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Leah Anderson Violence

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As it has been said by Hippocrates, “to seek to ease pain is natural”, yet the question still remains as to why we as a society inflict pain upon one another? (Silverburg, 1996, p. 16) The systematic and societal build-up of violence is a controversial issue as there are many dimensions through which it can be seen. Whether it is emotional, psychological, or physical abuse – the question of “why” still remains unanswered, as do many of the questions that are asked by the Aboriginal communities. The World Report on Violence and Health defines violence as: "the intentional use of physical force or power, threatened or actual, against oneself, another person, or against a group or community, that either results in or has a high likelihood of resulting …show more content…

(Walker, 2015) Yet with great concern, her unfortunate story never made national headlines. As Walker writes, Leah Anderson's death adds one more name to the RCMP's list of 225 unsolved cases of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls across the country [...] and even two years after her death, there hasn't been a single arrest. "Who could have done this? Do I see this person? Is he around here?" are just a few of the many unanswered questions asked by Myra Anderson, the aunt of the deceased. With the rise of horrific incidences as such, the question of a woman’s safety and security rise to prominence as fear takes over, yet who do we turn to for answers? Neither the government officials nor the RCMP have definite answers as to why we heed and pay more attention to one kind of body but not the other, as to why and how we have deemed and distinguished one body more important than the other… one life more valuable than the other? This issue is of high importance as the Aboriginal population is being discriminated against, which has been a continuation from the attack of Colonialism which enslaved and enforced thousands to assimilate into a more ‘civilized’ western culture. The on-going marginalization and bigotry has dug the whole even deeper as the "vulnerability and societal disinterest has placed Aboriginal women at higher risk for violence in all forms" (Pearce, 2013). What has fallen to the blind side of the greater public eye is the substantial number of cases that have gone unsolved and it is in this aspect that more consideration and resolution is

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