Sisters in Spirit Day

Why have a Sisters in Spirit Day?

A vigil was held in downtown Vancouver in March 2021 for Chelsea Poorman, a 24 year old Indigenous woman, who was last seen downtown on September 6, 2020. Police waited 10 days before issuing a press release about Chelsea. According to her sister, the police had told her they had “better things to do”. Indigenous victims’ families are often left feeling like the police force does not prioritize their cases and that police accountability must be improved.

Chelsea’s story is far too common for Indigenous women across Canada. Indigenous women are twelve times more likely to be murdered or to go missing than other women in Canada and sixteen times more likely than white women. It is no wonder that the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) called this violence a deliberate race, identity, and gender-based genocide.

This is devastating, especially when considering that before colonization, many First Nations were matriarchal societies, where clan mothers were the ones to make all the major decisions. When a child was born, they identified with their mother’s clan. It was considered rich to have daughters as the family line passed through the mothers. Women are the ones who give and sustain life and it is through women that future generations carry on. So when there are large numbers of murders, the ripple effect is a devastating loss of future generations, further perpetuating the genocide.

We’re dealing with a collective trauma here created by the Canadian government, police, and their priests and nuns who ran the residential school system. They have been after the land, and what better way to do that than to target our Indigenous women and girls who are our life givers? -Lorelei Williams, Butterflies in Spirit

Every October 4, Sisters in Spirit Day brings communities across Canada together to honour the lives of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, show support for their loved ones, and educate the public on this national tragedy. This annual vigil was initiated in 2006 by the Native Women’s Association of Canada (www.nwac.ca). In 2019, the Alberta government officially declared October 4 Sisters in Spirit Day.

In British Columbia, the Coalition on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls recently wrote an open letter calling for a BC action plan to end the current crisis of violence against Indigenous women and girls (https://www.ubcic.bc.ca/open_letter_call_for_a_bc_action…). BCTF president, Teri Mooring, sent a letter to Premier Horgan on behalf of all members, advocating for the creation of a provincial government action plan to implement the Calls for Justice from the National Inquiry into MMIWG. A multitude of reports and commissions over the years have set out clear recommendations. These include public education and awareness raising around violence against Indigenous women and girls, the issues and root causes of the violence they experience, and the issue of grooming for exploitation and sexual exploitation. This is especially important in communities connected to the Highway of Tears in northern BC, where Indigenous women are sexually assaulted three times more often than non-Indigenous women. Targeted education is also needed for Indigenous students, as most of the women and children trafficked in Canada are Indigenous.

Despite this national crisis, nothing seems to be happening to eliminate it. In fact, the government continues to approve pipelines and other resource development projects on stolen lands without considering their link to an increase in violence against Indigenous women and girls. Instead of eliminating dangers, the government is choosing to add to the risks.

Commemorating Sisters in Spirit Day with our students is one small way for teachers to take action and meet one of the Calls for Justice – the need for public education and public awareness around violence against Indigenous women and girls. As educators, we know that education can be a powerful tool for justice. We have seen how acknowledging days of action, such as Orange Shirt Day and Black Shirt Day, has started us on the path to creating space and drawing attention to important past and present oppressions. These acts help change peoples’ understanding and attitudes, and hopefully make change for the generations to come, by preventing violence and keeping Indigenous women and girls safe.

On Sisters in Spirit Day, we remember the Indigenous women who are missing in our lives and we work towards a better future.

RESOURCES:

·         MMIW Crisis Line: 1-844-413-6649 Provides 24/7 support to family, friends, and community members who are impacted by the loss of a missing or murdered Indigenous woman, girl or Two-spirit person.

·         Sisters in Spirit poster This new poster was included in the September mail-out to all schools. The back of the poster includes an extensive list of resources. Order additional copies on the Social Justice Resource Order Form, on the BCTF Member Portal.

·         Reclaiming Power and Place: The Final Report of the National Inquiry into MMIWG https://www.mmiwg-ffada.ca/final-report/ The website has several documents, including Calls to Action and Master List of Report Recommendations

·         Taking Action: What You Can Do? MMIWG Advocacy and Action webpage, Kairos website: https://www.kairoscanada.org/missing…/advocacy-action

·         Justice for Indigenous Women website: https://j4iw.ca/ Contains links to lesson plans and teachers’ guides.

