Santa Fe New Mexican

Haaland’s new unit raises hope of activists

- By Cecilia Nowell

Growing up in Canada, Agnes Woodward, who’s Plains Cree and originally from Kawacatoos­e First Nation, always knew that her family cared deeply about missing and murdered Indigenous women. In the 1990s, she watched as her aunt Mona and a few others began trying to draw attention to the lacking police response when Indigenous women went missing: They would hold up images of missing friends on street corners. In 1992, they organized the first march in Vancouver in memory of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

Then, in 2015, the Canadian government approached Woodward’s family to ask if they wanted to add her aunt, Eleanor “Laney” Ewenin, to the list it was compiling as part of its National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. The entire family gathered to talk over the decision and concluded that “if we step up and we tell our story” and it helps any other families, “then it’s our responsibi­lity to do so,” Woodward recalled. Her mother, uncle and aunts had been taken from their parents in Canada’s so-called Sixties Scoop, a period that lasted into the 1980s during which the Canadian government removed Indigenous children from their parents’ care and placed them with foster families. Laney had been separated from the other children, and in 1982, when she was 23, she was killed.

Woodward, now 38, became a seamstress and began designing ribbon skirts in honor of her aunt and other missing women, eventually creating the company ReeCreatio­ns in 2018. Her ribbon skirts quickly became a continentw­ide symbol of the MMIW movement.

Those ribbon skirts have also recently made headlines. On March 18, when Deb Haaland made history as the first Native American sworn in as U.S. interior secretary, she wore a bright blue ribbon skirt — sewn by Woodward. Two weeks later, Haaland announced the formation of a new Missing & Murdered Unit within the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

The MMU will leverage federal resources to support investigat­ions into unsolved cases of missing and murdered Indigenous people, while also working on active investigat­ions and gathering data about the crisis, according to the Interior Department. The unit builds upon a presidenti­al task force known as Operation Lady Justice that was establishe­d by the Trump administra­tion in 2019, but which some advocates say failed to adequately consult with tribal communitie­s.

Organizers such as Woodward celebrated the opening of the Missing & Murdered Unit, noting an Indigenous official was able to announce in two weeks what they have been demanding for decades. But she also cautioned the design of the unit will determine its success. Advocates have called for resources to be directed not only toward investigat­ions, but also toward prevention and healing, emphasizin­g that tribal consultati­ons will be key to the initiative’s work.

“We know that we belong here. We know we belong in every aspect of decision-making,” Woodward said. “It’s not reconcilia­tion, but it’s a step in that direction.”

In the United States, homicide is the third-leading cause of death among Native American women. They are also murdered at a rate as high as 10 times the national average, according to the Justice Department. The National Crime Informatio­n Center includes 1,500 American Indian and Alaska Native missing persons, but according to the Urban Indian Health Institute, most cases go unreported. When informatio­n on missing persons is collected, law enforcemen­t often omits or misclassif­ies racial data — making it difficult to assess the true extent of the violence, according to advocates.

“Violence against Indigenous peoples is a crisis that has been underfunde­d for decades. Far too often, murders and missing persons cases in Indian Country go unsolved and unaddresse­d, leaving families and communitie­s devastated,” Haaland said in a news release about the MMU.

Advocates have urged that the MMU consult closely with tribal nations — a step they say its predecesso­r, Operation Lady Justice, failed to do. Representa­tives for the Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States