[Indigsol] All Eyes on Us! Capitalizing on the 2010 Olympics to Call International Attention to the 500+ Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
Indigenous Peoples' Solidarity Movement -Ottawa
ipsmo at riseup.net
Thu Jan 28 10:46:25 PST 2010
All Eyes on Us!
Capitalizing on the 2010 Olympics to Call International Attention to the
500+ Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
By Carmen Teeple Hopkins
The Native Womens Association of Canada (NWAC) has confirmed that there are
over 500 Indigenous women who are missing or who have been murdered in
Canada over the past 30 to 40 years. The disappearances and deaths of
Indigenous women have received very little attention compared to their white
counterparts, as well as inaction from the police, media, public, and
government. This has led to considerable impunity of the state and
perpetrators.
In particular, Vancouvers Downtown Eastside (DTES) is an area that is known
for an extremely high number of Indigenous women who have experienced
violence. It is also one of Canadas most impoverished neighbourhoods.
Vancouver has been at the forefront of organizing annual memorial marches
every February 14 to honour women who are missing or have been murdered from
the DTES. Although the Vancouver march is meant to acknowledge all women,
Indigenous women are overrepresented in the DTES, and as a group that
experiences violence. Beginning in 1991, February 14, 2010 will mark the
nineteenth annual Vancouver memorial march. February 14, 2010 will also
highlight day three of the 2010 Olympic winter games.
Since then, however, organizers have refused to be sidestepped by the
Olympics and have made it clear that the march will take place.
Gladys Radek is a long-time activist around Indigenous womens issues, one
of the organizers of Vancouvers memorial march, as well as co-organizer of
the Walk4justice. Like many Indigenous women, she is personally affected
by this violence. Her niece, Tamara Chipman, has been missing from what has
been nicknamed, the Highway of Tears (a 700 km long part of Highway 16
between Prince Rupert and Prince George, BC known for a high number of
disappearances of Indigenous women) since September 2005.
Radek outlines that the goal of the February 14, 2010 Vancouver memorial
march will be to honour the missing/murdered women with the eyes of the
world on us. She estimates that the world is going to be amazed to learn
that Canada has been able to hide the extremely high number of
disappearances and murders, a phenomenon that has often been referred to as
a national shame or Canadas dirty little secret. Radek sees the role of
the media as one that gets the word out about these women, many of whom
are Indigenous.
There has been a growing anti-Olympics movement in Vancouver and other parts
of British Columbia. One central aspect to this momentum is: No Olympics
on Stolen Land, a slogan that refers to the illegal state and corporate use
of land in Vancouver and outside of Vancouver to build facilities for the
Olympics, when Indigenous title to the territory has never been ceded. Many
groups have begun to organize around the decrease of low-income housing over
the past couple of years, while Vancouver prepares for the Olympics, a city
that has seen an increasing homeless population and one that the police will
likely displace as the Olympics near.
While Radek states that the organizing committee of the Vancouver memorial
march is very strong in building allies, she also mentions that the
memorial march will likely not fall under the typical anti-Olympic
organizing that will be occurring simultaneously in Vancouver. She comments
that the march has always been and will continue to be about the women. The
march doesnt accept agency banners or flags, but rather, focuses on the
women and families most affected by this violence. While anti-Olympic
activists and supporters are welcome to participate in the march, they are
asked to respect the principles and history of the march: remembering and
honouring the women.
Entering its nineteenth year of existence, the 2010 memorial march in
Vancouver is not being organized as a direct response to the Olympics, but
will instead use the Olympics to further its cause, one that many Indigenous
women have been fighting for over decades.
Furthermore, it has been predicted that women and children in Vancouver will
experience a 10% to 36% rise in violence during the Olympic games.
Alarmingly, gender-based anti-violence organizations and support services in
Vancouver have been told that they will not receive additional funding
amidst the possible increase in numbers. With this in mind, it becomes
especially important to support the February 14 organizing being done across
the country in 2010.
Groups across Canada have been working for many years to end violence
against Indigenous women. Vancouvers February 14 march has inspired
solidarity marches in other cities, including Toronto, London, Sudbury,
Thunder Bay, Regina and Winnipeg. The year 2010 will mark Torontos fifth
annual rally, organized by local group, No More Silence.
Radek has encouraged support and solidarity to take place outside of
Vancouver. She wants to see February 14 actions across the country and
ensure that they are being held in all major hubs and cities.
Emphasizing the importance of family members of missing/murdered Indigenous
women being involved in this work, she believes it is important for family
members to know that they are not alone and to become familiar with the
organizations that are already involved in this activism. Radek also
encourages groups outside of Vancouver to find ways to send family members
and other supporters to Vancouver for the February 14, 2010 March.
The use of shaming Canadas international reputation as a peacekeeping
country has been very important to some of Indigenous womens activism over
the past decades. For instance, sexism within the Indian Act which meant
that Indigenous women would lose status upon marriage to non-status men
(which did not operate vice versa for men with status upon marriage to
non-status women) took many years of struggle to change, but the accumulated
organizing climaxed when Sandra Lovelace took her case to the United Nations
toward the end of the 1970s. The international embarrassment to Canada was
a major factor in a 1985 change to the Indian Act that attempted to remedy
the sexism.
Such changes to the Indian Act exemplify how Indigenous women have
strategically used international institutions and opportunities to their
advantage. The 2010 Vancouver Olympics offers another possibility for
international shame that Indigenous women are capitalizing on through
political organizing.
There is certainly credence and a history of resistance by Indigenous women
that gives weight to the utilization of the worlds gaze on Canada that
Vancouver will see within the months to come. For those outside Vancouver,
lets join them in solidarity on February 14, 2010 to send a message to the
international community that this violence cannot continue.
The Toronto NMS rally and march will take place on Sunday February 14, 2010
at 12pm noon at the Toronto Police Headquarters at Bay and College. A feast
will follow the event at the Centre for Women and Trans People (University
of Toronto) at 563 Spadina Ave. For more information please contact:
nomoresilence at riseup.net or learn about NMS on Facebook.
No More Silence (NMS) is a group based out of Toronto that has existed for
almost six years. NMS consists of Indigenous women and allies who create
inter/national networks to end violence against Indigenous women. NMS
situates this violence within an understanding that Canada is a white
settler colony state and colonialism continues to operate in many different
ways today. NMS believes that all people have a responsibility to work
toward decolonization, and to support struggles for Indigenous sovereignty.
Carmen Teeple Hopkins is a member of No More Silence
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