Families of missing, murdered women urge critics to get behind national inquiry
OTTAWA — Bernie Williams says she and other indigenous women have already been to hell and back — and now is not the time to give up on a national public inquiry they’ve spent decades fighting for.
Williams, a long-time women’s advocate from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, is among family members of missing and murdered women raising their voices in defence of the commission as it faces a stream of criticism from activists and indigenous leaders.
“I have to believe that there is something that is bigger than all of us out here that we can get through this together,” Williams said in an interview. “I have to believe in my heart, my soul, my being that … we are going to get our justice.”
Williams, who says she lost three sisters and her mother to murder, is confident the five commissioners are well aware of the extent of underlying issues plaguing indigenous communities, including rampant sexual abuse — an issue documented over the last year in an ongoing investigation by The Canadian Press.