·         Missing & Murdered: The Unsolved Cases of Indigenous Women and Girls CBC News webpage featuring profiles of 307 women and girls. https://www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/

·         Their Voices Will Guide Us http://projectofheart.ca/…/NIMMIWG-THEIR-VOICES-WILL…

·         J4IW Teacher’s Resource Guide http://docs.google.com/…/1qZO9Z7zOE97Cxu4AYzV5fUh7…/edit

·         Knowing Your Rights Toolkit: Sexual and Reproductive Health Booklet http://www.nwac.ca/…/knowing-your-rights-toolkitsexual…/

BOOKS:

·         Missing Nimama by Melanie Florence (2015) recommended for grades 6+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/?q=Missing-Nimm…

·         #Not Your Princess: Voices of Native American Women edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale (2017) recommended for grades 8+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/…

·         If I Go Missing by Brianna Jonnie (2019) recommended for grades 9+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/?q=If-I-Go-Missing…

·         Betty: The Helen Betty Osborne Story by David A. Robertson (2015) recommended for grades 10+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/…

·         The Missing by Melanie Florence (2016) recommended for grades 10+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/?q=Missing-The…

·         Seven Fallen Feathers by Tanya Talaga (2017) recommended for grades 10+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/?q=Seven-Fallen-Feathers…

·         Will I See? by David A. Robertson (2017) recommended for grades 11+ http://k12.bcerac.ca/resource/?q=Will-ISee…

·         Bone Black by Carol Rose Goldeneagle (2019) recommended for adults www.strongnations.com/store/item_display.php?i=8176&f=

·         Remembering Vancouver’s Disappeared Women: Settler Colonialism and the Difficulty of Inheritance by Amber Dean (2015) recommended for adults https://www.strongnations.com/store/item_display.php?i=6076&f=

·         Highway of Tears: A True Story of Racism, Indifference and the Pursuit of Justice for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls by Jessica McDiarmid (2019) recommended for adults www.strongnations.com/store/item_display.php?i=8157&f=

·         Red River Girl: The Life and Death of Tina Fontaine by Joanna Jolly (2019) recommended for adults www.strongnations.com/store/item_display.php?i=7806&f=

·         Stolen Sisters by Emmanuelle Walter (2015) recommended for adults www.strongnations.com/store/item_display.php?i=5887&f=

FILMS AND DOCUMENTARIES

·         This River (2016) 19 minutes www.nfb.ca/film/this_river

·         Finding Dawn (2006) 1 hour 13 minutes www.nfb.ca/film/finding_dawn

·         Unclaimed (2016) 1 hour 27 minutes gem.cbc.ca/media/films/unclaimed/38e815a-00a5dfd52cf

·         Where women go missing in Canada (2020) 50 minutes youtu.be/yNPKWDEOAD4

·         Our Sisters in Spirit Documentary (2016) 35 minutes www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdzM6krfaKY

·         The Pig Farm Documentary (2011) 1 hour 26 minutes youtu.be/L3HfVIurJA8

·         Trawling Winnipeg’s Rivers for the Bodies of Unsolved Murder Cases (2014) 22 minutes youtu.be/K8iDzIQW0XE

·         Caribou Legs (2017) 11 minutes vimeo.com/218566972

·         Don’t Need Saving: Aboriginal Women and Access to Justice (2011) 6 minutes youtu.be/e5bqUjdbzls

·         1200+ (2015) 3 minute trailer vimeo.com/301196245

·         If I Go Missing (2018) 1 minute trailer vimeo.com/267159334

NEWS REPORTS

·         Felicia Solomon’s Story (2015) 19 minutes youtu.be/lWCYw8Ilk7g

·         FULL STORY: The Missing and the Murdered (2015) 13 minutes youtu.be/YcKKJ2kkvuc

·         UN Reports Blasts Canada’s Human Rights Record on Violence Against Indigenous Women (2015) 8 minutes youtu.be/kqALyvbYPug

·         Trudeau government begins MMIW inquiry (2015) 3 minutes youtu.be/9ZXPwe9dL44

·         Canada’s missing and murdered indigenous women (2015) 3 minutes youtu.be/vqpsoEuQEjU

·         A Family’s Desperate Search for a Missing Woman Police Can’t Find (2015) 9 minutes youtu.be/1G4DebQk6iY

ADDITIONAL VIDEOS

·         Pam Palmater interview on MMIWG: Murdered & Missing Indigenous Women & Girls in Canada (2015) 12 minutes youtu.be/_dULLnpG9Hg

·         How do we stop aboriginal women from disappearing? | Beverley Jacobs | TEDxCalgary (2014) 18 minutes youtu.be/8NtkmnJ2Q3w

·         11 Year Old Jasmine Seeking Answers for her Mother Tanya Nepinak (2012) 3 minutes youtu.be/TyLNInEXsls

·         Missing Murdered Indigenous Women (2019) 2 minutes youtu.be/tc6pUYwG3yQ

·         A Memorial Song by Tasheena Sarazin (2020) 2 minutes youtu.be/mLdsjFRR2nQ

·         The Highway music video by N’we Jinan Artists, Kitsumkalum First Nation (2017) 5 minutes youtu.be/hG_9d260YeI

·         Performance for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (2016) 4 minutes youtu.be/q_vqlZJof

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