Log in

View Full Version : Loretta Saunders



The Garbage Disposal Unit
27th February 2014, 21:43
Reposted from the Halifax Media Co-op (http://halifax.mediacoop.ca/story/honour-loretta/21987)


In Honour of Loretta

by Darryl Leroux (http://halifax.mediacoop.ca/author/darryl-leroux)
http://halifax.mediacoop.ca/sites/mediacoop.ca/files2/mc/imagecache/page450/loretta-saunders.jpg (http://halifax.mediacoop.ca/sites/mediacoop.ca/files2/mc/imagecache/bigimg/loretta-saunders.jpg)



Trigger Warning - This article deals with the death of Loretta Saunders, an Inuk woman who was found murdered on Wednesday, February 26th in Salisbury, New Brunswick.

In Honour of Loretta


I woke up early this morning, unable to fall back asleep. As you may imagine, the past 10 days or so have been extremely difficult, for a number of reasons that I never could’ve predicted.


After hearing about Loretta’s murder, I walked home, the loneliest walk of my life, braving onlookers who were no doubt puzzled at the tears streaming from my eyes and the sounds emanating from my body. I came home, lay in bed, and ignored all attempts to communicate with others for several hours. I couldn’t move. I ended up speaking with a few friends and family members before falling asleep from exhaustion, my heart heavy with sorrow and my head aching.


I’m still in shock at the news, and especially of her final resting place. That image hurts beyond anything I could say in words.


And I refuse for that to be the last image I have of Loretta, given her remarkable spirit.


Even as I write this, as the tears wrack my body and the letters on my keyboard blur, none of this seems real. I was always so worried about Loretta. She presented all of the vulnerabilities to which indigenous woman are prone, through no fault of her own. I reread her thesis proposal last night and was reminded of how deeply she was aware of being a product of a Canadian society intent on destroying and eliminating indigenous peoples. That last word, “eliminating,” may seem extreme to some, but it is now so charged, so raw, so very real. Elimination. [Deep breath] [Deep breath] [Deep breath] Elimination.


Lying in a ditch along the Trans-Canada Highway. I simply cannot get this

image out of my mind.


So many friends want to discuss the details of the case with me, they want to dissect it like they were the lead characters in a crime drama, the same ones that actually promote the incarceration and elimination of indigenous peoples and peoples of colour from society. What in the world makes somebody think that I want to listen to them piece together Loretta’s murder. “Darryl, do you think they did it? C’mon, you must know.” This is not a crime drama, she is dead. Murdered. What is wrong with those people? What were they thinking? If it’s not friends acting like sleuths, it’s the media acting like buzzards, circling and waiting for somebody to surrender like fallen prey. No more than 5 minutes goes by between the police announcement of Loretta’s murder and my inbox and voicemail being filled with requests.


If you’re reading this, take it as my statement.


I refuse to speculate about Loretta’s death. What I do know is that our society has discarded indigenous women and girls in much the same manner for generations. These people were playing out a script that we all know intimately, but never acknowledge. I told a good friend of mine yesterday that there’s no conspiracy, there’s no mystery, Loretta will show up in a ditch like so many indigenous women before her. He was taken aback. I am devastated that the pattern proved true.


It's our doing, which Loretta articulated so clearly in her writing -- theft of land base, legalized segregation and racism, residential schools for several generations, continued dispossession = social chaos.


It is a recipe for disaster for indigenous peoples, and especially indigenous women. Who suffers most when access to land, to the ecological order at the basis of most indigenous societies, is limited, controlled, or outright eliminated? Is that not what’s at the basis of a settler society like our own, eliminating indigenous peoples' relationship to the land (and/or their actual bodies), so that can we plunder it for our gain?


All the while, through trickery and deceit, we convince our children that indigenous peoples are to blame for their condition, that through no fault of our own, they simply don’t understand how to live well in society.
When I discuss these issues with my non-indigenous students in an open, honest, and non-judgmental manner, I am continuously disappointed, though no longer surprised by their lack of knowledge.


Less than half of my second-year students have heard of residential schools, and among those who have, only a handful can imagine and articulate the impacts such a system would have had in their own communities. We are for the most part incapable of empathy.


I ask my students, who are you meant to care about in society? The answer is always clear to them – I have been taught in such a way that I’m mostly incapable of caring about indigenous peoples. It’s not that they don’t want to, it’s that it takes years of hard work. And who has that much time or is willing to be vulnerable in the face of the seemingly unending gulf that lies before them?


And so we continue to look to indigenous peoples like the savages we imagine them to be. Meanwhile, Loretta is dumped in a ditch in a province that once paid European invaders for the scalps of Mi’kmaq women, children, and men, repeating a centuries-old pattern in ways that are much too familiar to be a coincidence, to be irony, to be senseless. But these are the most common qualifiers I read about Loretta’s life and death. Loretta herself expressed the patterned, structured ways of colonial violence very clearly in her work, which I reread last night before falling asleep.


It is an organized terror of the everyday. And it must stop.

Darryl Leroux spent many hours speaking with, advising, and reading Loretta Saunders undergraduate honours thesis research.

