N.S. man teams up with Terry Fox's brother to bring Canadian icon's run to Ireland
Living in Ireland for the last few years, Halifax native Stew Paterson felt something was missing every September.
The Terry Fox Run was part of his upbringing and his Canadian roots, but Fox's legacy is not well known in Ireland — so he took it upon himself to change that.
On Sept. 17, Paterson partnered with the Terry Fox Foundation to organize the first Terry Fox Run in Ireland in over a decade.
He reached out to Fox's brother, Darrell Fox, who flew to Ireland for his first Terry Fox Run outside of Canada.
Paterson he hopes more Canadians living around the world can spread the word about Fox's inspiring story.
When meeting a Canadian, he wants people to say, "Oh, I bet you love ice hockey and love Tim Hortons and love maple syrup and love Terry Fox, right?"
"I think his story should be synonymous with being Canadian because it's such a special one," said Paterson.
Fox, of Port Coquitlam, B.C., was 18 when he embarked on a cross-Canada run to raise money for cancer research in April 1980. The activist, who had a leg amputated after a diagnosis of osteogenic sarcoma, was forced to stop his Marathon of Hope in September 1980 after cancer returned to his lungs. He died on June 28, 1981.
On Saturday, about 150 people walked, ran or cycled around Herbert Park in Dublin in Fox's memory.
Paterson said the group raised €20,000, equivalent to $27,000 Cdn, which will go to the Irish Cancer Society.
Before he moved to Dublin a few years ago, Paterson lived in New York for eight years and helped organize an annual Terry Fox Run in Central Park.
He said Terry Fox's story resonates with many because most people know someone who has been touched by cancer, whether in Canada, Dublin, or New York.
Paterson's father was diagnosed