Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Memorial Marks 20 Years Since Reena Virk's Death, Steps From Tragic Scene

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Nov, 2017 10:54 AM
    SAANICH, B.C. — Reena Virk struggled to understand why people considered her different and a target for school bullies, her father said Tuesday at a memorial to mark the 20th anniversary of the Victoria teenager's death.
     
     
    Standing just steps away from the beach where his daughter was murdered in November 1997, Manjit Virk said Reena was a naive, 14-year-old girl trying to find herself in a hard world and ended up the victim of a "horrible act."
     
     
    About 200 people gathered outside a historic schoolhouse along the Gorge Waterway to mark the sombre anniversary during a pounding rainstorm. The site overlooked the beach near where Virk was killed and is not far from the Craigflower Bridge where the teen was lured and beaten by a group of girls.
     
     
    "When she went to school, she had a hard time," said Manjit Virk. "She was very puzzled. Why would people pick on her?"
     
     
    He said as parents, he and his wife, Suman, were worried about their daughter's struggles to find acceptance among her peers. Virk said his daughter was trusting, and their attempts to warn her about possible troubles ahead did not sink in to a teenager seeking her independence.
     
     
    "We always told her, 'Reena, this is a part of life. Some people have different values. They will mistreat you, but you always make sure you be kind with them. You don't retaliate. You don't fight back. Talk to your teachers. Talk to us.' "
     
     
    Virk's death made international headlines after it was reported she was the victim of a swarming attack by a group of girls who invited her to meet under the bridge to hang out. The attack started when one of the girls extinguished a lit cigarette on her forehead and ended with her death in shallow water near the bridge.
     
     
    Six girls were convicted of assault causing bodily harm and sentenced to up to one year in custody.
     
     
     
     
    Warren Glowatski and Kelly Ellard were convicted of second-degree murder after they followed the limping girl away from the fight and drowned her in the Gorge.
     
     
    "Little did she know this world is not a very safe place for her," said Manjit Virk.
     
     
    Glowatski was 16 at the time of Virk's death and has been released on parole, while Ellard, who was 15, remains in prison.
     
     
    Virk's death also spearheaded anti-bullying campaigns.
     
     
    "Anybody who lives in Victoria will tell you they can't drive over this bridge or walk over it and not think about Reena Virk," B.C. Education Minister Rob Fleming said after the event.
     
     
    Fleming paid tribute to the Virk family, who turned their grief into a public campaign against bullying.
     
     
    He said in the two decades since the girl's death, school's have launched numerous successful anti-bullying and inclusion programs, but it's difficult to forget the price paid by Reena Virk.
     
     
    "It's a day to celebrate tolerance and diversity and to rededicate ourselves in Reena's memory to make sure no child is bullied in the way that she was," said Fleming, who called her death a national tragedy.
     
     
    Following the memorial, Manjit Virk said he found the experience "therapeutic." He said Reena is never far from his family's thoughts.
     
     
    He said the anti-bullying campaigns in schools and across society in general are comforting in that they seek to make the world a better place.
     
     
    But Virk said he still has moments of darkness.
     
     
    "It's not a better place now," he said. "The world will be a better place when all people will accept every one."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Doors Shut To Public At Murder Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Off-Duty Cop

    Doors Shut To Public At Murder Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Off-Duty Cop
    HALIFAX — A pre-trial hearing for a Halifax man accused of murdering an off-duty police officer will be held behind closed doors.

    Doors Shut To Public At Murder Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Off-Duty Cop

    Officials Plan B.C. Wildfire Evacuation Centre Closure, As Fires Still Rage

    Officials Plan B.C. Wildfire Evacuation Centre Closure, As Fires Still Rage
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Social services officials in British Columbia's southern Interior hope at least one large centre for wildfire evacuees can be closed this weekend, despite warnings that the wildfire season in the province isn't over.

    Officials Plan B.C. Wildfire Evacuation Centre Closure, As Fires Still Rage

    New Brunswick Man Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting Girl Sues Her Family For Brutal Beating

    New Brunswick Man Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting Girl Sues Her Family For Brutal Beating
    The man's lawyer, David Lutz, says it was not up to the girl's family or other vigilantes to punish the man — that's the job of the courts.

    New Brunswick Man Convicted Of Sexually Assaulting Girl Sues Her Family For Brutal Beating

    Complaints About N.S. Judge Who Said 'A Drunk Can Consent' Will Be Investigated

    Complaints About N.S. Judge Who Said 'A Drunk Can Consent' Will Be Investigated
    Justice Michael MacDonald issued a statement Thursday saying a three-member review committee will look into allegations of misconduct against Judge Gregory Lenehan.

    Complaints About N.S. Judge Who Said 'A Drunk Can Consent' Will Be Investigated

    Toronto's Deputy Mayor Under Fire For Saying City Planner 'Should Stick To The Knitting'

    Toronto's Deputy Mayor Under Fire For Saying City Planner 'Should Stick To The Knitting'
    Toronto's deputy mayor is coming under fire for comments he made about the city's outgoing chief planner, which critics are calling sexist.

    Toronto's Deputy Mayor Under Fire For Saying City Planner 'Should Stick To The Knitting'

    Tory MPP Apologizes For Comments About Wynne After Lawyers Warn Of Possible Lawsuit

    TORONTO — A Conservative member of the Ontario legislature is apologizing to Premier Kathleen Wynne for comments made in a radio interview after the premier's lawyers warned he could face a defamation lawsuit.

    Tory MPP Apologizes For Comments About Wynne After Lawyers Warn Of Possible Lawsuit