Decolonize The Left
1st March 2014, 19:01
Yeah I heard about this. My gf is pretty on top of Indian issues - the story which is unfolding seems like something more than just some addicts who robbed and murdered her for her car and credit cards... I dunno. Hard to tell how skeptical to be a lot of the time.

RedAnarchist
2nd March 2014, 00:48
There's a road in British Columbia where so many First Nations women have been found murdered, dumped like rubbish on the side of the highway. People can pretend that there's equality for women and for Native people in countries such as Canada, which all too often is seen as some sort of progressive paradise when it isn't.

blake 3:17
2nd March 2014, 22:08
Saunders' sister, Delilah Terriak, thanked the media and police on Friday for the attention her sister's case received.

"We just want to thank you for bringing awareness especially to the issue of missing, murdered and abused aboriginal woman -- something that’s been put on the backburner too long," Terriak said. “And Loretta made a grand point -- she hasn’t died in vain and so we just want to thank you all."

Saunders had been studying at St. Mary’s University and was set to graduate in May.

The thesis she had been working on specifically tacked the issue of missing and murdered aboriginal women.

For years, aboriginal and social justice groups have criticized Canadian law enforcement agencies and governments for not aggressively tacking the high number of missing and murdered aboriginal woman. The Native Women's Association of Canada says despite being only 3 per cent of the population, aboriginal woman make up 10 per cent of all female homicides in the country.
Saunders' murder has already renewed calls for a national public inquiry into the issue.
Saunders' brother, Edmund, said the public's response to his sister’s disappearance is something that should happen every time an aboriginal woman goes missing.
"We came here and we got an explanation," he said. “And it's a prudent point that every missing aboriginal woman can be found… Not very often are aboriginal women returned home. She was returned home.”

Earlier on Friday, Blake Leggette, one of two people charged with first-degree murder in Saunders' killing, appeared in a Halifax court.

It was the first time since Saunders' body had been found that family and friends were in the same room as Leggette. Emotions ran high, with someone yelling "gutless coward," as Leggette stood in court.

Charges have also been laid against Victoria Henneberry. Police believe Leggette, 25, and Henneberry, 28, were in a relationship.


Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/saunders-family-says-her-legacy-will-live-on-1.1707893#ixzz2uqUrvzJB

blake 3:17
3rd March 2014, 16:44
Mohawks begin direct action to force missing, murdered inquiry
UNCATEGORIZED | 03. MAR, 2014 BY APTN NATIONAL NEWS | 0 COMMENTS

Kenneth Jackson
APTN National News
The Mohawks of Tyendinaga have made the first move in their threat of direct action to force the prime minister to call a national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women by putting up a blockade Sunday night.
The Mohawks cut off Shannonville road just south of Hwy. 401 at about 8:30 p.m. according to Shawn Brant.
“It’s happening,” Brant texted an APTN National News reporter.
The area is about 20 minutes east of Belleville, Ont. and close to Mohawk territory.
Both CN Rail and CP Rail run close together through the area. There are paths to the 401 from there as well that Brant and the Mohawks would be familiar with.
Brant called it “good positioning.”
Brant gave Prime Minister Stephen Harper until the end of February to call the inquiry or face direct action, but never heard from the prime minister.
Brant told APTN Sunday night they are digging in.
“We’re down for the long haul,” he said. “Harper will call it (an inquiry).”
Brant said about 100 men started at the blockade and Brant himself will be there “24/7″.

http://aptn.ca/news/2014/03/03/mohawks-begin-direct-action-to-force-missing-murdered-inquiry/

blake 3:17
7th March 2014, 00:15
There's a petition here to sign started by a cousin of Loretta Saunders calling for an inquiry into missing and murdered Aboriginal women: www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/hon-kellie-leitch-minister-for-the-status-of-women-call-a-public-inquiry-into-hundreds-of-missing-and-murdered-aboriginal-women-like-my-cousin-loretta-saunders?


Loretta Saunders vigil draws hundreds to Parliament Hill
Vigil organizers calling for national inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women

Hundreds of people gathered at a vigil on Parliament Hill in memory of Loretta Saunders, an Inuk student living in Halifax who was found slain on the side of a New Brunswick highway last week.

The 26-year-old Saint Mary's University student disappeared in Halifax Feb. 13. Her body was found two weeks later on a snow-covered median on the side of the Trans-Canada Highway west of Salisbury, N.B.
...
Jarrett said Saunders' parents and the rest of their family are in Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador and she wants to send a message to the Canadian government on their behalf.

"In memory of Loretta's heart and her kindness and her courage, please stand behind me and demand answers from our government," she said.

"We must not let this happen again without our government putting some serious effort — not simple placating gestures — into a public inquiry."

...

Pressure is mounting for a national inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women. The Native Women's Association of Canada recently presented the federal government with a petition, signed by more than 23,000 people, asking for an inquiry.

Saunders was working on a thesis about missing and aboriginal women when she disappeared.

It is estimated there are hundreds of cases of missing and murdered aboriginal women dating back to the 1960s. A United Nations human rights investigator called that statistic disturbing last year during a fact-finding visit to Canada in which he also urged the Conservative government to hold an inquiry.

full article: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/loretta-saunders-vigil-draws-hundreds-to-parliament-hill-1.2561062