British Columbia

Komagata Maru memorial defaced again on 100th anniversary

The Komagata Maru memorial has been defaced for the second time this year just as B.C. prepares to commemorate Friday the ship's arrival in Vancouver exactly 100 years ago.

Vancouver Park Board tries to clean it, makes it worse

The Komagata Maru Memorial lost some of its rusty patina after a Vancouver Park Board crew used the wrong chemicals to remove graffiti. (CBC)

The Komagata Maru memorial has been defaced for the second time this year just as B.C. prepares to commemorate on Friday the ship's arrival in Vancouver exactly 100 years ago.

Vancouver Park Board commissioner Niki Sharma says graffiti was discovered about a week ago on a portion of the monument where someone had spray painted, "Owen is gay."

The park board removed the graffiti, but the chemicals used in the cleaning process also removed the rusty boat-like finish that is part of its overall design.

Vancouver Park Board commissioner Niki Sharma says the Komagata Maru will be restored after Friday's ceremonies. The Memorial was defaced with spray paint about a week ago and was further damaged when the park board attempted to remove the graffiti with strong chemcials. (CBC)

Sharma says the park board will have it properly restored, but it won't be in time for Friday's ceremonies. Instead, she says it will be covered with something appropriate.

She says the vandalism is unfortunate, but she doesn't believe it was intentionally hateful.

"I am hopeful in the sense where I feel like it wasn’t a hateful act," she said.

"I think it was just a matter of it being a public monument in the space, but it underscores the importance of telling the story. It’s such an important monument that people need to know why it’s there and what it represents."

In January, a man was photographed urinating on the memorial. He apologized and no charges were laid after police determined he was a mentally ill drug addict.

The memorial commemorates an incident in Canadian history when on May 23, 1914, 376 immigrants from India seeking asylum anchored in Vancouver harbour for two months because they were not allowed to disembark. They were eventually forced to return to India where 20 passengers were killed in an ensuing riot.

Both B.C. and Canada have since issued apologies for their handling of the affair.

The Komagata Maru memorial was erected in 2012.