When the clock stopped

Cara and Murray Sinclair sit on an old log by the beachfront, with large rocks and water stretching out before them. In the distance, a mountain rises against the horizon.

Photography by He虂le虁ne Cyr

Tie-dye T-shirt, cowboy hat, and cowboy boots. That鈥檚 what Craig Sinclair would wear to many of his chemotherapy treatments at BC Cancer in Vancouver. It didn鈥檛 take long for most doctors, nurses, and staff there to know him by first name and smile every time they saw him. It was an 鈥渙utrageous outfit,鈥 remembers his sister-in-law, Cara Sinclair, with a smile of her own. But that was just who Craig was.

Whether he was helping one of his special education students with a math problem or his two young children with the intricacies of kicking a soccer ball, Craig was always trying to lift up those around him. He just loved life, says his brother, Murray Sinclair, Com鈥84.

So, when Craig was diagnosed with the aggressive form of brain cancer known as glioblastoma in March of 2021, it wasn鈥檛 too surprising what his instructions were to his brother, who was also his medical power of attorney: Craig not only wanted to live as long as he could, but he wanted to live 鈥渂ig鈥 every day.

And he did, says Mr. Sinclair, indulging in everything from hamburgers and milkshakes when he probably shouldn鈥檛 have to watching movies late into the night to spending as much time as possible with his family. That lust for life stayed true even as Craig started to lose the function of his limbs and other body parts and as he travelled to London, England, to receive the immunotherapy that he couldn鈥檛 get in Canada.

But even though Craig was holding out hope for more time 鈥 which the immunotherapy did give him 鈥 鈥測ou always knew the clock was ticking,鈥 says Mrs. Sinclair.

On March 20, 2024, that clock finally stopped.

Craig was 55 years old.

  • Brothers Craig and Murray Sinclair stand in a hospital hallway wearing face masks. Craig is wearing a tie-dye shirt and cowboy boots.'

    Brothers Craig, left, and Murray Sinclair.

  • Craig and Murray Sinclair stand in the kitchen, with Craig dressed in a colorful shirt and shorts, while Murray wears a Christmas apron.

Almost three months after Craig died, Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair were onstage in the atrium of the Queen鈥檚 School of Medicine. They were there to announce their $25-million gift to cancer research at Queen鈥檚, one of the largest donations ever made to Queen鈥檚 Health Sciences.

As it was explained that day, the money would go toward a new state-of-the-art cancer imaging facility, a specialized biomanufacturing facility for immunotherapy treatments, a new training program for aspiring cancer researchers, and more. In recognition of the gift, the Queen鈥檚 Cancer Research Institute was renamed the Cara & Murray Sinclair Cancer Research Institute.

The Sinclairs鈥 gift had been in the works for more than a year at that point, but the timing of the announcement was particularly poignant. Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair fought back tears as they talked about Craig and their hopes for what this gift would do for those diagnosed with cancer and the loved ones who watch them face it.

You could hear a pin drop.

鈥淪adly, our loss is not unique,鈥 said Mrs. Sinclair. 鈥淐ancer crosses all lines, all cultures, races, and religions.鈥

According to the Canadian Cancer Society, two in five Canadians are expected to be diagnosed with cancer in their lifetime. Approximately one in four Canadians will likely die of the disease. This year alone, it鈥檚 estimated that every day an average of 675 people in the country will be diagnosed with cancer and 241 people will die from it.

But as Mrs. Sinclair noted, cancer鈥檚 universality is what can actually bring hope.

鈥淲e are all touched by cancer,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd because of that we can find the collective strength and motivation to do something about it.鈥

Two months later, I catch up with the Sinclairs via Zoom from their home in Vancouver. I want to learn more about who they are and why they wanted to make such a large gift to cancer research at Queen鈥檚 in particular. The two sit on a big couch in their living room sipping coffees with a wall of abstract paintings behind them. Their dog, Parker, a Frenchie, makes a brief appearance to say hello.

Giving interviews isn鈥檛 something the Sinclairs are necessarily used to. They aren鈥檛 used to having their names attached to their charitable work either. The words 鈥渉umble,鈥 鈥渄own to earth,鈥 and 鈥渦nderstated鈥 come up again and again when I talk to others who know them.

Giving back is nothing new for the two, however, particularly Mrs. Sinclair. She was born in Kingston, grew up in Ottawa, and eventually moved to Vancouver where she completed an MFA at the University of British Columbia. 

