One night in Hinton, Alta., 16-year-old Shelley-Anne Bacsu decided to walk home along Highway 16 from her boyfriend's house.
She was never heard from again.
But 40 years later, her story is part of a new project aiming to honour
the thousands of Indigenous women and girls who have been murdered or
gone missing in Canada: a newspaper of “cover stories,” which organizers
plan to hand deliver to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
On
Monday, one day before the National Day of Action for Missing and
Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, those walking by the Ontario
legislature at Queen's Park in Toronto came face to face with these
women.
More than 100 “missing” posters set up in front of the building showcased those whose stories are rarely amplified.
In the middle of the posters is a newsstand carrying the “4,000 Cover
Stories” newspaper compiled by the Native Women's Resource Centre of
Toronto (NWRCT).
“It's really to demonstrate the impact of how
many women have been missing that we know of,” Pamela Hart, NWRCT
executive director, told CTVNews.ca. “So instead of a small section of a
40-page newspaper, you have a 2,000 (page), double-sided newspaper of
cover stories of missing and murdered Indigenous women.”
She
said that the massive size of the newspaper was to show “how large a
newspaper would be if you covered all of these stories with the amount
of attention that they deserve.”
Each one of these women's disappearances could be a cover story, she said.
The project is aiming to spur action to protect Indigenous women and
girls in Canada. A national inquiry that ran between 2015 and 2019 called the issue a “genocide,”
finding that governments and law enforcement have often failed to
collect proper data or follow up on cases of missing Indigenous women.
More than 1,000 Indigenous women and girls were killed or went missing
between 1980 and 2012, according to the RCMP, but experts believe the
true number is closer to 4,000, according to the Native Women's
Association of Canada (NWAC).
And this violence is ongoing —
between 2015 and 2020, the most recent year for this data, Indigenous
women accounted for 24 per cent of all female homicide victims in
Canada, NWAC reports, despite making up just five per cent of the female population nationally.
Advocates say little has been done to tackle this crisis in the three
years since the release of the national inquiry's final report,
something that the NWRCT is hoping this project will challenge.
Each page and story within the newspaper will be accompanied by a QR
code that, when scanned, will draft a letter to the MP of that specific
missing or murdered woman's local riding, calling for action.
“My hope is that folks will learn and that they will follow through with
the letter … so that we are slamming MPs and Trudeau with letters that
force us to remember that this issue has never gone away,” Hart said.
“The other (goal) is that we honour and show that these women existed
and that they deserved a cover page and that they deserve to be spoken
about, and that there should have been outrage, there should have been
more storytelling, there should have been more coverage.”
Following the demonstration in Queen's Park, the newspaper will be part
of activities on Tuesday, which is National Day of Action for Missing
and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG).
It will be
present at the annual Sisters in Spirit Vigil at Allan Gardens in
Toronto, where community members gather to honour those who are no
longer with them and celebrate their lives, Hart explained.
Afterwards, organizers are planning to deliver the newspaper to Trudeau's doorstep in Ottawa.
“So everybody knows that it's been done and that he has one of the largest levels of responsibility to respond,” Hart said.
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