Catherine Doyle
BBC News NI
Reporting fromBarefield, County Clare
PA Media
Mourners have been asked to wear bright and cheerful colours in their memory
The funeral service for the mother and her two children murdered in County Fermanagh last week is under way.
Veterinary surgeon Vanessa Whyte, 45, her 14-year-old son James Rutledge and 13-year-old daughter Sara Rutledge were shot dead in Maguiresbridge last week.
A funeral Mass is being held at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Ms Whyte's hometown of Barefield, County Clare.
They will then be buried together in Templemaley Cemetery.
Items representing the family were placed next to their coffins, including a blue card representing Vanessa's career as a vet.
A hurl was placed next to James' coffin, as the pitch was his "second home", and a cat toy was placed by Sara's because of her "love for animals".
The Bishop of Ferns, Ger Nash, spoke of how "heartbroken" the community of Barefield is at the "tragic and unspeakable loss".
He said Vanessa, James and Sara played an "irreplaceable part" in the lives of their families, community, schools, workplaces and clubs.
He added that the condolence messages left by some women who do not know the family highlight "the vulnerability of women to pain inflicted by others", and that the messages are "signs of solidarity in the face of that pain".
Handout
Vanessa Whyte and her daughter Sara and son James were fatally shot at a house in Maguiresbridge last Wednesday
Mourners attending the funeral have been asked to wear bright and cheerful colours in their memory.
Pupils from Enniskillen Royal Grammar, where James and Sara went to school, are among those who have come to pay their respects.
Just before 11:30 local time, three black hearses returned to the church of the immaculate conception in Barefield, County Clare.
Hundreds of people lined the route from St Mary's GAA (Gaelic Athletic Association) in Maguiresbridge and St Patrick's Hurling club in Lisbellaw where the family were members.
The purple and navy of Vanessa's childhood club, St Joseph's Doora Barefield, is represented in even bigger numbers.
People gather to pay their respects in Barefield where the funeral of Vanessa, James and Sara will be held
On Friday, hundreds gathered in the village to pay respect to Ms Whyte and her children as they lay in repose together.
Fr Brendan Quinlivan from the Diocese of Killaloe, said there has been such an "incredible sense of sympathy and empathy and outpouring of grief for all of Vanessa's family".
"There are no words that are adequate to describe the depth of feeling and the sense of tragedy that is being felt by Vanessa's family, but also by the community," he said.
He spoke about Vanessa Whyte and that when she was younger, living in Barefield, she was "a very vivacious and lively young person".
He added that her career as a veterinary surgeon is "a reflection of the generosity of spirit that would have been very much part of her and her family, and that she received from her family".
Emergency services were called to the home of Ms Whyte and her children on the Drummeer Road on 23 July, a rural area about 75 miles (121km) west of Belfast and about eight miles from the county's largest town, Enniskillen.
Two of the victims were declared dead at the scene and a third died later that day in South West Acute Hospital.
Hours after the attack, police said a man from the same household was in hospital with gunshot wounds.
Following the shootings, police said a suspected triple murder and attempted suicide was one line of inquiry for detectives.
On Monday night, the man suspected of the killings, 43-year-old Ian Rutledge, died in hospital.
Detectives investigating the shooting also reiterated their appeal for "anyone with information, no matter how insignificant it may seem, to come forward".