Friday, May 29, 2026
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

    Heat Prompts Air Quality Alert For Metro Vancouver And Fraser Valley

    Heat Prompts Air Quality Alert For Metro Vancouver And Fraser Valley
    VANCOUVER — An air quality advisory has been issued for parts of Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley as air pollution reacts with the warmer weather.

    Heat Prompts Air Quality Alert For Metro Vancouver And Fraser Valley

    I'm Not A Hardened Terrorist: Omar Khadr Talks About His Past, Future And Settlement

    I'm Not A Hardened Terrorist: Omar Khadr Talks About His Past, Future And Settlement
    The federal government has apologized to former Guantanamo Bay inmate Omar Khadr and, sources say, paid him $10.5 million to settle his long-standing lawsuit over the violations of his charter rights. 

    I'm Not A Hardened Terrorist: Omar Khadr Talks About His Past, Future And Settlement

    Business Destroyed, Home Damaged But Wildfire Contained Near Cherry Creek, B.C.

    Business Destroyed, Home Damaged But Wildfire Contained Near Cherry Creek, B.C.
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Firefighters have managed to contain a small but intense wildfire that has destroyed a business just west of Kamloops, B.C.

    Business Destroyed, Home Damaged But Wildfire Contained Near Cherry Creek, B.C.

    Murder Trial For Jujhar Khun-Khun, Jason McBride, Michael JonesIn Kelowna Adjourned To July 24

    Murder Trial For Jujhar Khun-Khun, Jason McBride, Michael JonesIn Kelowna Adjourned To July 24
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A B.C. Supreme Court trial has been briefly adjourned for three men charged with first-degree murder in a gang-related shooting in Kelowna.

    Murder Trial For Jujhar Khun-Khun, Jason McBride, Michael JonesIn Kelowna Adjourned To July 24

    Dad Tells B.C. Court Son In Unhealthy State Of Mind Before Prison Suicide

    Dad Tells B.C. Court Son In Unhealthy State Of Mind Before Prison Suicide
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man says his son was in a "fragmented" state of mind just days before he hanged himself in a solitary confinement prison cell where he didn't belong.

    Dad Tells B.C. Court Son In Unhealthy State Of Mind Before Prison Suicide

    Speeding Ferrari On Lions Gate Bridge Impounded Longer, Driving Ban Considered

    Speeding Ferrari On Lions Gate Bridge Impounded Longer, Driving Ban Considered
    VANCOUVER — West Vancouver police say the length of time that a sports car will be impounded has been extended to 60 days after its driver was allegedly caught going 210 kilometres and hour in a 60 zone.

    Speeding Ferrari On Lions Gate Bridge Impounded Longer, Driving Ban Considered