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Wendy Poole Park : ウィキペディア英語版 | Wendy Poole Park
Wendy Poole Park is a small triangular plot of parkland near the waterfront in the Downtown Eastside in Vancouver, British Columbia. The land is at Alexander Street and the Main Street Overpass, and it was named by the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation for a young aboriginal woman who was murdered nearby in 1989.〔Cultural Memory Group (Bold, Castaldi, Knowles, McConnell, Schincariol). ''Remembering Women Murdered by Men: Memorials across Canada'', Sumach Press, 2006, ISBN 1-894549-53-8〕 The park contains a memorial boulder inscribed with information about Poole. ==Wendy Poole== Wendy Poole was a member of the Tsay Keh Dene ("People of the Mountains") a First Nations group from Northern B.C., near what is now the city of Prince George, British Columbia. She had moved to Vancouver, and was murdered on the second floor of a Downtown Eastside housing coop on January 26, 1989. Her body was later found in a nearby garbage dump. A man was arrested in connection with her death and was later acquitted. The murder case remains unsolved by police.〔Rolfsen, Catherine. ''Healing to move on: Native women and youth learn life skills and carving to remember the missing women'', ''Vancouver Sun'',Thursday, August 09, 2007〕〔(Missing Native Women )〕
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