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Wind phone offers 91Ƶprofound91Ƶ way for B.C. residents to grieve lost loved ones

Woman plans payphone in Greater Victoria91Ƶs Royal Oak Burial Park to honour memory of her brother
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Amanda Farrell-Low with the wind phone at Royal Oak Burial Park in Saanich. She led the initiative to have the phone installed, spurred by the loss of her brother in 2012. (Christine van Reeuwyk/News Staff)

A pay phone planted in the side of a hill in Greater Victoria91Ƶs Royal Oak Burial Park offers a 91Ƶprofound91Ƶ new way to grieve.

The path there is a long one, uphill past the landmark Art Deco building that cost the cemetery board $16,000 to build in the 1930s.

Adorned in painted flowers, birds, greenery and a sweet little dog courtesy of local artist Beth Threlfall, the phone is the newest form of remembrance in the 100-year-old park that is always evolving ways to help people grieve.

The 91Ƶwind phone91Ƶ was created by Japanese architect Itaru Sasaki in 2010 to cope with his cousin91Ƶs death. The disconnected phone afforded a way to reconnect with the lost loved one by making a 91Ƶcall.91Ƶ Put up on his private land, it opened to the public in the following year after a devastating earthquake and tsunami killed more than 15,000 people.

The revelation of a new way to grieve spurred an international movement.

The Royal Oak wind phone is tucked beside the Little Spirits Garden 91Ƶ a 2010 addition to support families who experience pregnancy or infant loss 91Ƶ and overlooks much of the park.

The location was crucial to Amanda Farrell-Low who embarked on 91Ƶquite the journey91Ƶ of installing a wind phone two years ago. That91Ƶs when she approacched Royal Oak executive director Ilan Highton, who approached his board and all agreed it aligned with their commitment to serve the community in meaningful ways.

91ƵThe 91Ƶphone of the wind91Ƶ represents a unique blend of tradition and innovation, offering comfort in the time-honoured setting of a cemetery while introducing a creative approach to mourning and remembrance. We are pleased to see this project come together and look forward to it being a thoughtful and comforting resource for our community,91Ƶ Highton said.

Together the pair searched high and low for the right site.

91ƵThis one just seemed perfect because it91Ƶs a little bit hidden away91Ƶ you kind of have to discover it a bit. You have a bit of privacy,91Ƶ Farrell-Low said.

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She learned about the phones from a newspaper article about a Lower Mainland wind phone dedicated in memory of someone lost to overdose and thought it sounded like something Greater Victoria could use. A researcher by nature, she set out to learn more about the wind phone.

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Details by artist Beth Threlfall on the new wind phone, where those grieving can speak with a loved one at Royal Oak Burial Park in Saanich. (Christine van Reeuwyk/News Staff)

91ƵThese things started spreading around Japan as a way for people to connect with folks they91Ƶd lost and now they91Ƶre all over the world,91Ƶ Farrell-Low said.

For her, the idea held personal value. She lost her younger brother Liam to overdose in 2012 and he91Ƶs actually buried in Royal Oak Burial Park 91Ƶ just one reason the location seemed ideal.

91ƵSometimes when I come to see him it feels kind of weird going up to this grave in the middle of this field and trying to think about the person or connect with them. The wind phone just seemed like a really cool way to have an excuse to pick up the phone, dial a number and talk to somebody. It can feel like a really profound way to connect with someone,91Ƶ she said.

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As the wind phone movement grows, so do the designs, but she had a pay phone in mind 91Ƶ not easy to find.

91ƵI really thought a pay phone would be great. So I started looking for one and, of course, there aren91Ƶt a lot anymore right, they91Ƶre all kind of gone. I reached a few dead ends.91Ƶ

Again someone sent her a newspaper story about pay phones with an email that eventually led to Doug Ferguson 91Ƶ the guy tasked with decommissioning them across Vancouver Island. Before that he was the guy who kept them operational. He had the perfect 91Ƶheritage booth91Ƶ and donated it to the cause.

91ƵHe91Ƶs been really amazing and a really cool person to get to know,91Ƶ Farrell-Low said.

Ferguson cleaned up the booth, made sure all the parts were there and helped install it on the Saanich hillside.

Phone found, Farrell-Low reached out to Victoria artist Threlfall, the woman who inspired pole art in Fernwood, then beyond.

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91ƵShe does a lot of community-based work and work that re-purposes old material so she was a natural partner for this,91Ƶ Farrell-Low said.

There are purple flowers for overdose awareness, a little dog to represent Liam91Ƶs dog, and lupins 91Ƶ common in the Yukon where Farrell-Low and her brother grew up. A wind chime hangs on one open side.

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Details of the work by artist Beth Threlfall on the new wind phone, where those grieving can speak with loved ones at Royal Oak Burial Park in Saanich. (Christine van Reeuwyk/News Staff)

A bench and a phone book are in the works, as is the path to the wooded site.

91ƵIt91Ƶs a simple idea but it91Ƶs really powerful,91Ƶ Farrell-Low said.

She91Ƶs done a little test phone call but is waiting for a quiet moment, perhaps the anniversary of Liam91Ƶs death on Jan. 26 for a dedicated chat to him.

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Amanda Farrell-Low with the wind phone at Royal Oak Burial Park in Saanich. She led the initiative to have the phone installed, spurred by the loss of her brother in 2012. (Christine van Reeuwyk/News Staff)
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Executive director of Royal Oak Burial Park Ilan Highton, left, artist Beth Threlfall, Doug Ferguson who donated the phone booth, and Amanda Farrell-Low who led the wind phone initiative, celebrate installation at the Saanich site. (Courtesy Amanda Farrell-Low)


About the Author: Christine van Reeuwyk

Longtime journalist with the Greater Victoria news team.
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