Sombre service recalls missing native women.An Anglican church representative--Esther Wesley, co-ordinator of the national Indigenous Healing Fund--returned to a city she knows well, Timmins, Ont., to participate in a sombre som·bre adj. Chiefly British Variant of somber. sombre or US somber Adjective 1. serious, sad, or gloomy: a sombre message 2. service Dec. 14 commemorating the one-year anniversary of the disappearance of a native woman. Ms. Wesley brought with her a poster and liturgical text for the service from the Sisters in Spirit campaign, an effort by churches and native women's groups to highlight the disappearance of approximately 500 native women across Canada Across Canada was an afternoon program that formerly aired on The Weather Network. The segment ran from early 1999 until mid 2002. The show ran from 3:00PM ET until 7:00 PM ET. in the past 20 years. "I set up the room, handed out (memorial) stones, greeted people, read some of the names from the poster," said Ms. Wesley, who is Oji-Cree. Part of the Sisters in Spirit liturgy calls for the construction of a memorial calm. As the name of a missing woman is read, a mourner places a stone on the cairn cairn, pile of stones, usually conical in shape, raised as a landmark or a memorial. In prehistoric times it was usually erected over a burial. A barrow is sometimes called a cairn. . "There were close to 100 women there," said Ms. Wesley. She and her husband, Rev. Andrew Wesley, who is Cree, lived in Timmins from 1980 to 2000, she said, when he was working for the provincial Ministry of Citizenship and Culture and she was teaching at Northern College. The service was held at the Native Friendship Centre. Ms. Wesley did not know the woman who disappeared, Pamela Holopainen, but knows her family. Her mother, Holly Kowtook, who is Inuit, is president of the friendship centre and the past year has been difficult for her, said Ms. Wesley. "The police say they don't have much hope, after a year. It's hard (for the family)," she said. Ms. Holopainen, who was 22 when she vanished, was last seen leaving a house party on Dec. 14, 2003. Her family said she was accompanied by her common-law spouse, Chris Manchester, who refused to comment on the case when contacted by the Timmins Daily Press The Timmins Daily Press is a newspaper in Timmins, Ontario, which publishes six days a week. It is notable as the first paper bought by press baron Roy Thomson, who would eventually own more than 200 newspapers including The Times of London. . She left behind two sons, now 3 and 17 months old, who are in Mr. Manchester's custody. The case has received prominent coverage in Timmins, a small mining city in northern Ontario. The anniversary commemoration was the lead story on Dec. 14 in the Daily Press and an Ontario Provincial Police The Ontario Provincial Police (O.P.P.) is the Provincial Police force for the province of Ontario, Canada. Overview The OPP is the largest police force in Ontario and the second largest in Canada. officer attended the ceremony. An OPP OPP Opposite OPP Opportunity/Opportunities OPP Office of Pesticide Programs OPP Ontario Provincial Police (Ontario, Canada) OPP Office of Polar Programs (National Science Foundation) detective, Dave Truax, told the newspaper that "at this point, we believe she is dead." He said officers had conducted more than 100 witness interviews and searched "over and over" again for Ms. Holopainen or her body, most recently at a landfill site near Timmins. Ms. Kowtook, however, told the newspaper she believes that, to some people, "(Pamela's) only an aboriginal woman and to some that's less than a human being." Other missing women have been found, she said, "except Pam. Where is Pam?" Sisters in Spirit, a campaign running from March, 2004 to March, 2005, is aimed at calling attention to violence against aboriginal women. "Many disappearances and deaths of aboriginal women simply go unreported," said the Sisters in Spirit poster. "Aboriginal women continue to be targets of hatred and violence based on their gender and their race." Sisters in Spirit is sponsored by the Native Women's Association of Canada The Native Women's Association of Canada, or NWAC, is an organization in Canada that represents Aboriginal women, particularly First Nations and Métis women.[1] Inuit women are represented by the separate organization, Pauktuutit. , the Anglican Church of Canada, the Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples The Council of Indigenous Peoples (Chinese: 原住民族委員會, pinyin: yuánzhùmínzú wěiyuánhuì) (sometimes referred to as Council of Aboriginal Affairs and the United Church of Canada United Church of Canada, Protestant denomination formed in 1925 by the union of the Methodist, Congregational, and Presbyterian churches in Canada. A large number of Presbyterian congregations, however, remain outside the union. . |
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