In addition to the funeral held for Nelson in Burnaby on April 1, 1989, Dave and Inger Logelin arranged a memorial for Nelson on Copper Island and invited locals to attend. Madge's family and friends took the Lady Rose from Port Alberni, a few came up from Chemainus and Victoria, and others arrived by boat from around Barkley Sound, including Mary Scholey of Bamfield.
One of the Copper Island Camp staff members, Charlene Baldwin, wrote a poem that was read at the memorial, and Inger recently sent me a copy:
Honoring the Life and Memory of Nelson Dunkin
The disciple of a Jewish Carpenter
This note accompanied the poem:
In keeping with a long tradition of hospitality and camping, Nelson Dunkin made his property on Copper Island available for a Bible camp targeting native youth from the area in 1987. Dave and Inger Logelin became directors in 1990 and were offered the property to build a camp. The Wilderness Retreat Society, a Canadian non-profit organization directed by a board of missionaries and pastors, including Mary Scholey of Bamfield, was then established to receive Nelson Dunkin's donation. Church work parties have labored with Dave Logelin to build a solid and efficient facility to accomplish the work Nelson intended: preaching the gospel, training ministry, transforming lives and touching nations.
A verse from Copper Island Camp's song, written by a guest in Nelson's home years before the camp existed, says:
Copper Island is where you go
To seek the Lord so you will know
There is a place where you can be
Happy, joyful, and totally free.
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