Search for missing Indigenous leaders leads to archives
By Ian Bryce
In June 1967, M矇tis leader Jim Brady and Cree councilor Abbie Halkett went on a prospecting trip in northern Saskatchewan by Lower Foster Lake. They vanished without a trace. With many people suspecting murder, the mystery of Bradys and Halketts disappearance continues to concern northern Saskatchewans Indigenous community 52 years later.
The mystery also occupies 間眅埶AV First Nations Studies Chair Deanna Redera specialist in Indigenous literature and founding member of , an Indigenous literary archive.
As part of the Presidents Faculty Lecture Series on Wednesday, Jan. 15, Reder will speak about Bradys and Halketts disappearance, its impact on the community and her connection to them. She will also discuss Brady as a writer, along with Cree and M矇tis storytelling traditions and the responsibility of storytellers and story recipients.
These are people who have been remembered by their families and community but mainstream Canada has not remembered them, says Reder. Both were leaders in their community and for them to be forgotten is its own kind of tragedy.
Reders connection to the mystery is personal: her uncle was a family friend of Brady and her grandmother healed Halkett from blindness when he was a young man. Three years ago, Reders uncle asked for her help in finding their bodies.
Joining the search was her cousin Eric Bell, the owner of La Ronge Emergency Medical Services and a Lac La Ronge Indian Band member, as well as Michael Nest, a scholar who researches corruption in the mining industry and beyond. Together, the team traced prospecting archives, interviewed community members and generated significant leads to find the missing bodies.
Reders research also lead her to the Glenbow Archives where she learned of Bradys extensive library, which included his unpublished literary work. This has been a significant addition to The People and the Text project.
Every time you hear a story there are these layers underneath it but what makes it Cree is the contextthe relatives and connections that you have, says Reder. This is a story thats going to be retold and have an impact on future generations.
While the reasons for their disappearance remain unanswered, Reder says that learning of Brady and Halketts past went beyond solving a mystery.
The end isnt to find the answerthe end is to respect all of the relationships as we honour the fact that Brady and Halkett have been missed not just by their families but by northern Saskatchewan.
Reder will give her lecture The Obligations of Stories: Missing Jim Brady and Abbie Halkett at 間眅埶AVs Vancouver campus on Wednesday, Jan. 15. The lecture is free with registration.
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Full recording of the lecture .