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Family's heartbreak: Sculpture stolen from gravesite in Dunedin

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 15 Jul 2019, 12:58PM
Joanna and Philip Bishop-Cherry want thieves to return a sculpture to the top of her father's gravestone. (Photo / Supplied)
Joanna and Philip Bishop-Cherry want thieves to return a sculpture to the top of her father's gravestone. (Photo / Supplied)

Family's heartbreak: Sculpture stolen from gravesite in Dunedin

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 15 Jul 2019, 12:58PM

A sculpture stolen from a Dunedin man's grave is likely of little worth to the thief - but it means everything to the man's family.

Mosgiel woman Joanna Bishop-Cherry said her mother visited her father Kenneth Bishop's burial site at Green Park Cemetery in Waldronville on Friday, on the fourth anniversary of his death.

She noticed a green-painted, concrete, Māori-style sculpture was broken off and stolen from the top of the gravestone.

It was glued and screwed on, so would have taken tools to remove.

Bishop-Cherry said her mother was "devastated''.

"Mum was just gutted. It's pretty scary, because there's a lot of taonga here.''

The thief likely thought it was valuable greenstone, she said.

"We wanted it because it was pretty - we've always been quite into Māori culture.''

The family just wanted it back and was not interested in punishing anyone.

Bishop-Cherry urged anyone with information about its whereabouts, or who had seen anyone selling the piece, to come forward.

The stolen sculpture.

The stolen sculpture. (Photo / Supplied)

She was told someone saw the sculpture at the cemetery the preceding Tuesday.

It would likely cost thousands to replace including installation costs, she said.

Bishop was a teacher who worked at King's High School for about 20 years, but left a few months before he died of cancer in July 2015.

A police spokeswoman said the police received a report of the incident on Friday.

"At this stage police have no active lines of inquiry. However, we would welcome any information that may assist police in recovering this item.''

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