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Red dresses hang in Labrador for missing and murdered aboriginal women

It was a dramatic scene in Happy Valley-Goose Bay this Saturday, as dozens of red dresses hung from trees to symbolize the more than 100 missing and murdered aboriginal women from the area.
The REDress project in a nation-wide initiative to honour the more than 1,000 missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

Dozens of red dresses hung from treesin Happy Valley-Goose Bay this Saturday,symbolizing the more than 100 missing and murdered aboriginal women from the area.

More than 30 people braved -30 Ctemperatures to honour lost mothers, daughters, sisters and friends.

More than 30 people gathered on Saturday to honour missing and murdered aboriginal women from Labrador. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

"Its very eye-opening to see all the red dresses being hung and recognizing the people that are murdered in Labrador," said Jennifer Hefler-Elson, executive director of the Labrador Friendship Centre.

"I'm sure it will bring awareness as people drive past and see the dresses and wonder why they're there, and hopefully they'll ask questions and see what it's all about."

The event was part of theREDressProject, a nationwide art piece honouringthe more than 1,000 missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada.

Similar events have taken place in locations across the country since 2010.

The Labrador Friendship Centre, theMokami Status of Women Council, and other community groups helped put the event together in Happy Valley-Goose Bay for the first time this February.

Two-years since Loretta Saunders' death

Saturday was particularly significant, as it also markedthe secondanniversary of the death of Loretta Saunders, a young Inuk woman from Labrador who was murdered in Halifax. Saunders, who was pregnant, had been researching the cases of murdered and missing aboriginal women as part of her university studies.

Forty-eight red dresses hung in Happy Valley-Goose Bay on Saturday in memory of missing and murdered aboriginal women from the area. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

Her parents were at the event, hanging a dress for their daughter and a tiny red tutu for their unborn grandchild.

"Before Loretta was murdered I didn't realize how many other Aboriginal women were murdered and missing," said Loretta's mother, Miriam Saunders.

"It's sad that it took my daughter's death in order for me to realize all the murdered and missing."

Remembering lost family members

Another woman, Angie Michelin, came to remember her cousin Bernice Rich, who was murdered at age 23 nearly three years ago.

"She was the most happiest person that you would meet. She was not shyshe did everything for my grandmother, she helped her," said Michelin, who said her grandmother is still heartbroken over the loss.

"She was always happy. She was kind, and anybody [who]knew her would say the same."

The federal governmentfinished consultations on how best to conduct an inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada on Monday.

More than 1,000 aboriginal women have been murdered or gone missing in Canada. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

With files from Alyson Samson