Manitoba's refusal to search landfill for remains is racist, church leader says
The leaders of four major church denominations are standing together to urge Manitoba's political leaders to search Prairie Green landfill for the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran, with one calling the province's stance racist.
"I think sometimes we have a preference for people who are white in this country and we tend to ignore people who are Indigenous," said Susan Johnson, national bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada.
"I can't imagine that if there were white people in the landfill that we wouldn't be searching for them. So I think in many ways, this is racist and it certainly does not work in terms of our commitment to reconciliation."
Johnson is joining leaders from the United, Presbyterian and Anglican churches of Canada on Sept. 5 at Camp Morgan at the Brady Road landfill in Winnipeg.
"Mostly we'll be listening. I think we want, first of all, to hear the concerns of the people," Johnson said. "And then we will consider how best we can advocate for them and with them after we've started at the grassroots."
The camp, named in honour of Morgan Harris, one of two women whose remains are believed to be in the Prairie Green landfill, north of Winnipeg, has been set up near the city's Brady Road landfill since December.
A second camp, named Camp Marcedes in honour of the other woman,
was set up in mid-July beside the Canadian Museum for Human Rights at The Forks.
"We're coming out in support of the people who are gathered at Camp Morgan and at Camp Marcedes to be with those people and their loss and sorrow and frustration and to support them," Johnson said about the event next Tuesday.
She will be joined by Carmen Lansdowne, moderator of the United Church of Canada, Mary Fontaine, moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, and Chris Harper, national Indigenous Anglican bishop.
"We have a unique historic moment where the leaders [of those four churches] are all women. That's never happened before, so this is an issue that moves us very deeply and we wanted to take action together," said Johnson, who is based in Winnipeg. The other leaders will be coming from different parts of the country.
The group is also inviting all other faith leaders to join the delegation.
Calls for a search have been growing since Premier Heather Stefanson said she would not fund something that could take up to three years and cost up to $184 million, citing dangers to searchers
highlighted in a feasibility report.
The study was commissioned after police said they would not search for the remains of Harris, 39, and Myran, 26.
It concluded that a search is feasible, but there would be no guarantee of finding the remains of the women, who police believe are victims of an alleged serial killer. The same man is accused of killing two other women — Rebecca Contois and a woman whose identity is not known but has been named Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, or Buffalo Woman.
The partial remains of Contois were found at the Brady Road landfill in June 2022. The location of Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe is not known.
"I feel very strongly that this is beyond just a cost analysis, and it's about holding faith and promised action for reconciliation, and that perhaps we need to rethink what our priorities are," Johnson said.
Earlier this month, the Canadian Museum for Human Rights announced its support for the search, and last week,
Amnesty International Canada added its voice to the call. It is planning a sit-in on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Sept. 18 as part of the International Day of Action to Search the Landfills.
The
United Church of Canada last month released a statement condemning Manitoba's refusal to conduct the search, saying it "demonstrates a lack of humanity."
Johnson said she and the other women leaders from the churches had been doing advocacy work around Israeli-Palestinian relations and started talking about the landfill issue.
"Organizing dates is a little more complicated but getting a commitment from each other was very, very fast," she said.
Melissa Robinson, Harris's cousin and one of the people organizing the camps and lobbying for a landfill search, said the church groups contacted her a couple of weeks ago to say they wanted to stand in solidarity.
"With our faith communities coming together … all on board for the same subject, it's remarkable," she said.
Robinson hopes other national groups follow that lead.
"It's an important issue all across the world. It's a human rights issue. We're talking about human remains lying in a landfill and our provincial government stopping us from moving forward to retrieve them," she said.
"They deserve to be brought home and laid to rest properly."
The church organizations asked how they could help, and Robinson suggested they make a public announcement. With that now done, she's optimistic they will follow through on one other thing.
"I'm hoping when they come, they bring their chequebooks. I did let them know," Robinson said.
"We know that our municipal government doesn't have the funds to help, so we're hoping that maybe they can."
It's costly to keep the effort going — to fund a sign-building campaign, to build structures at the camps like a wigwam, a kitchen and storage facilities, and to pay for food.
"And it's hard to keep up with the demand of wood supply to keep our sacred fires burning. A cord of wood is costing us $350 and we now have two camps to worry about," Robinson said.
"We're hoping for more support soon, with winter coming, because we're definitely going to need it."
Wait, what? Costly to build signs, a wigwam, a kitchen and storage facilities, and to pay for food? "And it's hard to keep up with the demand of wood supply to keep our sacred fires burning. A cord of wood is costing us $350 and we now have two camps to worry about,"
You would think people that who understand the money for these items does not grow on trees (we have plastic money) would understand $184 million could keep their fire burning in perpetuity. Tough finding money for a fire but the government can just write a check and the money comes out of thin air.