Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Grieving Families Seek Voice, Hope In Aboriginal Women Inquiry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2015 10:57 AM
    WINNIPEG — For years, Bernadette Smith says, she felt like she was waging a battle on her own.
     
    When her sister, Claudette Osborne, disappeared in 2008, Smith held vigils with a handful of people who knew her pain, put up "missing" posters with family members and, more recently, organized a group to drag Winnipeg's Red River for clues about the fate of missing and murdered indigenous women.
     
    "I remember feeling so angry and crying and going: 'Where is everybody? Why doesn't our community care about our women?'" Smith recalls. "Does a life not matter?"
     
    Osborne's four children and Smith still don't have the answers they are looking for, but the search has become a little less lonely.
     
    And when an inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women gets underway, as early as the summer, Smith and other families hope their voices will be heard and given the weight they deserve.
     
    "It's the families that are living this every day and breathing this," Smith says. "They're the ones who know what could have prevented what's happened to their loved ones."
     
    The RCMP issued a landmark report last year which put the total of missing and murdered aboriginal women at 1,181. Indigenous women make up 4.3 per cent of the Canadian population, but the report found they account for 16 per cent of female homicides and 11.3 per cent of missing women.
     
    For years, the families whose loved ones are part of those statistics called for an inquiry, but the previous Conservative government steadfastly refused.
     
    The Liberals came to power in October and last week new Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett announced an inquiry the shape and scope of which is to be determined in the next few months. It will rely heavily on input from families, she said. 
     
    Many are asking for the power to formally advise the inquiry. They want to ensure financial assistance for those who want to participate, as well as guarantee culturally appropriate support services.
     
    "It's a lot different than any other kind of commission or inquiry," says Beverley Jacobs, lead researcher on Amnesty International’s report on missing and murdered indigenous women. "It's very spiritual and emotional ... We're not talking about a pipeline."
     
     
    Jacobs, who is a former president of the Native Women’s Association of Canada, has a personal interest in the upcoming inquiry.
     
    Her cousin, Tashina General, was 21 when her body was found in a shallow grave on the Six Nations reserve in southern Ontario. General was four months pregnant and had been strangled. Her former boyfriend was convicted of second-degree murder, but a new trial recently was ordered upon appeal.
     
    An inquiry has to have built-in ceremonies that take into account that a dead woman's spirit is disrupted every time her name is mentioned, Jacobs says.
     
    "They're resting (and) we're bringing up some of the horrific issues that they had to endure. They're very close by. Having that ceremony, feasts and elder involvement has to be an integral part of the inquiry process."
     
    The inquiry should also learn from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission by travelling to often-remote communities to better understand the victims, she suggests.
     
    Families, she says, will need culturally appropriate support services as they relive the trauma of losing their mothers, daughters, aunts or sisters.
     
    "It's to ensure that no harm is done to any person that's involved."
     
    Grand Chief Sheila North Wilson, who represents northern Manitoba First Nations, says the process must be shaped by those who have fought so long for the issue to be recognized.
     
    Families who have held vigils to bring attention to the disappearance of indigenous women are the reason why an inquiry has been called, she says. The inquiry should not only honour them, but listen to them carefully.
     
    "It would give us all the lay of the land — how police react to them, how they have to do ... the searches themselves," says North Wilson, head of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak. "They know what it feels like to be patronized."
     
    For Smith, the inquiry wasn't something she lobbied for.
     
    A government committed to reducing violence against indigenous women could use the estimated $40 million the inquiry will cost on programs addressing the root causes highlighted by previous studies, she says.
     
    But now that an inquiry is coming, she wants to be part of it.
     
    "We've waited this long."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors
    The home, run by a charitable group known as E4C, made headlines in September when one of its residents, a 17-year-old girl, was charged with stabbing a man to death on a nearby street.

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’
    The attack came two days after a mosque in Peterborough, Ont., was set ablaze in the aftermath of last week's terrorist attacks in Paris that left 129 people dead.

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users
    The group wants to see the existing bureaucracies that oversee social benefits, such as disability payments, instead funnel all the savings into tax measures that would put more money into the hands of low-income earners.

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users

    Judge Dismisses Jury In 'Scud Stud' Defamation Trial Over Opening Remarks

    The judge said the opening statements by Arthur's Kent's lawyer were prejudicial and it would be unfair to continue after what the jurors heard.

    Judge Dismisses Jury In 'Scud Stud' Defamation Trial Over Opening Remarks

    Public, Political Opposition Seen As 'Greatest Risks' To Olympic Bid: Documents

    Public, Political Opposition Seen As 'Greatest Risks' To Olympic Bid: Documents
    Toronto officials saw public resistance as the main threat to a possible Olympic bid and worried holding a referendum on the issue would "allow critics to overstate and inflate opposition" to hosting the 2024 Games, documents reveal.

    Public, Political Opposition Seen As 'Greatest Risks' To Olympic Bid: Documents

    Alberta Politician Maria Fitzpatrick Recounts Her History As Victim Of Domestic Violence

    Alberta Politician Maria Fitzpatrick Recounts Her History As Victim Of Domestic Violence
    Maria Fitzpatrick, member for Lethbridge-East, told the house that at one point during her troubled nine-year marriage to her ex-husband, who has since died, she awoke to find he had pointed a gun to the back of her head.

    Alberta Politician Maria Fitzpatrick Recounts Her History As Victim Of Domestic Violence