Red dresses appear around Yellowknife for missing and murdered Indigenous women

'I just needed to do something,' says Angela Canning, who hung a red dress outside her home in Yellowknife

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Caption: Angela Canning became emotional while having a conversation about what it means to speak out and raise awareness on missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. (Lawrence Nayally/CBC)

The red dress is the only piece of crimson clothing that Angela Canning owns.
And on Friday, Canning hung it outside her Yellowknife home on a street that gets lots of traffic, with the hope that many would see it and question it.
"I'm trying to reach the people that don't actually know about all our missing and murdered Aboriginal women," said Canning, whose family is from the Dehcho in the Northwest Territories.
Friday is Red Dress Day in Canada, an initiative started by the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations to raise awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women(external link) and girls. The federation is urging people to wear a red dress — a symbol representing missing and murdered Indigenous women.
Canning had bought the dress for her sister's wedding. Now it serves another noble purpose.
"It was just meant to be," she said.

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Caption: A red dress hangs outside Canning's house in Yellowknife. (Lawrence Nayally/CBC)

A Facebook post prompted Canning to take action.
"It just made me feel like I just needed to do something," she said.
"Growing up, I always felt like I just needed to listen, behave, keep quiet, keep my head down," Canning said.
But she's relieved more people are talking about Indigenous issues. "Progress takes time, so I'm hopeful."
She said that seeing young Indigenous men and women speaking out makes her especially proud.
"I just love it," said Canning, shedding some tears. "It's just really emotional … how proud it makes me. [They're] happy tears."

Red dress at Mildred Hall

"I'm the only one who wore a dress," said Courtney Jung, a teacher at Mildred Hall School in Yellowknife.

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Caption: A red dress hangs outside of Mildred Hall School in Yellowknife on the National Day of Awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women, as declared by the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations. (Submitted by Courtney Jung)

When staff had a conversation about the day of awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women, Jung knew she wanted to show her support.
"We agreed that it is an important day to honour. So I went out and actually bought a red dress yesterday, just for today," said Jung. A red dress hung outside the school Friday in support of Red Dress Day.

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Caption: Courtney Jung, a teacher at Mildred Hall in Yellowknife, wears a red dress to remember the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. (Submitted by Courtney Jung)

Jung has a personal connection to the issue.
"I have a few friends who have had family members and friends who have gone missing and who have been forgotten," Jung said. "And so for me it was my way of showing that it is an important date, and I do recognize that for them."