Good evening, and thank you for the opportunity to be here this evening.
First of all, I'd like to acknowledge the Anishinaabe territory, which we all have the privilege of being on.
I would also like to acknowledge the women who cannot be here because they currently are living in fear, have no voice, and believe that no one cares. One indigenous woman shared the following quote, which I believe is really important for all of us. She said, "Just try hard not to give up on us like everyone else in the world has."
I am presenting this evening, representing the work of the Canadian Women's Foundation. My key messages are: collaboration, reframing the issue, nurturing indigenous women leadership, and system change.
The Canadian Women's Foundation, for those of you who are not aware, is a national public foundation that invests in the strength of women and the dreams of girls. We do this by raising money to end violence against women, to move women out of poverty, and to build strong resilient girls through funding, researching, and promoting promising practices. I am sharing this because there is an important role for philanthropy in funding organizations, raising the profile of issues facing women and highlighting the opportunities to partner for system change.
The Canadian Women's Foundation targets our support to women and girls who need it most, who are aboriginal women and girls in Canada. We achieve this by engaging indigenous women from across Canada in all aspects of our work.
We are all aware of the many challenges and barriers facing aboriginal women in Canada. Many of us are aware of the research, community initiatives, and advocacy led by aboriginal and first nation leadership, community-based agencies, national organizations such as the Native Women's Association of Canada, governments, and foundations such as the Canadian Women's Foundation.
We all know things are not getting better; in fact, they are getting worse. The root causes of the problem are deep and complex. These root causes of poverty, racism, classism, sexism, and undervaluing of indigenous women exist at significantly high levels.
Just to highlight poverty, there is a strong link, as you are aware, between poverty and violence against women. Of all aboriginal women, and this is first nation, Métis, and Inuit women, 36% live in poverty. This is much higher than the average of 9% for all Canadians.
Racism is a really important part, and the Canadian Women's Foundation is starting to talk about that in a very public way.
The Canadian Women's Foundation demonstrated leadership last summer and wrote a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper. It was written by Margot Franssen, of the Canadian Women's Foundation board of directors, chair of the Task Force on Trafficking of Women and Girls in Canada, and a philanthropist in Canada.
This is a quote from her letter to the Prime Minister: “If there were hundreds of white women murdered or missing wouldn't an inquiry be launched? Wouldn't their names and photographs be front page news everyday until answers were found? Wouldn't the community demand that the government uncover causes and create solutions so that no more women were taken or murdered? Aboriginal women deserve no less.”
This letter was written in part because the Canadian Women's Foundation leadership to stop human trafficking in Canada began with investing $2 million of foundation money to provide funding to organizations, conduct research, and bring together 23 experts from across Canada and survivors to participate on a National Task Force on Human Trafficking of Women and Girls in Canada. The result will be an anti-trafficking strategy for the Canadian Women's Foundation and Canada, and it will be done by the fall of 2014.
There are very serious and tragic intersections, murdered and missing aboriginal women being one, particularly for aboriginal and first nation women and girls in Canada. Racism, classism, sexism at its worst results in the most extreme form of violence against indigenous women: human trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation.
The Canadian Women's Foundation in 2012 and 2013 consulted with over 250 Canadian organizations and 150 survivors of human trafficking and learned that girls and women are being trafficked into forced prostitution inside Canada, to Canada, and across Canadian borders.
Girls and women who are bought and sold from inside Canada are often the most marginalized young girls and women, with aboriginal women being at the top of the list.
Many girls in Canada are first trafficked into forced prostitution when they are 13 years old.
Along this continuum, particularly for indigenous women, is the horrifying reality that they are methodically targeted by traffickers when they are teens and young women, their vulnerabilities are exploited, and they become trapped in a life of absolute chaos, abuse, and extreme violence.
It doesn't end there, though. When they are no longer of value to a trafficker, they become the women in the survival sex industry: 40 years old, poor, and dying. Women's bodies are not equipped to handle the physical and psychological trauma of being sexually exploited and trafficked, whether by circumstances or by force.
As part of the work of the Canadian Women's Foundation task force, we are also challenging the assumptions about who is benefiting and who is to blame. We conducted a national Angus Reid public opinion poll last year and uncovered the following: 78% of Canadians agree that girls under the age of 16 are not in prostitution by choice, and 67% of Canadians agree that Canadian girls under the age of 16 are being recruited and trafficked to work in prostitution against their will.
It seems everyone has some knowledge and knows what's happening. So what can be done about it?
One thing the Canadian Women's Foundation is doing is reframing the issue on sex trafficking. The question isn't, why girls are prostituting themselves, but why men buy sex from girls.
We need to address the root causes, including the undervaluing of women by those who harm us. We also cannot move forward without recognizing the systems that perpetuate and create vulnerabilities for aboriginal women. We are the only population experiencing this level and type of systemic discrimination in most systems, including child welfare, education, etc.
I believe it will only be indigenous women's leadership to make these significant changes to improve the lives of other indigenous women, their families, and the communities. In fact we're seeing indigenous women's leadership at the community level, which is how I would like to conclude this presentation.
The courage and leadership of aboriginal women and their remarkable strength can be seen across Canada, in fact, even around this table.
Our Anishinaabe grandmothers are rising and reclaiming their role as protectors of our communities, and this is gaining momentum across Canada.
In the words of one of the Canadian Women's Foundation's founding mothers, “Until all of us have made it, none of us have made it.”
Thank you.