Yvonne Harvey holds a photo of her daughter Chrissy Predham, who was murdered in 2007. Harvey wants to build a memorial and garden in north Kanata to honour women who have lost their lives 'at the hand of violence.'
Daniel Reid
The mother of a murdered Kanata woman is planting
the seeds for a project to bring attention to women who have been victims of
violence.
Yvonne Harvey plans to
erect a garden and monument in Kanata
to honour “all women who have died at the hands of violence.”
“We’ve got to start
raising the profile of this social problem,” said Harvey, whose daughter was murdered in 2007.
“We still have a societal
shame.”
Chrissy Predham, a
longtime Kanata resident, was killed in Newfoundland in 2007,
leaving behind an infant daughter.
Harvey filed an affidavit with the Newfoundland Supreme
Court last year stating that her daughter was in an abusive relationship with
her estranged husband before she was slain.
No one has been charged in
the killing.
Harvey envisions a non-denominational Garden of Reflection
in north Kanata
complete with a monument, surrounded by trees planted in memory of victims of
abuse.
A monument of the same
nature already exists at Walter Baker Park
in Kanata.
“I have no objection to
having one,” said Kanata North Coun. Marianne Wilkinson, “but I don’t know if
we need two.”
Wilkinson said she would
like to see Harvey’s
concept incorporated into the existing monument, located near a pond in the
park.
Kia Rainbow, manager of
Chrysalis House, Kanata’s
shelter for abused women and children, said the more memorials to bring the
issue to the public's attention, the better.
“I think that whenever
anyone wants to create a memorial for women who have been victims of violence,
it's wonderful,” said Rainbow. “You could have 50 of those and it would be
good.”
At very least, Rainbow
would like to see Kanata’s
existing memorial made more visible to the public.
“The one at Walter Baker
Park is very hidden so
people don't really see it,” she said.
Harvey is still brainstorming the project's details and
plans to come up with more specifics in the new year.
NO PROTECTION
Though there are many
services available to victims of abuse, the system isn’t perfect, said Harvey.
Chrysalis House has 25
beds but still turns away about six women a day, according to the shelter's
manager.
“We’re telling them they
don’t have to tolerate this (treatment),” said Harvey, but they’re then turned away from
housing. “A lot of people give up because it is painful.”
Chrissy, Harvey’s daughter, didn’t have a place to go
when she left her husband.
“When Chrissy realized
she had entered into this (volatile) relationship … she made arrangements to
take her daughter and move into her own home,” said Harvey. “But there’s no protection.”
The system failed
Chrissy, said her mother.
“Chrissy did everything
right,” said Harvey.
“The problem was that we
don’t have laws in place to deter that kind of a crime.”
The garden might help
others get over their pain but Harvey
doesn’t think she’ll ever get over hers.
“I don’t think I’m ever
going to be able to do that,” she said. “It’s too late for me.”
Many Ottawa
women and children have been victimized in the last few years, said Harvey, including her
daughter, Jennifer Teague and Ardeth Wood.
She hopes the garden will
start a public discussion or at very least serve as a beacon to victims in
their time of grief.