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Waterloo Chronicle, 27 Oct 2022, p. 16

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DY=\TAV/=) 9 Janta! maa) 2 q q 8 Rg rt 5 3 g kA = FS 2 g Zz = 2 3 é Oo 8 i a” im From city centres to rural communities, we have you covered with + Best In Class Next Day Delivery + Decades of experience + Competitive Pricing + Limitless volume capacity Join some of Canada’s largest companies who rely on us for their ecommerce delivery. Get a quote today: metrolandparcelservices.ca SCAN FOR M PARCEL SERVICES ESRMATOn waterloochronicle.ca IBNEWS TOURNAMENT OF HOPE HONOURS WOMAN: HER FAMILY VOWS TO MAKE THE SYSTEM BETTER BILL JACKSON bjackson@torstar.ca WARNING: This article contains details about the associated with mental health and may be upsetting to some readers. Fiona Roth sal have a a! Jot of questions daughter's ears cation this year, but there's one thing they're certain of — it isn't some- thing she wanted. Obituaries often ignore this fact when people suc- cumb to "a disease of men- tal illness" like Kaitlyn did, they say. "You look to the bottom where the dona- tions go, and we didn't want to do just that," said Mike. wanted to say what it was, because it is a dis- ease — it's an illness,” he said. “Kaitly m didn't want this. She was actually ask- ing for help and trying to get better, but unfortunate- ly there's long wait-lists and t programs weren't inaugural Kaitlyn Tournament of Hope held Friday and Saturday, Oct. 14 and 15, at Bluevale Collegiate Institute includ- ed eight baskothall teams consisting of 120 partici- pants and it vime to change that narrative moving for- ward. The Roths said they con- sulted organizers of the Ja- cob Ranton Memorial Bas- ketball Tournament, held annually at Waterloo Colle- giate Institute, and decided to create a similar event with girls'teamsin memory of Kaitlyn, who played for her high school team as Above: The Roth family, from left: Molly, Mike, Fiona and Simon Khanna photo Michael Jr., with a butterfly representing Kaitlyn, who died last spring. Below: Kaitlyn Lydia Roth died on April 28, 2022. | Prestige Portraits photo well as the Wildhawks rep eavfental health aware- ness was at the forefront di e week leading up to the event, with students and staff generating discus- sion about compassion and For the Roths, including Kaitlyn's siblings Molly, 19, and Michael, 16, knowing they can make a difference in the lives of others in the future has been comforting to the healing process, Fio- sai "Tm happy our family was able to raise awareness about mental health to help more Kait- lyns out there," said her sis- ter Molly. Through connecting with the broader communi- wt hey ve realized just how ctioning people have minds that are a battleground like Kait- I "Thou she dealt with anxiety schoo, it never impacted abilities, her mother said. Described as a go-getter tho aspired to do the best she could in everything she aa, Kaitlyn was involved in student council, choirs, band, basketball, rugby and le swim team, and took part in leadership confer- ences and mission work with her church. She as: as- pired to purst working with children with with special ni was her third year at the Univer- sity of Waterloo when she died April 28, just shy of her 21st birthday. Her mental struggle be- gan months prior in July of 2021, when she lost her "go- getter zest,” her mom said. When they went to the See - page 17

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