In late September, Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook died tragically in Ottawa. Pootoogook was an award-winning illustrator from Cape Dorset, Nunavut. Her ink-and-crayon depictions of everyday life in the north B次元官网网址 families sitting to eat a meal of seal meat or shopping at the Arctic co-op B次元官网网址 received international acclaim.
Ottawa police believe PootoogookB次元官网网址檚 death is suspicious B次元官网网址 she may have been the victim of foul play. If so, she is yet another Indigenous woman to die violently in Canada.
Indigenous women and girls are at least three times more likely to experience violence than non-Indigenous women and six times more likely to be murdered. On any given day, thousands of First Nations, Inuit and M茅tis women and children are living in emergency shelters to escape abuse (though on-reserve shelters remain woefully underfunded).
The RCMP hasnB次元官网网址檛 kept accurate statistics on the number of murdered or missing people, but Indigenous womenB次元官网网址檚 organizations and affected families have reported hundreds of cases of loved ones who have been victims of violent crime. After years of indifference and inaction, CanadaB次元官网网址檚 government has finally launched an inquiry into the many lives lost to violence.
Although the national inquiry into murdered and missing Indigenous women wonB次元官网网址檛 investigate cases police previously examined, it will look at broader factors that put Indigenous women and girls at such great risk. According to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, this includes institutional racism, social and economic marginalization and inadequate access to affordable housing so women can escape abusive relationships. Police forces have often failed to deal with violence against Indigenous peoples, and officers themselves have been implicated or charged with assaults and sexual abuse.
Human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and Kairos have drawn attention to resource development in Indigenous territories, where the influx of transient workers B次元官网网址 along with money, alcohol and drugs from outside the community B次元官网网址 puts Indigenous women at risk of aggressive harassment and violence by men.
As environmentalists, we often emphasize the impacts of mining or oil and gas development on wildlife and ecosystems but ignore the staggering social consequences for Indigenous communities, especially women. Amnesty InternationalB次元官网网址檚 research on the social impacts of resource development in northeast B.C.B次元官网网址檚 booming Peace Region has uncovered numerous accounts of attacks on women and girls, including B次元官网网址渄omestic violence, encounters with strangers that ranged from aggressive harassment to brutal violence, including unsolicited offers of drugs and money for sex, sexual assault and gang rapes.B次元官网网址
These stories are heartbreaking, but the response from Indigenous peoples brings hope. One such grassroots effort is the Moose Hide Campaign, a growing movement of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal men dedicated to ending violence against women and children, through education and peer support, encouraging men to develop healthier relationships with the women in their lives.
The Moose Hide Campaign was created by a young First Nations girl named Raven Lacerte and her father, Paul, in Victoria. Working with First Nations hunters, they have distributed more than 250,000 small moosehide squares to communities across Canada B次元官网网址 encouraging men to wear the pins as symbols of their commitment to be accountable for their behaviour and to reject violence. What makes the campaign particularly poignant is that Raven and her father made the first pins from the hide of a moose they harvested near the infamous Highway of Tears between Prince George and Prince Rupert, where dozens of Indigenous women have gone missing or been found murdered.
The inquiry into the crisis of murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls is long overdue and is a testament to the hard work and leadership of Indigenous women and communities who have spent decades calling for an inquiry. It will proceed over the next few years and will make recommendations to governments, police and other agencies. We must also take personal action to end violence by participating in initiatives like the Moose Hide Campaign, which bring people together to promote healing.
These are important steps for all Canadians to embrace if we are to advance reconciliation.