Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Woman's Obituary Says No Flowers, Asks For Letters To Politicians Instead

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2016 11:07 AM
    WINNIPEG — An 89-year-old Winnipeg diabetic who had recently been diagnosed with stage four breast cancer has chosen to end her life by refusing to take her insulin.
     
    And in lieu of flowers, her family is asking people to write politicians to show support for broadly defined right-to-die legislation, and to urge legislators to act soon.
     
    According to an obituary published in the Winnipeg Free Press, Jess Bowness died March 3 from complications related to her decision to refuse insulin.
     
    In the obituary, her family says they supported "her gutsy decision to die on her own terms."
     
    They also criticized "the legal and medical vacuum that still exists around the right to die," noting her death "took longer than it needed to" and there was "more discomfort and distress than needed to be."
     
    The Supreme Court of Canada struck down a ban on physician-assisted dying last year but gave the new Liberal federal government until June 6 to come up with replacement legislation.
     
    In the obituary, Bowness's relatives wrote of her flamboyant personality and love of shocking people or making them laugh.
     
    However, with diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, quadruple bypass surgery, neuropathy, memory loss and the cancer, "she'd had enough. There wasn't enough laughter anymore."
     
    Bowness was born in Singapore, where she worked as a nurse during the Japanese occupation of the city-state during the Second World War.
     
    She, her husband and children emigrated to Canada in 1965 and her husband, Michael, who died in 1999, became a professor of biochemistry at the University of Manitoba.
     
    Her obituary describes her as "stylish to the point of eccentricity," noting an outfit she wore once to an event to raise money for a son's terminally ill friend: "Silver knee-high platform leather boots, sparkly silver pants that tied at the knee, black-and-white striped blouse ... and lots of silver snake jewellery, bracelets and necklaces, some wrapped into her hair."
     
    The obituary recalls that sometimes, out of boredom, she would answer her phone with "city morgue."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Telus Agrees To Give Up To $7.3m In Customer Rebates For Misleading Ads

    Telus Agrees To Give Up To $7.3m In Customer Rebates For Misleading Ads
    The federal agency said Wednesday that Telus will give rebates of up to $7.34 million to some of its existing and former wireless customers over false or misleading representations in advertisements.

    Telus Agrees To Give Up To $7.3m In Customer Rebates For Misleading Ads

    Canadian Chef Ben Ing Named Head Chef Of Acclaimed Noma Restaurant In Denmark

    Canadian Chef Ben Ing Named Head Chef Of Acclaimed Noma Restaurant In Denmark
    Ben Ing, 30, of Ottawa says it's an "honour" to be vaulted to the head chef position at Rene Redzepi's establishment, which has two Michelin stars and earned the No. 1 spot on the The World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2014.

    Canadian Chef Ben Ing Named Head Chef Of Acclaimed Noma Restaurant In Denmark

    Mounties, Businessman Save Christmas For B.C. Children Seized By Ministry Worker

    RCMP in the Interior city of Trail say the constables visited a local home on Thursday to check on the well-being of five- and nine-year-old girls.

    Mounties, Businessman Save Christmas For B.C. Children Seized By Ministry Worker

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada
    Boyden, whose novels include Three Day Road and The Orenda, joined 68 other people recognized Wednesday by the Governor General with one of the country's highest civilian honours.

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average
    The number of aboriginal students finishing secondary school in the province has increased steadily from about 54 to 63 per cent over the past six years, as indicated by data from B.C.'s Education Ministry.

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast
    Paul Cottrell of Fisheries and Oceans Canada says a surfer found the whale on Dec. 23 and a necropsy was conducted on Christmas Day.

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast