I travelled across Saskatchewan to photograph Indigenous women whose loved ones have disappeared or died
- by Sara HyltonSara Hylton Updated 16:58, Jan. 9, 2020 | Published 13:29, Sep. 27, 2017This article was published over a year ago. Some information may no longer be current.
This past April, documentary photographer Sara Hylton travelled across Saskatchewan, where over 50 percent of missing or murdered women and girls are Indigenous—one of the highest proportions in the country. With help from Ntawnis Piapot, a local Cree journalist, Hylton met with community elders, victims’ families, and women willing to share their experiences. Hylton’s photos capture nearly thirty Indigenous people whose loved ones have disappeared or died.
In the months since Hylton launched her project, the families she spoke to have watched the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, which aims to identify systemic roots of violence against Indigenous people, struggle to recover from its bureaucratic and political missteps over the past year. Several of the inquiry’s high-level staff members, including one of the five commissioners, have resigned, and Indigenous families and advocates across the country are calling for a “hard reset.” The inquiry’s failures add a new dimension to Hylton’s photos, which seek to portray the suffering and the “resilience, sisterhood, and femininity” of communities that are waiting for answers and concrete change.
Sara Hylton reported with funding from the International Reporting Project.
The Walrus uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences.
December 3 is GivingTuesday, a global movement dedicated to supporting the charities and issues you care about.
It’s getting harder to find news you can trust, with growing polarization, dis- and misinformation, as well as generative AI. As a registered charity best known for our independent, award-winning journalism, The Walrus is hoping to raise $10,000 on this day of generosity in the face of these realities.
If you’re looking for real, fact-based journalism by real people, I ask that you support The Walrus with a donation this GivingTuesday.
Jennifer Hollett
Executive Director, The Walrus
Make this GivingTuesday GIVING NEWSDAY!
December 3 is GivingTuesday, a global movement dedicated to supporting the charities and issues you care about.
It’s getting harder to find news you can trust, with growing polarization, dis- and misinformation, as well as generative AI. As a registered charity best known for our independent, award-winning journalism, The Walrus is hoping to raise $10,000 on this day of generosity in the face of these realities.
If you’re looking for real, fact-based journalism by real people, I ask that you support The Walrus with a donation this GivingTuesday.