What Red Dress Day represents for local Indigenous communities and their allies
CBC
A Red Dress Day event was held in London, Ont., on Wednesday, where Indigenous communities and allies joined together to reflect on and honour those who have been killed or gone missing over the past seven generations.
May 5 is the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG). It's also referred to as Red Dress Day, in which red dresses are hung from trees to commemorate the lives of the men, women, children, and two-spirited people, that were lost.
The event was organized by Atlohsa Family Healing Services, a non-profit organization providing Indigenous-led programs and services.
CBC News spoke to some attendees on what this day means to them, and what their journeys of reconnecting with their culture look like. Here are some of their stories:
MMIWG day means community coming together and learning from the Indigenous families who are impacted by the epidemic for Madison Alexandra of the Mohawk from Six Nations of the Grand River.
Through her work with Atlohsa's anti-trafficking network, Alexandra found that the voices of LGBTQ and two-spirited youth often get overlooked in relation to MMIWG.
"Indigenous two-spirited people, are at greater risk to become part of this, but they're often completely ignored and cut out from these conversations, so when we ignore that, we give them the message that they aren't seen," she said.
"A lot of times our youth is told their voices don't matter, but they're at such a unique position where they're growing up in a time where they lived through intergenerational trauma, but they're going through intergenerational healing, and we need to foster spaces for them to be able to do that."
Alexandra seeks to change that dynamic by opening up conversations to all Indigenous Peoples, including boys and men as well.
"A lot of people are really hesitant to learn about this because it's heartbreaking and can really put someone in an emotional heaviness if they find out that a close family member became one of these statistics," she said.
Although she always had a Status Indian card, it meant nothing more than just a card to her. Now Alexandra makes moccasins and does traditional beadwork with her mom.
"I'm able to speak some of the language, but it's a lifelong journey reconnecting and passing that down to future generations. My mom is also able to reconnect with me, culture really did save my life," she said.
Alexandra said a way to foster positive change is for police to take Indigenous complaints seriously.
"They can't just brush it off with the stereotypes that 'we're drunk and Indian' because that's not all we are," she said. "When there is an MMIW case, it's shrugged off and a few days later, we find them burned in a ditch or their body in a lake."