elevated mGYcl September 29, 1946 ~ March 5, 2026

elevated mGYcl Visitation #1
Sunday, March 8th, 2026 from 2– 6 p.m.
Holy Cross Catholic Funeral Home
211 Langstaff Road East, Thornhill, Ontario, L3T 3Z6

elevated mGYcl Visitation #2
Monday, March 9th, 2026 at  9:30 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
Blessed Trinity Parish
3220 Bayview Ave, North York, ON M2M 3R7

elevated mGYcl Funeral Mass
Monday, March 9th, 2026 at 10:30 a.m.
Blessed Trinity Parish
 3220 Bayview Ave, North York, ON M2M 3R7

elevated mGYcl Cremation
To take place at a later date

elevated mGYcl Obituary
Arturo Bacani passed away on March 5, 2026, surrounded by the love of his family, leaving behind a life defined by faith, hard work, and deep devotion to those he cared for most.

elevated mGYcl Arturo was born on Sept. 29, 1946, in Sampaloc, Manila, Philippines, into a devout Catholic family of 11 children. He was the fourth child of Angel Pangan Bacani, a judge in the Philippines, and Editha Cui Bacani, a housewife. Faith and family were the centre of his life from the very beginning.

elevated mGYcl One of the most important chapters of Arturo’s life began when he met the woman who would become his wife, Teresita Borromeo. Their love story eventually led Arturo to make a life-changing decision: to leave the Philippines and move to Canada, where Teresita had gone ahead of him. He arrived in 1973 so they could begin their life together.  After four years, they moved back to the Philippines, where they stayed for ten years.  Art studied law in the Philippines and graduated in 1979. That same year, he passed the bar exam and began working as a lawyer in the Philippines, a career he was deeply proud of.

elevated mGYcl In 1987, Art moved his family of five children back to Canada, to find a better way to support them.  In Canada, they had two more children.  Like many newcomers, Arturo took on whatever work he could find to support his growing family. He worked as a factory worker, bartender, water and air filter salesman, encyclopedia salesman, and print operator.  His last job before retirement was computer operator.  No task was too small if it meant putting food on the table, paying for school, and keeping a roof over his children’s heads.

elevated mGYcl Arturo stopped working in 2008 after being officially diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease the year before. But, in many ways, he never truly stopped working. He continued doing what he believed was his most important role — caring for and praying for his family.

elevated mGYcl During their almost 53 years of marriage, he and Teresita built a large and loving family. They raised seven children — Mary Rose, Anne Marie, Frances Marie, Joseph Gerard Marie, Noel John Marie, Gabriel Marie and Faith Jeanne Marie — and are blessed with 10 grandchildren — Emma, Chiara, Gianna, Maria, Nora, Field, Caterina, Claire, James, and Noah — with one more on the way.

elevated mGYcl While Arturo was proud of his work as a lawyer back in the Philippines, the title he carried with the greatest pride was husband and father. His wife and children remember his quiet sacrifices, his steady faith, and the many ways he worked to ensure that the children could eat, go to school, and grow up safe and loved.

elevated mGYcl He will be deeply missed, never forgotten, and forever loved.

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