Newlywed couple walking across Canada for missing and murdered Indigenous people - Action News
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Manitoba

Newlywed couple walking across Canada for missing and murdered Indigenous people

Charity and Cameron West arrived in Brandon, Man., Saturday. They are walking across Canada to honour missing and murdered Indigenous people in the hopes of encouraging tough conversations that push for change.

For Charity and Cameron West, missing and murdered crisis hits close to home

Three people stand by a truck with information about missing and murdered Indigenous people.
Charity and Cameron West walk on Highway 1 East near Brandon to raise awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous people in Canada on Saturday. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

A newlywed couple walking across Canada is hoping to inspire others to join the conversation about missing and murdered Indigenous people and push for systemic change.

Charity and Cameron West arrived in Brandon, Man., Saturday. They hail from northern British Columbia and for them, the issue hits close to home, Charity said.

Her son Tyrrehz's dad, Barry Blaine Thomas Seymour from Kwadacha Nation, went missing from Prince George, B.C., in May 2012. Charity saidquestions still linger.

"We don't know how it isnot living it," Charity said. "It completely flips your world upside down not knowing is the hardest, or all the scenarios that run through your head."

Cameron said he and Charity alsolive along the Highway of Tears, a 720-kilometre stretch of Highway 16 in northern B.C. where RCMP say 18 girls and women have gone missing from or been murdered near since 1969 though Indigenous leaders say that number is closer to 50.

The couple got married in October and set off on their cross-Canada trip in early May.

During the first leg of their journey to St. John's, Nfld., each step is a reminder of the losses of those who were murdered or went missing, Cameron said. The second leg of their walk will honour those lost along the Highway of Tears, taking them from Prince Rupert to Prince George in B.C.

Two people walk on a highway with a dog wearing information about missing and murdered Indigenous people.
Cameron and Charity say their goal is to push for change at the grassroots level by inspiring conversations about missing and murdered Indigenous people in Canada. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

"There's a lot of miles, so you go through a lot of emotions. We've both lost a lot of family members," Charity said. "It's been really tough. So you go through all those emotions, there's all this grieving, and then you miss home."

While visiting Brandon, they participated in the CFB Shilo Indigenous Peoples awareness week and will be part of a missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls feast and ceremony Sunday at the Riverbank Discovery Centre.

Florence Halcrow of Brandon's Ask Auntie said the outreach grouphas beensupporting the couple's missionsince meeting them in Regina.

"We have so many people, so many of our women and men that go missing and are murdered," Halcrow said, adding that includesthe 2022 Winnipeg homicide of motherTessa Perry, who had ties to Brandon.

A woman with long wavy hair stands in front of a colourful mural.
Florence Halcrow of Brandon's Ask Auntie says the outreach group has been supporting the couple's mission since meeting them in Regina. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

Halcrow's hope is for Brandon to help fuel the national conversation about the effects of missing and murdered Indigenous people in Canada.

"It's very important for sure [to provide] support for our Indigenous people that are walking through and trying to bring awareness to others," Halcrow said. "Every community has some sort of murdered and missing Indigenous peoples."

Starting conversations

Charity and Cameron want their walk to inspire hard conversations about the crisis and encourage non-Indigenous people to join in on these discussions.

They said they are being supported by the Tsay Keh Dene First Nation, Kwadasha Nation, Takla Lake Nation and Lake Babine Nation in British Columbia.

Charity said they often talk to non-Indigenous people who want tosupport and engage in these conversations, but find it hard because they don't want to offend anyone.

For Charity, these connections are achance to talk about their lived experiences so people better understand the loss and trauma created when someone is killed or goes missing.

Three people walk on a highway with a dog wearing information about missing and murdered Indigenous people.
Terryn Mecas, left, joins Charity and Cameron on their walk. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

Cameron saidhehopes they inspire other walks, conversations and collaborations across the country.

While Canada has created high-level actions like the Truth and Reconciliation Commission andthe National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, it's hard to see direct changes happening in their community as a result, Charity said.

The inquiry's final reportwas released in 2019 and included sweeping calls for change. It found Indigenous women and girls are 12 times more likely to be murdered or go missing than members of any other demographic group in Canada.

At least 28 Indigenous womenin Manitoba have died due to violence since May 2020, Sandra DeLaronde, team lead for the Manitoba MMIWG2Simplementation team, said earlier this month.

And in a report last year, Statistics Canada said 63 per cent ofIndigenous women have experienced violence and nearly half have experienced sexual assault.

"We live it. We're not seeing the follow through," Charity said. "We can do better everybody can do better."


If you or someone you know needs immediate emotional assistance, call 1-844-413-6649. This is a national, toll-free 24/7 crisis call line providing support for anyone who requires emotional assistance related to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.