Vancouver Sun

Funeral held for shooting victim

- MATT ROBINSON mrobinson@postmedia.com

A faint smell of sweetgrass lingered in the Glenhaven Memorial Chapel Monday morning when friends and family members of Willis Hunt arrived to say goodbye to the 33-year-old man, who was killed earlier this month in east Vancouver.

After the chapel pews had filled to their capacity of 250 people, mourners who had arrived a little late stood in the perimeter of the room. And when the perimeter packed full, those who arrived even later spilled into the hall.

Hunt lay in a hand-painted wood casket at the front of the room, an arm’s reach or two from his mother Sunni Hunt. Flanking Hunt’s casket were red and black painted drums and above it was a painting of a cross surrounded by wildlife — an eagle, a turtle, a whale and other animals — all recreated in a Northwest Coast Indigenous style.

SHOT DEAD

Hunt was shot dead in the early hours of Aug. 10 on a quiet back road just a few kilometres from the chapel. Police have characteri­zed his shooting as a traffic dispute turned deadly, but by Monday they had yet to publicly identify any suspects and there was no further informatio­n on the investigat­ion.

A dozen pallbearer­s — young men close to Hunt — stood in an alcove at the side of the room. They were dressed in black T-shirts that depicted in white a portrait of Hunt and an image of Ken Lum’s iconic sculpture Monument to East Vancouver, a neon cross inscribed “East Van” that stands at the corner of Clark Drive and East 6th Avenue. “Big Brother,” the shirts read.

Robert Joseph, a hereditary chief of the Gwawaenuk First Nation, an ambassador for Reconcilia­tion Canada and a member of the National Assembly of First Nations Elders Council, offered an opening prayer and spoke at Hunt’s funeral. Joseph said he had met with the pallbearer­s and others earlier, during a memorial service for Hunt on Sunday.

“I heard so many inspiring things about what a young man who left us so early could still do in his lifetime to impact people, bring about change, share love, inspire others to pick up those who fall and be caring and compassion­ate beyond measure,” Joseph said.

“I was moved, really beyond words, to comprehend what a beautiful, powerful young man Willis was.”

An acoustic guitarist led mourners in renditions of the Christian hymns Amazing Grace and Precious Memories and worship songs How Great is Our God and What a Beautiful Name, before Kwakwaka’wakw and Haida singers performed songs of their own.

The pallbearer­s, some of whom had sung alongside their Kwakwaka’wakw and Haida relatives, then guided Hunt’s coffin up the chapel aisle, out the building and into a waiting black hearse that was destined for a cemetery in Surrey.

Hunt, who was born and raised in east Vancouver, was the city’s 14th homicide victim of the year.

Homicide detectives have asked drivers with dash cam video who had driven in the area of McGill and Renfrew streets between 1:30 and 2 a.m. Friday, Aug. 10, to contact police at 604-717-2500 or anonymousl­y at Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ?? Sunni Hunt, centre, mourns at her son Willis Hunt’s funeral in Vancouver on Monday.
ARLEN REDEKOP Sunni Hunt, centre, mourns at her son Willis Hunt’s funeral in Vancouver on Monday.

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