By WENDY SQUIRES
Last night, around 200 people gathered in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda to mark the one-year anniversary of Tracy Connelly’s death. Tracy Connelly, 40, was found murdered in the back of her van on July 21 last year – but her killer still has not been found.
This is speech Mamamia contributor Wendy Squires gave at the vigil last night. It has been published with full permission:
Several years ago I set out to Melbourne from Sydney to start a new life. I decided to settle in St Kilda, a suburb I had often visited and remembered as egalitarian and inclusive, far from the elitist and beautiful people-only attitude I had left behind. It was one of the best moves I’ve ever made.
I didn’t know too many people here when I arrived and, as I was working from home, could go days without human interaction.
But there was a smiling face, albeit shy at first, who soon made me feel part of the community, a statuesque brunette sex worker who worked from a corner close by.
I didn’t know her name – that would come later – but after my dog bounded up to her one day for a cuddle, we became friends of sorts.
Over the ensuing year or so, the woman I now know as Tracy Connelly and I shared many a laugh. She cheered me up if she thought I was flat and I would bring her back a coffee from my morning dog walk in case she was still standing in the cold.