In the memory of the Vancouver missing women including her sister Sarah, Maggie De Vries wrote the memoir Missing Sarah. She shares her sister’s life story from her own perspective while incorporating information about the life in Downtown Eastside and the Robert Pickton trial. In comparison to De Vries’ personal perspective, Wally Oppal’s (BC former Attorney General) report Forsaken: The Report of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry provides extended material about the missing women, including future recommendations of safety for women within sex work as well as a positive focus on the women’s life to try to “counter balance the negative storyline” (Forsaken, 9). I will look into how this report extends but also complicates the work done by De Vries.
One way Wally Oppal’s report extends the missing women story from Maggie De Vries’ work is by the inclusion of future recommendations to try to provide solutions for the unsafe environment many sex workers have to survive in (Forsaken, 6). De Vries mentions in her epilogue the necessity of these recommendations, holding “the potential for real change” (Missing Sarah, 266). In this way De Vries’ possibly limited knowledge of the legalities and the wider scope of the sex worker problems in Vancouver is being compensated with Oppal’s extensive work into these cases. This information then gives ideas for change and provide public actions suggestions in order to help Downtown Eastside become a safer place. Today Vancouver has a safe injection site provided to people with addiction to avoid disease and have arranged an on-site place to get help to come clean.
In the memoir Maggie De Vries mentions that she first intended to write her book for all the missing women in Vancouver, she had even done interview’s with some of the missing women’s families (Missing Sarah, 282). In the end she didn’t feel like she would be able to tell all stories and give justice to all the women. The report, on the other hand, highlights all the cases and describes most the missing women. It goes deeper into the practicalities of the cases, which may be problematic as it could hinder an emotional connection to the women (Forsaken, 11). In Missing Sarah we are only brought Sarah’s case and those involved, this may be effective in making the victims feel real but still doesn’t provide context of the broader missing women’s case. We follow Sarah’s story and that becomes an intimate connection to Downtown Eastside where’s the report, which includes documentations of findings, might lose that connection and make the story more complicated.
The report by Oppal does provide an extension for the work De Vries had previously done, a chance to get a further insight to the larger scope of the missing women case. De Vries sees this and therefore refers to his previous work in the memorial (Missing Sarah, 265). De Vries brings up her thoughts on the problems in Downtown Eastside while Oppal is able to give concrete solutions. Although Oppal’s work may not be sufficient in creating a meaningful connection to the women, the combination of texts works well. This is important to understand, to see the women’s perspective and root for the changes to be made in order to create a safer space for them and make them a part of our society.
Work Cited:
De Vries, Maggie. Missing Sarah. Penguin Canada Books Inc. 2008.
Judd, Amy. “Health Canada approves new supervised injection site in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside”. Global News, 26 May, 2017, https://globalnews.ca/news/3481936/health-canada-approves-new-supervised-injection-site-in-vancouvers-downtown-eastside/
Oppal, Wally. Forsaken: The Report of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. Volume I Part 3 (9-11). Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing. 2012.