Tina Fontaine: The Abuse Of Indigenous Women In Canada

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On August 17 2014, the body of 15 year old Tina Fontaine was pulled from the Red River in Winnipeg Manitoba after she was reported missing 8 days earlier (Poisson 2018). Unfortunately the case of Tina Fontaine is not uncommon here in Canada where Indigenous women are three times more likely to suffer violence and are substantially more likely to be killed by an acquaintance than non- Indigenous Canadian women (Palmater 255). Tina Fontaine and others like her unfortunately represent the highly likely reality for many Indigenous women and girls in Canada. Despite representing only 2% of the overall population, Indigenous women and girls represent 16% of the women who are murdered and missing in the country (Palmater 255). While there are a …show more content…

Historically, every effort to sanction or regulate the behaviours of Indigenous peoples in Canada were a part of a long stilled effort to control and assimilate Indigenous Canadians into the white Christian Canadian society. The 1876 passing of the Indian Act , legislation that provided a coercive and patriarchal set of directives governing Indigenous culture and education, while also setting arbitrary standards for who was granted status as an Indian (Francis 253). The Indian Act included strict regulations surrounding who was determined a ‘status’ Indian, European settlers enforced patriarchal and christianized views on Indigenous culture — effectively disturbing their power structures and ways of life — and sought to make women subservient in all ways that mattered (Barker 262). The Indian Act’s provisions for status — which ultimately stripped Indigenous women of the ability to independently claim status — represented the goal of social formation over the Indigenous populations ways of life (Barker 262). “On the cultural front, the state outlawed Indigenous religions, cultural practices and languages and distorted the integrity of familial and community structures by removing several generations of children to residential schools” (Francis 253). The colonial violence experienced by many Indigenous peoples at the hands of the state is often undervalued and ignored despite calls for the government to address the harsh realities and conditions that many Indigenous Canadians are forced to live with. Tangible advancements such as the Kelowna Accord — which allocated $5 billion to improving the quality of life experienced by Indigenous people in Canada — was cancelled by the Harper government (Francis

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