Sisters in Spirit march continues to raise awareness in Edmonton

Tuesday, October 10th, 2017 12:05pm

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Summary

"There are so many who are still missing, so many whose lives were taken and there has been no justice, no answers to the families who are waiting in vain.”

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By Paula E. Kirman
Windspeaker.com Contributor

An annual march and rally in Edmonton presented emotional and passionate pleas for justice and action on the issue of missing and murdered Indigenous people.

The annual Sisters in Spirit march and rally took place at the Alberta Legislature on Oct. 7 and saw about 100 people come out to show their support for action and justice for Indigenous women and girls, as well as men and boys.

“My mother was murdered before I could meet her. She would have been an excellent grandmother,” said a tearful Freda Ballantyne, one of the organizers of the event. “My best friend Bella passed away in Toronto and I don't know what they are doing for her case. I see everyone's placards and I wonder what their stories are. I know what mine is, and what is why I am here today.”

Family members had an opportunity to speak about their missing and murdered loved ones and also express frustration with the justice system. Eva Potts' sister Misty, from Alexis First Nations, went missing in March of 2015. “When I reported my sister missing they told me I had to wait a week. As a family we went out and looked for her anyway,” she said. “We don't know anything. We have no closure.”

Potts' daughter Lorraine performed a jingle dress dance, a healing dance, while Shane Potts and Lloyd Cardinal sang and drummed. Participants later walked around the perimeter of the Legislature fountains holding signs and placards, most of them featuring names and photos of someone who is missing or murdered.

Sisters in Spirit began in 2005 as a national initiative led by Indigenous women to conduct research and raise awareness of the high rates of violence against Indigenous women and girls in Canada. Under the organization of the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC), annual vigils and marches for missing and murdered Indigenous women are held on or around Oct. 4, a day chosen to be a movement for social change. Since beginning with 11 such vigils in 2006, the number has grown to hundreds across the country in more recent years.

“This issue affects so many families. There are so many who are still missing, so many whose lives were taken and there has been no justice, no answers to the families who are waiting in vain,” said organizer April Wiberg in her remarks. She also raised the need for the government to address the issue of domestic human trafficking.

Wiberg is the founder of the annual Stolen Sisters and Brothers Awareness Walk. While not a founder of Sisters in Spirit, her group has supported the event every year and has begun to address the issue of missing and murdered Indigenous men and boys in addition to women and girls. 

“The strength of this movement is the strength of the families who won't stop until we get the justice we all deserve because we don't want this to continue.”

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