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  • Q2 News

    Vigil held in downtown Billings to remember murdered and missing Native people

    By Mack Carmack,

    6 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4bjBXy_0vmS3SrK00

    According to the Department of Justice, 31% of missing individuals last year in Montana were Indigenous , while Indigenous people make up less than 7% of the population. Although most of those are women, at 68% , Indigenous males will likely face violence during their lifetime.

    That's why a vigil was held Friday in downtown Billings to remember and honor both missing and murdered indigenous men and women.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=07D9Gr_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Friday's MMIP Vigil, Downtown Billings

    It's an epidemic impacting reservations across Montana: missing and murdered indigenous people.

    "I would probably say that every single Native American in this country, and in Canada as well, has somebody directly - probably within their immediate family - that impacted by this," said Nicci Wagy, one of the vigil organizers.

    Wagy and fellow organizer Lita Pepion spent weeks gathering names of missing and murdered Indigenous people to read on the Yellowstone County courthouse lawn. That list has over 140 names, including confirmed and reported cases.

    One of those names is Wagy's brother.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=31ag1W_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Nicci Wagy, vigil organizer

    "They stopped counting his wounds at 57, and that wasn't near as many times he had been stabbed," she said.

    The murder of her brother, Gary Lasley Jr., in Nebraska fueled her passion behind Friday's call for help.

    "That's why I've been active ever since. Because, if I can prevent anyone else from feeling that hurt, and that rage - it's not even anger, it's rage - I'm gonna do everything I can," Wagy says.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1B2elm_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Friday's MMIP Vigil, Downtown Billings

    The organizers' latest effort is a petition to convince the city of Billings to fund a new low-barrier shelter. A low-barrier shelter has fewer restrictions and questions when it comes to accepting residents. Organizer Lita Peppion says that many Indigenous people encounter alcoholism and drug-addiction, so a low-restricted housing unit would be beneficial to their community.

    "Enough of this band-aid stuff. We need quality. We're tired of waiting for it. We want it," Peppion said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0CAbsV_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Lita Peppion, vigil organizer

    Peppion says violence heavily impacts Indigenous communities as well.

    "Eighty-two percent of Native Indigenous men have experienced violence in their lifetime. That's a huge, huge, number. Violence creates trauma. So many of our people are traumatized, and it's unhealed, and untreated, and unrecognized," she said.

    However, that trauma and pain was recognized through each of the guest speakers.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4ATM6v_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Friday's MMIP Vigil, Downtown Billings

    Wagy and Peppion organized the vigil out of the kindness of their own hearts, with no organization attached. They plan to work until those 140+ names receive justice, or make their way back home.

    "A lot of people would say we've lost community, and I look around here and say 'no, we haven't,'" Peppion said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1If588_0vmS3SrK00 Mack Carmack, MTN News
    Friday's MMIP Vigil, Downtown Billings

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    Comments / 7
    Add a Comment
    Prick
    2h ago
    If this many people have disappeared and as far as I know the only people who’ve been booked for murders of any kind are already locked up or waiting trials for the things they’ve done and that’s only because of them being caught or shot in the streets by police. That being the case, it’s terrifying, all of these people. No matter how shitty they were in life they didn’t deserve death! From the looks of it it’s not just one person out here simply because I don’t believe one person could know all of these individuals. That means there are still multiple people or groups of people who participate or know what happened concerning these unfortunate souls. I’m sure people know but they won’t speak up and that’s horrible, imagine them there with you and you don’t know right now. Watch your circle and please speak up if anything please. It’s the only way we can all make our community’s lives safer.
    Jennifer Wicka
    6h ago
    let's bow bow down to the natives. what's so special about them? what about all the other people of different races that have gone missing
    View all comments
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