There are many Indigenous women and girls who are missing and/or murdered in Canada. Colonization is the reason many Indigenous women are going missing and murdered in Canada due to the fear, racism and other colonization tactics to make this group vulnerable. The missing and murdered rate is much higher for Indigenous women and it seems as if the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is doing very little for the Indigenous communities. Indigenous women are the main target in the colonization violence due to their role in fighting against colonization. There is a high distrust with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police due to past and current abuses of Indigenous peoples. How Indigenous communities are dealing with this social issue are …show more content…
Colonization encourages violence against indigenous women based on their race sexuality and they are threat to colonization (Baker, 2017). When Europeans were at war against Indigenous people for land, settlers were captured by Indigenous communities, the captives mostly, women decided to stay because they enjoyed Indigenous way of life better (Baker, 2017). Indigenous women were also the main fires for fighting against colonization and European ways (Baker, 2017). Indigenous women were also a threat to European patriarchal societies (Baker, 2017).
Canada has a history of being violent, and murdering Indigenous people, between, residential schools, small pox blankets, legal beatings, criminalizing Indigenous people protecting their lands, and no panic over thousands of missing and murdered Indigenous women (Palmater,2015). All this was done in an effort to colonize Canada, and ‘get rid of the Indian problem’ (Bernson, 2013).
Murder …show more content…
Indigenous women are more likely to be murdered kidnapped and sexually abuse, more than settler women, not just by their partners or family members but by settlers due to Indigenous people being a threat to colonization and land claims (Baker, 2017). “Yet, while the federal government persistently refuses to launch a public inquiry into the disproportionate levels of murdered and missing Aboriginal women, Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt recently claimed that:
"obviously, there's a lack of respect for women and girls on reserves, so, you know, if the guys grow up believing that women have no rights, that's how they are treated" (Maher 2015). To return to isomorphism, Valcourt's statement illuminates a failure to identify similar features between past colonial projects that destabilized Aboriginal worldviews and current ills faced by Aboriginal women.” (Parent 2017).
Distrust with