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The village of Creeslough will never be the same again after an explosion that killed 10 people, residents have said.
The close-knit community of about 400 people, well-known to tourists visiting some of County Donegal's most scenic spots, is coming to terms with an unprecedented scale of loss.
The explosion happened at a service station on Friday afternoon.
An investigation is under way into the cause, but police have said it appears to have been a tragic accident.
Candlelit vigils have been held, with tributes coming from the Pope, Irish president and neighbours.
The first funerals of two of the victims, Jessica Gallagher, 24, from Creeslough, and Martin McGill, 49, who was originally from Scotland, will take place on Tuesday while James O'Flaherty, from Sydney, Australia, will be buried on Wednesday.
A village where everyone knows everyone
Among the other victims of the blast at a service station was a five-year-old girl and two teenagers, while there are eight people still in hospital.
The youngest victim, Shauna Flanagan Garwe was a "playful, energetic little girl" who always asked for a lollipop, according to Creeslough pharmacist Fergus Brennan.
She was with her father Robert, known as Bob to the villagers, when the explosion happened.
Monday should have been the first day for Jessica Gallagher, 24, in her new job as a fashion designer in Belfast.
She had "all her life in front of her", Councillor John Shéamais Ó Fearraigh, whose daughter was a friend, said.
In Creeslough, like many villages in rural Ireland, everyone knows everyone.
Speaking outside St Michael's Church before Mass on Monday, local resident Majella Russell said "ten beautiful souls have gone to heaven".
Ms Russell, whose niece worked in the shop, said church services had been packed as "we just have to pray and be with each other".
"All we have is our faith, our faith will get us through," she said.
"We are just all numb, this is a very close community, it's just unbelievable what's happened."
Villagers first on the scene
Businessman Brian Dolan was one of the first people on the scene, rushing the few hundred yards from his office to help in the immediate rescue efforts.
"You just went into autopilot trying to help your community," he told BBC News NI.
"There were dozens of people doing what they could do.
"We knew we couldn't deal with it ourselves - it was beyond us and people knew that [emergency] services were going to be needed.
"We were trying to clear places for them and trying to clear a path into the building."
He said people began clearing the debris without considering the potential dangers to themselves.
"I don't think anybody that was there on the day was actually thinking about what they were doing," he detailed.
On Monday, the Irish Red Cross announced it had set up the Creeslough Community Support Fund to help those injured, bereaved, made homeless or who had lost an income.
A separate online appeal for donations to help people in the village has surpassed €250,000 (£219,000) in two days.
'Creeslough will never be the same'
On Sunday, An Garda Síochána (the Irish police force) confirmed the names of the 10 victims, who were all from Creeslough or the surrounding areas.
Vigils to remember those who died were held across County Donegal on Sunday evening.
Mr Dolan said they were "ordinary members" of the community.
He said that before the disaster most people in Ireland would never have heard of the village.
"We will get through it but Creeslough will never, ever, ever be the same for anybody here," he said.
Afric McGlade, a former intensive care nurse who arrived to the service station minutes after the explosion happened, described the devastation she saw.
"I walked up and I could see all this debris, this dust - this thick, thick dust probably up to about knee level," she said.
"There was a mother with a child that had a cut in the hand and there were men pulling out blocks that were there trying to clear the area."
She praised the emergency services who arrived swiftly to help the causalities.
Emergency crews from Northern Ireland were sent across the border on Friday to help their Irish counterparts deal with the aftermath.
Creeslough resident Anthony Gallagher spoke to two search-dog handlers from Northern Ireland who had been part of the rescue operation.
"They looked a little bit stressed out because they had been in doing all the hard work, and they came down the road for a walk or a break," he said.
"I had a conversation with them both - [it was a] difficult job and I thanked them for their help."
A man in his 20s who was injured in the explosion is critically ill in St James's Hospital in Dublin.
Seven other people who were hurt are in a stable condition in Letterkenny University Hospital.