B.C. musician recovers stolen 1840s-era violin near bus loop in downtown Kelowna - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 21, 2024, 12:53 PM | Calgary | -10.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. musician recovers stolen 1840s-era violin near bus loop in downtown Kelowna

The violinist from a popular music band in Kelowna, B.C., has successfully recovered his rare violin.

'I don't want to be any kind of vigilante, but what's mine is mine,' said Mitchell Howanyk

A man in dark red T-shirt and white shorts holds a violin body and a violin neck in a room.
Musician Mitchell Howanyk says he reclaimed his 1840s-era Italian-made violin from a man near the Queensway bus loop in downtown Kelowna, B.C., Thursday evening, about 24 hours after he had reported the theft to the local RCMP. (Submitted by Mitchell Howanyk)

The violinist from a well-known music band in Kelowna, B.C., managed to recover his 1840s-era violin on Thursday evening, about 24 hours after reporting it stolen.

Mitchell Howanyk, a member of the Kentucky Eileen band for over a decade, says he discovered the vintage stringed instrument had gone missing after a performance on the evening of Aug. 3.

He says the theft likelyoccurred while he was unloading equipment from his trailer in downtown Kelownaor while loadingequipment after the performance at the Cambium Cider Co. in Vernon.

Howanyk says he noticed it was missing the following day while preparing for a gig at the Kelowna brewery.

He says the instrument is an Italian-made violin from the 1840s, featuring a unique one-piece back with two black bows and one red bow. It's housed in a silver carbon-fibre case with backpack straps and stickers from various countries.

After losing it, he says he went on a search in various parts of Kelowna and Vernon.

'I grabbed it immediately'

While biking and walking through encampment areas in downtown Kelowna and the Okanagan Rail Trail on Thursday, Howanyk says a homeless manadvised him and thefriend he was with to go to the Queensway bus loop in the downtown core.

Once there, Howanyk says hespotted a man with the silver violin case, who then placed it on the ground. He says he was"full of adrenaline."

"My buddy just spoke to him, and I grabbed it immediately and then proceeded to say, 'Nice violin.'

"I don't want to be any kind of vigilante, but what's mine is mine," he told host Sarah Penton on CBC's Radio West. "I had a true passion for this instrument, so I grabbed it and then, luckily, my friend reminded me that we should probably just head out."

The musician remembers the man was "shaken up" when he saw the violin case being taken away and told him he had purchased itfor $20 from someone else.

A bus loops with a sign that reads 'Queensway Exchange.'
Mitchell Howanyk says he discovered his violin near the Queensway bus loop in downtown Kelowna Thursday evening. (Winston Szeto/CBC)

Kelowna had one of the highest crime severity indices in Canada last year, according to the latest data from Statistics Canada. The municipality recorded a non-violent crime severity index which includes theft of 162.98 in 2022, an increase of over seven per cent from the previous year.

While grateful for the local community's support in trying to recover his violin, Howanyk feels saddened by the frequent thefts in Kelowna in recent years.

"It's super sad what's going on, but it's hard to not have a lot of anger and rage," he said.

Violin has sentimental value

Howanyk says he purchased the violin about a decade ago from a musician friend who has since passed away, making it a highly sentimental item for him.

After some repairs, he used it while performing with his band across Canada and internationally, as well as for teaching music at a K-12 school in Kelowna.

WATCH| Howaynk plays violin in performance with Kentucky Eileen band

Howanyksays the violin's neck and stringssuffered damage, but he's confident that a local luthier he knows can repair it.

"I can hopefully bring it back to life even better than it was before. Its voice will live on."

With files from Radio West