December 10, 2004
Remembering the dead and pressing for change
Candlelit vigil marks
anniversary of the Montreal massacre, and sends a message against violence against
women
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Iqalungmuit
protesting against violence against women sang a round of Amazing Grace in Inuktitut
and English on Dec. 6 during a candlelight vigil at Parish Hall in Iqaluit.
(PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Raanva Simonsen, a seamstress
and musician in Iqaluit, set the tone for the community's vigil against violence
against women before she even hit the first note on her guitar.
"This is a terrible
occasion," Simonsen said on stage at the Parish Hall on Dec. 6. "But
I want to say even though horrible things happen, change happens, too.
"And every day we
can do what it takes to make sure change happens."
With the qulliq burning
in front of her, Simonsen joined hundreds of women, men and children around
the territory on Monday evening, in a soft, but powerful condemnation of violence
against women.
Simonsen's message of hope
was echoed many times over by politicians, survivors, and women who volunteer
in the fight to protect women and children from abusive men.
Nunavummiut from Rankin
Inlet to Igloolik to Chesterfield Inlet gathered to recognize the day that marks
the 15th anniversary of the tragedy known as the Montreal massacre.
Canadians across the country
have gathered annually since 1989 to remember 14 female students who were killed
at L'Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal. Their attacker stormed their classrooms
with a rifle, separated men from women, and then gunned them down, before killing
himself.
The event later prompted
the country's restrictive gun laws and registry.
But the day also has special
meaning in Nunavut.
The rate of sexual assault
in the territory is 14 times higher than the national average, according to
crime statistics from 2002.
The women's shelter in
Iqaluit, where many women go with their children to escape abusive partners,
is stretched to capacity almost every day of the year.
Ed Picco, Iqaluit East
MLA and a cabinet minister, pointed out the added significance to Nunavummiut,
while speaking at Parish Hall.
"We have to remember
Dec. 6, 1989," said Picco, who was one of the few men at the event. "But
we also have to remember what happens right here in Iqaluit and Nunavut.
"We also have to remember
the people we have lost every day... to violence against women."
This year, two women were
killed in Nunavut. Sylvia Lyall, a secretary for a government minister in Iqaluit,
was found dead in her apartment in June. A former boyfriend awaits trial, on
charges of first-degree murder.
Rhoda Maghagak, of Cambridge
Bay, died violently in March. Police haven't arrested anyone, although they
consider the case to be a homicide.
Also, the murder trial
of the former boyfriend who killed Donna Kusugak in Rankin Inlet ended late
month. Allen Kabvitok was sentenced to 14 years in prison for strangling her
to death.
The day's demonstrations,
which included a youth event at Inuksuk high school later that night, were difficult
for many in the crowd, whose lives had been affected by attacks on women. Many
people made reference to Louise Pargeter, a Yellowknife parole officer, who
was murdered on the job in October. An Igloolik man faces a murder charge in
the case.
Elisapee Sheutiapik, the
mayor of Iqaluit, recalled her own pain and loneliness after her sister, Mary
Anne, was murdered more than a decade ago.
During the vigil, Sheutiapik
called for zero tolerance on violence everywhere.
"We need to send a
message to all of society that we will not and do not accept violence in any
form," she said. "Let's help them stop it, because violence affects
everyone."
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