  • Cara and Murray Sinclair walking through tall grasses with the Vancouver waterfront behind them. He has his arm around her shoulder.

    Cara and Murray Sinclair near their home in Vancouver.

It was also in Vancouver where Mrs. Sinclair鈥檚 volunteer work took off, particularly in the Downtown Eastside, an area notorious for a complex set of challenges including drug use, crime, homelessness, and poverty. In 2005, Mrs. Sinclair started a charitable initiative that eventually became in 2011. The non-profit now assists unhoused and at-risk Vancouver youth through a bursary program and the distribution of backpacks stuffed with essential items.

In 2021, Mrs. Sinclair was awarded for her volunteer work. In the award announcement, the committee said, 鈥淐ara鈥檚 vision and efforts have directly improved the lives of thousands of disadvantaged youth, educated thousands of others about youth homelessness, and made Vancouver a kinder place to live.鈥

Mr. Sinclair admits that giving back 鈥減robably isn鈥檛 as instilled in my DNA as it is in Cara鈥檚鈥 (though Mrs. Sinclair says he does a lot more than he lets on). He grew up in Toronto and went to Queen鈥檚 from 1980 to 1984 for a commerce degree. Among a long list of Queen鈥檚 memories that stick with him are his time living in Princess Towers, rolling $10,000 worth of pennies during Frosh Week, caring professors like Lewis Johnson, and learning how to be self-sufficient.

One good Queen鈥檚 friend was a popular engineering student named Peter Carty, who was diagnosed with cancer in the fall of 1983. He was the first person Mr. Sinclair knew who battled the disease. 鈥淧eter was collected every Wednesday and driven to Pearson where he flew to Atlanta to undergo the immunotherapy of the day,鈥 remembers Mr. Sinclair. 鈥淗e flew home after a couple of hours of treatment to resume his studies.鈥

Mr. Carty died in the spring of 1984.

鈥淚t was tough to comprehend his passing at that age,鈥 says Mr. Sinclair. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure it鈥檚 much easier now.鈥

After graduation, Mr. Sinclair moved to Vancouver for a job in finance and never looked back. Since 2013, he has been the chief investment officer at Earlston Investments Corp., a private investment company. Before that, he founded and was the chairman of Sprott Resource Lending Corp. and held various senior management roles with Quest Capital Corp., the predecessor to Sprott.

鈥淭he fact that Cara and Murray made a donation to cancer research doesn鈥檛 surprise me, although the generosity of their gift is really quite remarkable.鈥

Dale Bonsall, a friend of the Sinclairs

Although Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair moved to Vancouver around the same time, they actually met on Bourbon Street in New Orleans in 1986 during a conference. The two married in 1987, had two children, and later made it part of their collective mission to give back whenever they could. Over the years, that has meant donating time and money to a range of organizations, including the Winnipeg Art Gallery, the BC Cancer Foundation, and the Canadian Mental Health Association. Their gift to cancer research at Queen鈥檚, however, was by far their largest.

鈥淭he fact that Cara and Murray made a donation to cancer research doesn鈥檛 surprise me, although the generosity of their gift is really quite remarkable,鈥 says Dale Bonsall, a longtime friend of the Sinclairs and a colleague of Mrs. Sinclair鈥檚 at HELP Youth Canada. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e just wonderful, caring, understated people. I wouldn鈥檛 have been surprised if they had done it anonymously but I鈥檓 very happy they didn鈥檛 because the personal story behind their donation may inspire others to also contribute to cancer research.鈥

That personal story doesn鈥檛 just include Craig. Mrs. Sinclair鈥檚 parents both had cancer, another brother-in-law has cancer, Mr. Sinclair鈥檚 father died of cancer, and they both have a handful of friends who either have cancer now or have had it in the past.

鈥淚t鈥檚 everywhere,鈥 says Mrs. Sinclair. 鈥淎nd Murray and I talked for a long time about whether we could make this gift anonymously or not. And we ultimately decided, 鈥楴o. Queen鈥檚 wants to leverage this.鈥 And we wanted that, too. And so, we just thought that there comes a time when you鈥檙e trying to make a significant impact that you have to get outside of your comfort zone.鈥 Queen鈥檚 Dean of Health Sciences Jane Philpott can still clearly remember meeting Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair for one of the first times in mid-2023 on a trip to Vancouver. The three met for dinner on a Sunday evening at the Marine Lounge, a laid-back restaurant overlooking English Bay.

