elevated UuyCf January 21, 1936 – December 11, 2025
elevated UuyCf Visitation
Sunday, December 14, 2025 from 3:00 – 7:00 pm
Queen of Heaven Catholic Funeral Home
7300 Highway 27, Woodbridge, Ontario L4H 4Y8
elevated UuyCf Visitation
Monday, December 15, 2025 from 10:30 – 11:30 am
Queen of Heaven Catholic Funeral Home
7300 Highway 27, Woodbridge, Ontario L4H 4Y8
elevated UuyCf Funeral Mass
Monday, December 15, 2025 at 12:00 pm
The Chapel of Our Lady of Consolation – Queen of Heaven Catholic Funeral Home
7300 Highway 27, Woodbridge, Ontario L4H 4Y8
elevated UuyCf Entombment
Queen of Heaven Catholic Cemetery
7300 Highway 27, Woodbridge, Ontario L4H 4Y8
elevated UuyCf Obituary
elevated UuyCf On Thursday, we said goodbye to our family’s patriarch, Paolo. He was born in 1936 in the small town of Spormaggiore, in the foothills of the Alps in Trento, to Giovanni and Angelina. He grew up during the hardships of wartime Italy and became the eldest of five children.
elevated UuyCf In 1949, at just 13, Paolo watched his father leave for Canada in search of a better future. During the five years that followed, Paolo shouldered the responsibilities of the household. He often spoke about delivering bread to nearby towns with a basket strapped to his back, sometimes tumbling on the mountain paths, returning home with a loaf of bread as his pay.
elevated UuyCf In 1954, after years of saving, his father was finally able to bring the family to Canada. Paolo, now 18, arrived knowing it was his turn to help. He worked alongside his father, first as a labourer, then as a carpenter, and eventually rose to foreman and superintendent. He became known as a respected leader in the forming and heavy-construction industry. Bridges, sewage plants, and even the fountain at Canada’s Wonderland were among the many structures he proudly pointed to over the years with a simple “I built that.”
elevated UuyCf Paolo lived with remarkable resilience. Although he ultimately passed from kidney disease, he rarely spoke of his health challenges. Over the years he faced and overcame a long list of medical issues, yet he complained about none of them. His quiet endurance was simply part of who he was.
elevated UuyCf He was married for decades to the love of his life, Gina. Together they raised three children — Robert (Franca), Frank (Rosa), and Nancy (Elio). He was the proud grandfather of seven — Cristina (Dave), Julia (Felipe), Francesco (Lisa), Alexandra (Marco), Christopher (Cassandra), Nicolas, and Steven — and great-grandfather to Brooklyn, Olivia, Luke, Gia, Nash, and Nixon.
elevated UuyCf From the early years in their new country, Sunday dinners under the large willow tree in the driveway became a family tradition: simple meals, loud laughter, and the closeness Paolo treasured most. He lived a humble and grounded life, leading by example, and those qualities remain with all of us who loved him.
elevated UuyCf Paolo’s story is one of sacrifice, hard work, and devotion to family. He leaves behind a legacy built not only in concrete and steel, but in the lives he shaped with quiet strength and steady love.
elevated UuyCf In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Heart and Stroke Foundation (Click here to donate) or the Kidney Foundation. (Click here to donate)
elevated UuyCf

My sincere condolences on the passing of Paolo to all the family members. Special thoughts for his much loved wife Gina and his children. He had much to be proud of and his greatest achievement is the wonderful family that lives on and is thriving.
My deepest sympathy to Gina and the whole family
Deepest sympathies.
Paolo was a lovely man
Nancy and family. We are so sorry to hear of the passing of your beloved dad. Our thoughts and prayers are with you all. May he rest in Peace
What a beautiful sentiment about a remarkable man.
Beautiful words, that was Paolo, in his heart he always had spormaggiore, but his family was his strength and life. Our condolences to the family remembering you all in our prayers.
Condolences Gina for the loss of Paolo may he rest in peace. We enjoyed knowing him at the Carpenters Retirees Club 88. Every second Wednesday of the month. Also his participation on the committee.
Vince and Liliana
We are deeply saddened by this news. The death of a patriarch surely leaves a palpable sadness in its wake; a hollow echo that nothing can ever truly refill. It brings with it the fear that without him, everything will fall apart. But it may also bring new blessings. The spirit of a man like this can never be extinguished. It lingers in the small and the grand things he leave behind. In the traditions we keep, the languages we speak, the recipes we cook, in all those bridges, plants, buildings and fountains, in all the memories we carry. I will remember him as a hard working man who led by example. A man who, without any real education, managed to educate many. He left silently, wiser, with humility . . . just as perhaps his life, made of work and sacrifices, was humble, wise and silent. Another one of that great generation, has left. That generation that saw war and smelled its stench and saw its deprivations. That fled its country of birth in search of a better life and something to feed itself. That generation with hands hardened by calluses, with faces marked by deep wrinkles (memories of days spent under the scorching sun or bitter cold). Those hands that moved rubble, raised buildings and mixed cement, donning tee-shirts and hand-folded newspaper hats; those who came here in the fifties and sixties, who arrived in swarms like summer bees, smelling of something foreign and strange; those who came with rope-tied cardboard suitcases and heavy trunks, empty pockets, and a dream; those who owned the first refrigerators and the first black and white televisions; those who cooked their meals in a dingy basement under the dim glow of a 40 watt light bulb; those who, with their sweat and toil, built a nation. . . . ALL OF THEM, one by one, are going away, leaving this great void. Their experience, work ethic, patience, resilience, respect, which appear to be ever-fading qualities …. are going with them.
To his wife, Gina, his children Robert, Frank and Nancy, to his grandchildren, great grandchildren, his immediate family and many friends, we send our love and support. Though the depth of your loss is undoubtedly immeasurable, we pray you will draw strength from the certainties that Paolo stands joyfully in the light of his Creator, and, that whatever we lose comes around in another form. These sad times won’t last forever. Good times and bad times are the same in a way . . . neither lasts.
Edda and I are very sad to hear of your father’s passing. From reading the obituary, he must have been a strong and resourceful person.
Our deepest condolences to you, Rosa, and family.
Our deepest sympathies to the family . Rest in Peace Paolo
My deepest condolences to you and your family Frank. From reading the obituary, it’s clear he was a truly beautiful soul who meant so much to so many. May he rest in peace.
Our sincerest condolences . My Mom talked of him often . May he rest in peace. Prayers to the family from the Tenaglia’s.
To Gina and the Leonardelli family
We wish to express our deepest sympathy for the loss of your beloved husband/father.
He will be remembered as a kind good man.