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Current
Issue
COVER
The
Hermit and the Ham
BEE
IN THE BONNET
Before You Sign Anything, Call
Me!
San Nan Ta Claws Finds Love
BOOKS
Native
Thriller Adds Fact to its Fiction
BUSINESS
Judicial
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COMMUNITY
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Tuesday's
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Centres by Regions
CRIME
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Youth Going Wild in the Streets
EDITORIAL
Feds
Let Natives Down Again
OBITUARY
Chief of Chiefs
Dies at 91
Downtown Eastside
Crusader Dies
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Downtown
Eastside Crusader Dies
By Staff Writers
"He comforted the afflicted and afflicted the comfortable."
-Georgia Straight Editor Charlie Smith on John Turvey
John Turvey, who died unexpectedly and too soon on October 11, 2006,
was honored and remembered at the Ray Cam Co-operative Community Centre
(902 East Hastings, Vancouver, BC) on Thursday November 9.
The centre was literally packed with people who had known and respected
Turvey over the years. A long line of speakers starting with Charlie Smith,
editor of the Georgia Straight, told personal stories and paid tribute
to the life and work of this remarkable man.
A video entitled "Turvey Boatrocker" put together by a longtime
friend, highlighted Turvey's articulate interactions with the media at
various stages of his long involvement in the issues of the Downtown Eastside.
Those who spoke covered the entire spectrum of friends and colleagues
connected to Turvey through love and admiration: judges, police officers,
fellow social workers, and colleagues from frontline organizations all
remembered his stubbornness when confronted with obstacles to progress
in his struggle to reduce the harm happening to people living on the edge.
Margaret Prevost of the Carnegie Centre, Mike Woodsky of DEYAS (Downtown
Eastside Youth Activties Society), Lou Desmerais from Vancouver Native
Health, and Steve Bouchard and Lorelei Hawkins of the Ray Cam Centre all
reflected upon Turvey's dedication to youth at risk.
Jenny Kwan and Libby Davies were also in attendance. And a number of lesser
known individuals who had been touched in some way by Turvey's energy
and commitment. The many personal and professional tributes can perhaps
be summed up in Turvey's own words.
As he said in an interview on CBC radio in 2004, "All I'd like to
be remembered as is a person who came from there and struggled with his
realities and tried to achieve good things for himself and good things
for the community. That's all."
Turvey did achieve good things for the community; his legacy includes
the organizations he helped to found and led over the years and the very
fact that harm reduction is a part of our vocabulary at all. A John Turvey
Community Fund has been established and will be administered by the Ray
Cam Centre. Funds donated will be used to support programs assisting youth
at risk on the Downtown Eastside.
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