鈥淚 was struck by how casual it all was,鈥 says Dean Philpott. 鈥淵ou tend to think when you meet with people who can make a $25-million gift that it鈥檒l be in some fancy, formal place. But it wasn鈥檛, and we just chatted about their family, about Vancouver, their travels. Nothing was pretentious about it.鈥

  • Cara and Murray Sinclair walk on a pathway in the woods.

    Cara and Murray Sinclair walk in Pacific Spirit Regional Park.

Dean Philpott was also struck by how confident the Sinclairs were about making their gift. They never questioned whether it was the right thing to do, she remembers. 鈥淭hey knew right from the beginning that this was something that was really important to them, and they knew it would have an impact.鈥

Part of that confidence came from a couple of visits the Sinclairs made to the Queen鈥檚 Cancer Research Institute in 2023. As they toured the facilities and met with passionate PhD students hunched over microscopes and leading researchers like immunotherapy expert Paul Kubes, the 鈥渆nthusiasm of the place became contagious,鈥 says Mr. Sinclair.

Mrs. Sinclair agrees. 鈥淭his is the top cancer research institute in Canada, and we could see that. A lot of what these brilliant scientists were doing went way over our heads,鈥 she says with a laugh, 鈥渂ut you just knew they knew what they were doing, and they were doing it right.鈥

Back on their couch in Vancouver, the Sinclairs are thinking again about Craig. You can see the impact of his life and death in their faces and hear it in their words about him 鈥 鈥渙ptimistic,鈥 鈥渕odest,鈥 鈥渇unny,鈥 鈥渟trong.鈥

Yet as devastated as the Sinclairs are about Craig鈥檚 passing, they clearly aren鈥檛 swallowed by grief. They are determined to use Craig鈥檚 memory and this gift to help others, to try to extend lifespans, to put, as Mr. Sinclair says, 鈥渆ven one more tool in the toolbox鈥 of the experts who wake up every day trying to beat back this disease.

Mrs. Sinclair is still thinking about Craig鈥檚 鈥渙utrageous鈥 chemo outfit.

鈥淲hat a strange, ironic reversal,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat somebody so ill can make you feel so buoyant by their story, that they can make you somehow feel better.鈥

But that鈥檚 what cancer can do, she adds.

鈥淚t can teach you so many lessons along the way. It taught us about Craig and his strength, about ourselves. And it taught us that even though the clock was ticking, if cancer research can give you more time 鈥 five, 10 years 鈥 then that can be such an incredibly positive thing.鈥 


The Cara & Murray Sinclair Cancer Research Institute: A world leader

Founded in 2001, the Sinclair Cancer Research Institute (SCRI) is the only research centre in Canada that brings together experts from three key areas: cancer biology and genetics, clinical trials, and cancer care and epidemiology.

It鈥檚 rare to have this breadth of research in one institution, says Queen鈥檚 Health Sciences Dean Jane Philpott. And as she put it during the Sinclair family鈥檚 $25-million gift announcement in June, that comprehensiveness means that the SCRI can 鈥渢ake cancer research from bench to bedside and back.鈥

The Sinclairs鈥 gift will build on that foundation and help position the SCRI 鈥渢o be a leader in cancer research on the world stage,鈥 adds Dean Philpott.

In particular, the gift will fund two new state-of-the-art facilities.

One will be an imaging facility equipped with technology for seeing the immune system interact with cancer cells in real time. This will allow researchers to better grasp how cancer cells defend against the immune system and resist treatments.

The other facility will focus on making personalized immunotherapy treatments available to Canadian patients faster for clinical trials. These types of therapies use a person鈥檚 own immune system to find and attack cancer cells and are among the most promising for treating a variety of different cancers.

The Sinclairs鈥 gift will also go toward a new training program to support graduate students, as well as an innovation fund for supporting new collaborative team-based research on cancers that remain hard to treat.

鈥淭his gift really does change the game for us,鈥 says Dr. Andrew Craig, director of the SCRI. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 so exciting when alumni want to make sure Queen鈥檚 is in a better place than when they left it. So, I鈥檓 looking forward to working with the Sinclairs and my colleagues to make sure their gift yields maximum potential benefit for all of those affected by cancer.鈥

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