Missing, murdered women inquiry hears stories of loss at first B.C. hearing
SMITHERS, B.C. — Mary Jane Hill wasn’t there to witness the birth of her grandchildren or to see them graduate from high school. She won’t be there when her daughter needs her most, when she’s in pain, or on her wedding day.
These are the losses Vicki Hill says she’s suffered because of the death of her mother, whose naked body was found along British Columbia’s Highway of Tears in 1978.
“I never knew her, but to me, in my eyes, she gave me life,” Hill told the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women on Tuesday. “Now I have to live without her.”
Hill was the first family member to testify at an inquiry hearing in Smithers, B.C., on Tuesday. She spoke softly and slowly, and her 15-year-old daughter, Zoey Hill-Harris, comforted her as tears rolled down her face.