As a rule, in Canada we keep incarcerated offenders and victims of crime apart. But on a farm in Mission, B.C., they work together. The idea is that offenders and victims have something to offer one another.
Offenders work six-hour shifts at the 3.2-hectare farm — known as Emma's Acres. They come from two nearby minimum security prisons: Mission Institution and Kwikwexwelhp Healing Village for Indigenous men, 140 kilometres east of Vancouver. In the past year, 20 offenders have worked on the farm.
Emma's Acres
Emma's Acres, a 3.2-hectare farm outside Mission, B.C., is maintained by inmates from two minimum security prisons nearby. (Nick Purdon/CBC)

John has been in prison for most of his adult life. 

"I get up at 5 o'clock every morning because I know I am coming out here. I ain't done that in 35 years," says John, an inmate at Mission Institution serving a life sentence. John says he doesn't want to draw unwanted attention to his victims, so he asked CBC not to use his last name.
Emma's Acres
Offenders work 6-hour shifts at the farm - known as Emma’s Acres. They come from two nearby minimum security prisons. Mission institution, and Kwìkwèxwelhp Healing Village for Aboriginal men, 140 kilometres east of Vancouver. (Nick Purdon/CBC)

'It's just something I can't undo.'

In March 1985, during a blizzard in Toronto, John, left, and two accomplices pretended their car had broken down. When a Good Samaritan stopped to help them, they robbed and killed the man. John pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to life.
"It's just something I can't undo," he says of his of crime. "Something I got to live with, the victim's family has got to live with. A mother lost her husband. A kid had to grow up without her father."
John arrested
John, left, and Philip Vince, one of his two accomplices in a fatal robbery carried out in March 1985. (Toronto Star archives)

Prison cut John off from the outside world.

John continued to be violent in prison, and for 20 years, he was held in special handling units and had limited contact with the outside world.
"I watched a maple leaf blow in over the fence one day. One guy stabbed another guy over that leaf. Just so nice to have it, to feel it, to touch it. Two guys argued over the leaf, one guy got stabbed," John said. "He got stabbed pretty bad, too, over a leaf."
John on prison life
(Nick Purdon/CBC)

Ray King, whose son was murdered by Clifford Olson, is a regular on the farm. 

The promise of the farm is that it can help both convicts and victims of crime get to a better place. Ray King has been coming to the farm since 2013. In 1981, King's son, Ray Jr., 15, was murdered by serial killer Clifford Olson.
Ray King
Ray King, holds up a photo of his son, Ray Jr. (Nick Purdon/CBC)
"I come here, and all there is here is life," he said. "All I have been dealing with since 1981 is death, and it's such a welcome change."