MMIWG2S advocates urge change during Manitoba ceremonies for National Day of Action - Action News
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Manitoba

MMIWG2S advocates urge change during Manitoba ceremonies for National Day of Action

Smoke rose from a sacred fire into the early morning mist at Winnipeg's Kildonan Park on Tuesday, as people gathered for a sunrise ceremony to mark the Oct. 4 National Day of Action in honour of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, two-spirit and gender-diverse people.

'We are more than just numbers. We are mothers, we are grandmothers, we are children,' says community activist

Raven Hart sings a warrior song at Tuesday's sunrise ceremony to mark the National Day of Action in honour of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, two-spirit and gender-diverse people. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Smoke rose from a sacred fire into the early morning mist at Winnipeg's Kildonan Park on Tuesday, as people gathered for a sunrise ceremony to mark the Oct. 4National Day of Actionin honour of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, two-spirit and gender-diverse people.

The sunrise ceremony took place at the Rainbow Butterfly warming hut originally set up at The Forks and later moved to Kildonan Park which represents the lives that have been taken, said Angela Lavallee, a community activist and co-creator of the hut.

"This [warming hut] is an honour to all the Indigenous women, girls, babies and two-spirited relatives who have transformed into spirit, and whose lives continue to change and inspire us all to create a new world that is worthy of our children," Lavallee told CBC on Tuesday.

Posters displaying some of the 231 calls for justice fromthe final 2019 report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girlswere also placed on the grass outsidethe hut.

All Indigenous women and gender-diverse people encounter violence in different ways, Lavallee said, and the 231 calls represent that spectrum of experience.

Angela Lavallee, a community activist and co-creator of the Rainbow Butterfly warming hut, hopes all Canadians will read the MMIWG inquiry's 231 calls for justice and find ways to help on a personal level. (Karen Pauls/CBC)

She hopes Canadians will read the posters and find something they canpersonally do to promote safety.

"It starts from your heart first, right? Your heart, your home, your community, and then all of Canada. It's just like that ripple of water," she said.

At the ceremony, attendees wrote the names of friends and family who have been lost to violence on butterfly posters, before standing them up on the grass.

Jay Lavallee-Constant, Angela Lavallee's grandson, writes the name of his sister Zaylynn Emerald Rain, who was killed in 2015. Lavallee says no investigation was conducted by police after the cause of her grandchild's death was undetermined. (Karen Pauls/CBC)

Lavallee's grandson, Jay Lavallee-Constant, wrote the name of his sister Zaylynn Emerald Rain, who was killed in 2015. Lavallee says the cause of her grandchild's death was deemed undetermined, andno further investigation was conducted by police.

"We are more than just numbers. We are mothers, we are grandmothers, we are children," she said.

Brandon walk

In southwestern Manitoba, roughly 60 people gathered tomark the day by walking from Brandon's Stanley Park to Dinsdale Park, releasing flower petals into the Assiniboine River to remember their loved ones.

One of the organizers of the Sisters in Spirit Walk,Charlena Thies, who works with the Brandon Friendship Centre, says more and more people have been taking part in their ceremonies every year.

Two women with long dark hair wearing blue shirts and ribbon skirts release multi-coloured flower petals into a river.
Charlena Thies, left, and Lesley McOuat release flower petals into the Assiniboine River for Brandon's 2022 Sisters in Spirit Walk on Tuesday. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

"It lets us know that we're getting our message across, that we're being heard, we're being seen," she said.

"I just hope they understand that there's a lot of family members out there who never made it home. There's young women whojust disappear, and I just hope [the]awareness is therethatthey're missed greatly."

Signs that say
Lisa Ramsay walks at Brandon's Stanley Park. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

A survey conducted by the Southern Chiefs' Organization in 2021, which was open to all citizens of SCO member nations, found that the vast majority of respondents said they were related to, or were a friend of, a missing or murdered Indigenousperson.

On Tuesday, SCO announced a new multimedia awareness campaign, which will draw attention to the ongoing MMIWG2S crisis through T-shirts, billboards andbus boards throughout southern Manitoba, according to a news release.

Southern Chiefs' Grand Chief Jerry Daniels says he hopes the campaign will helppeopleunderstand they have a personal responsibility to help address thecrisis.

"I hope they feel that they have a role in this," he told CBC in a Tuesday interview.

Sandra Delaronde is project lead for the MMIWG2S Implementation Committee, a Manitoba organizationmade up of survivors, family members, knowledge keepers, Indigenous organizations and governments.

She says the national day of action is an opportunity to honour and remember lost loved ones, but also to educate the public.

The fact that the government of Manitoba officially recognizes the event is especially important, said Delaronde, thanks to a motion by NDP MLA Nahanni Fontaine. But although the issue has received widespread support, the number missing and murdered people continues to rise.

"This is ongoing," she told CBC. "Despite the national inquiry, there has been no change."

Attendees at Tuesday's ceremony at Kildonan Park in Winnipeg write the names of loved ones they have lost. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

There has been a lot of support from the community to address theMMIWG2Sissue, according to Delaronde, but the government needs to start addressing more of the calls for justice.

Tuesday's sunrise ceremony took place not far from the Red River, where the body of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine was found in 2014. Fontaine's death was the catalyst for the national inquiry, but Delaronde says more still needs to be done to prevent cases like Tina's.

"We still have not addressed the systemic issues that created the situation that ended Tina's life," she said.

Three people with long dark hair hold candles and look solemn.
People lit candles in honour of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, Two Spirit and gender diverse people at The Forks on Tuesday evening. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

She hopes survivors and their families take care of themselves, with the day of action coming on the heels of last Friday's National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

"We're constantly in a challenging situation, and I really hope that families and survivors take time to be gentle with themselves."

With files from Karen Pauls, Chelsea Kemp and Rachel Bergen