Calgary Herald

‘WE MUST STAND UP FOR JUSTICE’

Inquiry into missing women begins

- LAURA KANE The Canadian Press

WHITEHORSE • Frances Neumann searched tirelessly for her missing sister-in-law in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, only to learn from a newspaper article she had been dead for years.

Neumann, the first family member to speak publicly at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, urged the commission­ers not to let Mary Smith John’s death be in vain.

Smith John fled Yukon as a young woman after enduring the loss of an infant son and was found dead of an alcohol overdose in 1982.

Neumann said Smith John had been in the company of Gilbert Paul Jordan, known as the “Boozing Barber,” who is believed to have plied multiple women with a lethal dose of liquor.

“These women were vulnerable. They had no protection. They were lost, but each one of those women had families that loved them,” Neumann said, wiping away tears. “We let them down. We did not protect them because they were weak. Because they were weak, no justice came to their aid.”

Jordan was convicted of manslaught­er in the death of a non-indigenous woman in 1988. But he was linked to several aboriginal women’s deaths before then, reported APTN in a segment played at the hearing. He died in 2006.

Smith John was buried in an unmarked grave in Vancouver long before her loved ones learned of her death. Neumann used family photos to help police identify her sister-in-law.

Neumann told the commission­ers there can be no justice for her sister-in-law, but she wants her daughter and granddaugh­ters to walk the streets safely.

“We must stand up for justice for these women that have walked before us. This has been coming (for) many years and I thank Canada for supporting our families,” she said. “Please, please see this through. We have come up and waited for many years to see the results. Don’t sweep it under the carpet.”

Neumann’s testimony marked an emotional start to the first family hearings.

The commission­ers have faced criticism about poor communicat­ions and delays.

Chief Commission­er Marion Buller began Tuesday’s hearing by saying Canada needs to hear the truth about the violence endured by generation­s of indigenous women and girls in order to have a better understand­ing of systemic violence, to find solutions and heal.

“Today is a turning point in our national history,” she said. “Now there is a national stage for the stories and the voices of the missing and murdered indigenous women and girls through their families.”

More than 40 people are expected to share their stories. “We will hear about mothers, grandmothe­rs, sisters and aunties, nieces, cousins and dear friends. They are and were real people who loved and were loved, who dreamed and hoped, who laughed and cried,” Buller said. “This is a sorrowful but essential part of our national history. We need to recognize and understand colonizati­on and racism. We need to heal and we need to craft solutions.”

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 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Frances Neumann wipes a tear away as she tells a story about her murdered sister- in-law Mary Smith John at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Whitehorse.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Frances Neumann wipes a tear away as she tells a story about her murdered sister- in-law Mary Smith John at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Whitehorse.

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