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Calgary

Permanent memorial to honour city's homeless unveiled in downtown Calgary

A permanent memorial to commemorate those who have died while experiencing homelessness in Calgary was unveiled downtown on Wednesday.

'They are our loved ones ... and oftentimes, they are dying alone,' city councillor says

Advocates and artists honour lives lost by people experiencing homelessness

3 years ago
Duration 2:22
Murals, benches and a bronzed backpack are just a few of the smaller memorials that make up the larger tribute for people who have died while experiencing homelessness in Calgary.

A permanent memorial to commemorate those who have died while experiencing homelessness in Calgary was unveiled downtown on Wednesday.

The first of its kind in Calgary, the memorial includes a bronze sculpture of a backpack, a handcrafted wooden bench and murals from local artists. It's located at 107 13th Ave.S.E.

Those who visit the site are invited to mourn, pause and reflect on the lives of those who have died.

WATCH | See the different art installationsthat make up Calgary's first permanent memorial to the city's homeless in the video above.

"[The memorial is] important to me," said Nigel Kirk at its unveiling.

Kirk is withthe Client Action Committee, a volunteer-led advisory group whose members have experienced homelessness.

The bronze backpack featured in Calgary's permanent memorial for the city's homeless was based on a real backpack. It was used by a man who survived 10 years of homelessness and donated it to the project. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

The committee was one of the project's key organizers, along with the Calgary Homeless Foundation, the University of Calgary, the City of Calgary, Canadian Artists Against Povertyand several homeless-serving agencies.

"This is seven years' worth of work, and it's very touching," Kirk said. "And it's a way that I know I can pay tribute to a lot of the people that I love, that I've lost."

Ward 8 Coun. Evan Woolley spoke at the memorial's unveiling. He said that as a lifelong resident of the area,he counts many of the city's homeless citizens as his friends and neighbours.

"I have watched them grow, and watched their struggles over the years, and watched many of them disappear," Woolley said.

"We have monuments all over our city to the rich and powerful. And I'm just really pleased that we now have a memorial to those who have lost their lives being marginalized.

"They are our loved ones, they are our family members, they are our neighbours, and oftentimes, they are dying alone."

A momentous shift

In Calgary's early history, those who died unclaimed or abandoned were buried in "potter's field." Hundreds of people were buriedbeneath a small patch of grass in Union Cemetery, marked by a post reading "PF."

The namecomes from the Gospel of Matthew and is a reference to a public field where "foreigners"and outcasts were buried.

"Potter's fieldis a mass unmarked grave. And there are no gravestones, there are no headstones," said Jessica Shaw,an associateprofessor at the University of Calgary.

She is conducting research on end-of-life care for people experiencing homelessness.

These days,the cityoffers dignified burials, but often does not have headstones, she said.

A poem etched onto the side of the memorial was written by a Calgarian who experienced homelessness. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

The memorial allows a place to gather and payrespects, and it will be cared for by the city.

"It's a momentous shift, and I think it's a statement about how we're moving forward as a communityand valuing and honouring people," Shaw said.

She estimates more than 600 people have died since 2017 while experiencing homelessness in Calgary.

"Those people and their memories are with us here today, and really, it's for them," Shaw said. "And it's for our community."

A call to action

According to Shaw, every aspect of the memorial was designed by people who have experienced homelessness.

It was then created by artists from Canadian Artists Against Poverty, Fuse33, and Studio West Bronze Foundry.

The backpack sculpture, for example, was based on areal backpack that was donated to the projectby a man who used it to survive for 10 years while homeless in Calgary, she said.

Nigel Kirk, left, and Jessica Shaw, right. Kirk is with the Client Action Committee. Shaw is a University of Calgary associate professor researching end-of-life care for people experiencing homelessness. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

And the poem etched on the memorial was written by someone who experienced homelessness, too.

"We hope that as people walk through it, it's sort of an emotional and spiritual journey, too, as you're walking through the physical space," Shaw said.

"This place is not only to gather and reflect, but I see it also as a call to action and hopefully, moving toward a time when this is a historical memorial."

With files from Dave Gilson and Sarah Rieger