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Peter Julian Arthur HANCOCK

Peter Julian Arthur HANCOCK obituary

FUNERAL HOME

Morgan Funeral Home

415 Regent Street

Niagara on the Lake, Ontario

Peter HANCOCK Obituary

PETER JULIAN ARTHUR HANCOCK March 16, 1938 - December 18, 2023 Peacefully on Monday, December 18, 2023, at the Greater Niagara General Hospital. Peter arrived in Canada in 1940 at Pier 21 in Halifax, a two-year-old war guest of the Dominion, evacuated from England along with his mother and sister. He left us in his eighty-sixth year with a distinguished record of serving the country that became his home. He found his métier in diplomacy, and during his long career in Canada's foreign service became one of its most skilled practitioners with an abiding commitment to advancing Canada's interests on the world stage. Welcomed by the generous Moyer family to the Niagara Peninsula, they lived during the War in Vineland Station, and later moved to St. Catharines. At Queen's University he studied political science, wrote poetry, produced theatre, and met Eleanor Toren, whom he married in 1960. In postgraduate study of the history of ideas at Brandeis University under Herbert Marcuse, he had hoped to savour the great works, but found that academics spend more time reading one another. Disappointed, he left. As a young man of letters gifted in languages, he joined the Department of External Affairs as part of the celebrated class of '63. His inaugural posting was to Yugoslavia during Tito's presidency, where as a junior officer he got his first indelible taste of the Cold War up close. Next came Moscow under Brezhnev, where he assisted with Pierre Trudeau's landmark 1971 visit and experienced the thrill of being embroiled in the 1972 Hockey Summit Series. A posting to Barbados followed and was an opportunity to explore the culture and the geopolitics of a different part of the world. When he returned to Moscow in 1979, it was as deputy head of mission, an expert in East-West relations, and one of the most skillful interpreters of the Soviet Union - just in time for Canada's boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics. As head of policy planning in Ottawa in the early 1980s, he led development and elaboration of foreign policy and accompanied Gorbachev on his influential 1983 visit to Canada. Later that year, he worked directly with PM Pierre Trudeau on his International 'Peace Initiative,' helping to pen the seminal Guelph speech. A stint as deputy head of mission in West Germany from 1985-1989 was followed by the role of Ambassador to both Poland and East Germany, where he witnessed the fall of the Berlin Wall. His final posting was Ambassador to Turkey from 1993-1996. After retiring from public service, he was appointed Head of Regional Office in Banja Luka for Republika Srpska, implementing the Dayton Peace Accords in Bosnia and Herzegovina (an American initiative under President Clinton). Upon his return to Canada, he taught for several years at the Munk School for Global Affairs & Public Policy, and at Trinity College, University of Toronto. Despite living much of his life abroad, home for Peter was always the Niagara Peninsula. His knowledge of the region was encyclopedic and up to date, from natural history, local politics, the best plays at Shaw this season, the best restaurants and wineries, its demographics and cultural enclaves, to, always, always, the history of the place. It was his terroir, and the pond hockey rinks of his youth, the music and pizza in Buffalo, and the multicultural community he grew up with in St. Catharines shaped his character in enduring ways. It was no surprise that upon retiring he would move back to his roots and establish a home in Niagara-on-the-Lake. Peter was a consummate storyteller, and a brilliant conversationalist when it pleased him. He was possessed of a great roaring laugh and was a man of keen insight, rare wit and towering erudition. He was a constant and voracious reader. Peter will be sadly missed by his four children, Christopher (Pat), Max (Karen), Martha (Jeffrey) and Claudia (David); six grandchildren, Julia, Ben, Jasmine, Zoe, Aidan and Tara; and by friends and family at home and around the world. The family thanks the many friends, neighbours and care staff who made his last years as comfortable as possible despite declining health, and allowed him to remain in his home where he was happiest. As per his wishes, his ashes will be interred at Niagara Lakeshore Cemetery, and a 'congenial but not lugubrious' event will be held to mark his passing and celebrate his life at Morgan Funeral Home in Niagara-on-the-Lake in a few months. Please check the funeral home website for service details. Donations, if desired, may be made to Gillian's Place in St. Catharines or The Chautauqua Oaks Project c/o the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake Tree Fund. Condolences at: www.morganfuneral.com And this gray spirit yearning in desire To follow knowledge like a sinking star, Beyond the utmost bound of human thought. - Tennyson

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Published by The Globe and Mail from Dec. 30, 2023 to Jan. 3, 2024.

Memories and Condolences
for Peter HANCOCK

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6 Entries

Charles and Lisa Svoboda

March 10, 2024

Lisa and I were very privileged to have known Peter so well personally and professionally through our careers and even beyond into our retirement. Peter was a brilliant colleague and a fine friend, always welcome company. Even at our distance we will miss him greatly. Our condolences to the Hancock family and to his many friends in Canada and abroad.
Chuck (G63) and Lisa Svoboda
Benimarco, Spain

Carol Anne Gillis

January 12, 2024

My sincere condolences - Carol Anne Gillis

Rick Kirby

December 31, 2023

Very sorry to learn of Peter´s passing. Condolences to his family and friends from myself and Ellen, my wife. I last visited Peter about 2 weeks before his passing. His body had been failing him, but his mind was as sharp and active as ever. I met Peter during his first posting abroad in 1966 in Yugoslavia when I was there for 1 year as a postgrad student; worked with him for 2 years in Moscow, 1979-81; saw him occasionally after that; and, regularly, after Ellen and I retired to Niagara-on-the-Lake in 2011. Always enjoyed our chats; he will be missed; RIP, Peter.
Rick Kirby

AKIN KOSETORUNU

December 31, 2023

I worked for Ambassador Hancock some 35 years ago as a junior officer when he was a Canadian Ambassador in Turkey. I still remember him as a diplomat of highest caliber with exceptional intellectual faculties and benevolence to his staff. He was an exemplary man of sincerity and integrity in human conduct.
I am utterly saddened to hear that Mr. Hancock is no longer with his loved ones, but his legacy will live on for generations in his family and will always be remembered with respect and fond feelings by the community who were fortunate enough to know him.
I offer my deepest condolences to his family and friends. May God Rest Him in Peace.
Akin Kosetorunu
Turkey
[email protected]

Robert Bothwell

December 30, 2023

I will always remember Peter, legs stretched out to his desk, angled into his chair, puff in hand, dispensing wisdom and wit, and, unusually for a Canadian diplomat, useful information. To wisdom and wit he added wine, the one enhancing the others. I will always remember him fondly.

Dan Livermore

December 30, 2023

Peter was one of the greats of the Department of External Affairs, a mentor to many of us, a paragon of professionalism, and a true friend. He will be missed.

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Memorial Events
for Peter HANCOCK

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Morgan Funeral Home

415 Regent Street, Niagara on the Lake, ON L0S 1J0