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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Mon Nov 8, 2021, 08:03 PM Nov 2021

The stench of death

On Canada's Highway of Tears.

By Brandi Morin
Published On 8 Nov 2021

In this six-part series, Al Jazeera tells the stories of some of the Indigenous women and girls who have gone missing or been murdered along an infamous stretch of highway in British Columbia, Canada.

Warning: The following article contains content that may be disturbing to some readers.


British Columbia, Canada - Mike Balczer pensively traces the rim of a white coffee cup on a frigid February morning. He takes a ponderous breath and looks up. His hair is covered by a black and white bandana and a cap. His trademark attire - black leather and black and white flannel - bear the markings that distinguish him as a nomad - a Crazy Indian Brotherhood nomad.

The Crazy Indian Brotherhood started in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 2007 and now has chapters throughout Canada and to the south as far as California and Oklahoma. It resembles a motorcycle gang, but Mike says the tough image is just for appearances. “We protect women and children around here. We patrol the streets looking out for the vulnerable.” And the uniform helps to intimidate the town’s drug dealers, he adds. But it is not only the local drug dealers who are on Mike’s mind. He is on the prowl - looking for a killer, or possibly killers, in Smithers.

The small town in northwestern British Columbia has a population of just over 5,300 people. It is home to the remnants of settler frontiers and Indigenous nations in a valley between towering snow-capped mountains, curtained by rows of lodgepole pine, spruce, sub-alpine balsam fir, aspen, birch and cottonwood trees.

Although a confessed wanderer, Mike has called Smithers home on and off for the past 20 years. He is a member of the Wit’Dat Nation (Lake Babine Nation) about a two-hour drive east and as a hereditary chief is part of a traditional governance system responsible for decision-making and cultural practices. When he became a leader his elders gave him the name “Person of Many”.

More:
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/longform/2021/11/8/the-stench-of-death-life-along-canadas-highway-of-tears

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niyad

(113,348 posts)
1. Thank you for posting this most imporrtant and heartbreaking piece. That these women
Mon Nov 8, 2021, 08:24 PM
Nov 2021

and their deaths have gone unanswered is horrific. I am so lad that attention is finally being paid. No let us see if the situation improves at all.

Srkdqltr

(6,297 posts)
2. Vary powerful. It points out the injustices to the indigenous people in general and
Mon Nov 8, 2021, 08:48 PM
Nov 2021

Women in particular.
I don't know the answer. What men do to hurt women is horrifying.
How women accept the treatment to other women and children is abominable.
I don't understand but it's not new and goes on all the time.

I know it's not everyone but enough to be heartbreaking.

brer cat

(24,578 posts)
3. Heartbreaking.
Mon Nov 8, 2021, 08:54 PM
Nov 2021

The treatment of Indigenous nations has been deplorable for centuries.

It's hard reading, but thank you for posting Judi Lynn.

Nululu

(842 posts)
4. Over 5700 native women murdered or disappeared in one year.
Mon Nov 8, 2021, 10:34 PM
Nov 2021

They're now spreading the word on commercials. It's horrendous.

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