Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Why, Why Why?' Funeral Held For Three Alberta Sisters Buried In Grain Truck

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 08:18 PM
    RED DEER, Alta. — Eleven-year-old Jana Bott was the quietest of the three sisters, an artistic girl who painted sunsets, sewed her own
    nightgown, decorated cakes and went most places clutching a pet rabbit named Marbles.
     
    Her twin sister, Dara, was a tomboy who tore around on a quad in her family's farmyard, her helmet plastered with mud. She played with insects, shot a bow and arrow, and collected stuffed cats.
     
    The oldest girl, 13-year-old Catie, was vibrant with an infectious grin. She wrote songs, made up plays and loved to read books and ride horses.
     
    A funeral for the Alberta sisters was held in Red Deer on Friday, 11 days after they were buried in a truckload of canola on their parents' farm near the village of Withrow.
     
    RCMP said the girls had been playing in the truck and suffocated before they could be pulled out.
     
    Brian Allan, a pastor at Withrow Gospel Mission and a friend of the Bott family, told hundreds of people who gathered for the service that it's difficult to understand the deaths.
     
    "Why, why why?" he said. "How is it possible that suddenly they could be swept away from us the way they were?
     
    "There are some things that are a mystery to us and will be until we get to the other side."
     
    Photos and home movies showed the three blond girls dressed up for church, pulling fish out of a lake and driving a combine on the farm. Several musicians played throughout the service.
     
    Five of the girls' female cousins, wearing crocheted headbands in the sisters' favourite colours — purple for Jana, blue for Dara and green for Catie — took turns on stage describing the trio and how they loved farm life.
     
     
     
    The girls' parents, Roger and Bonita Bott, have said they don't regret raising and involving their children on the farm. They also have a younger son, Caleb.
     
    Allan said friends and neighbouring farmers pitched in to finish the family's harvest the day after the accident.
     
    The small community is a close-knit one, he said, and everyone in it is hurting.
     
    Some of the first responders who rushed to scene to try to revive the girls knew them as family friends or from a nearby school they used to attend. A few years ago, the Bott children started home schooling.
     
    The girls were kind, mature and responsible children taken from the world too soon, said Allan.
     
    After they died, he woke up without the same trivial worries he'd had before, he said. Their deaths have put things in perspective.
     
    "Who cares if the Blue Jays win or not? Who cares if the price of oil drops through the basement? ... Nothing else matters, because our three girls were taken."
     
    He and others in the church believe the girls are dancing in heaven, and everyone will see them again, he said.
     
    "This isn't goodbye. This is we'll see you in a while."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It

    Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It
    Erik Anonby and Christina van der Wal have dedicated nearly a decade to comprehensively documenting the language of Kumzari in a way no one appears to have done before.

    Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It

    Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt

    Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt
    CORNWALL, Ont. — Two men have drowned in the St. Lawrence River near Cornwall, Ont, in what authorities suspect was a failed human smuggling attempt.

    Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt

    Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff

    Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff
    Canadian Labour Congress president Hassan Yussuff said more has to be done to talk about the value of unions and their role in society.

    Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff

    Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement, Here's How The Process Works

    Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement,  Here's How The Process Works
    Here's a look at how the process works:

    Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement, Here's How The Process Works

    Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter

    Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter
    First he was toast, now he's butter. Conrad the raccoon is back, sculpted into a slab of butter at Toronto's Canadian National Exhibition.

    Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter

    Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids

    Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids
    The man who killed his three children at their Merritt, B.C., home in 2008 began living in a psychiatric hospital two years later.

    Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids