Amid attention on Petito case, Native mother seeks justice
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[September 25, 2021]
By Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - Pepita Redhair, a
27-year-old Navajo woman who dreamt of becoming an engineer and loved
skateboarding, was last seen in March 2020 walking with her boyfriend in
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Redhair's disappearance was not reported in local media. Detectives said
they ran out of leads, according to her mother Anita King.
Now King, 62, is organizing an Oct. 3 rally in Albuquerque to seek
justice for her daughter after the disappearance of another young
American woman, Gabby Petito, gained global attention.
"I felt like my voice wasn't important, my daughter wasn't important
because she was Native American," King said on Friday from her home in
Crownpoint, New Mexico.
She is being helped by Native American activists who note how much more
media coverage was given to Petito, a 22-year-old white woman, compared
with missing and murdered women of color.
"It's systemic racism, it's the historical and inter-generational trauma
that continues to perpetuate these stigmas that black and brown people
are not as important as white people," said Jolene Holgate, a director
for the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women in
Albuquerque.
"I want to extend our love and prayers to the (Petito) family and I'm
very happy they could get that closure and I hope that they get
justice," Holgate said after Petito's body was found on Sunday in
Wyoming. "We really feel like our stories are not being as amplified."
State studies show Native people, especially women and girls,
represent a disproportionately large number of missing and murdered
cases but do not get equal attention from media or law enforcement.
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Flyer for rally seeking justice for Navajo woman Pepita Redhair who
went missing in March 2020 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in this
handout photo released September 24, 2021. Coalition To Stop
Violence Against Native Women/Handout via REUTERS
"Deep-rooted racism and stereotypes of Indigenous
women are primary causes of the unequal response in Minnesota when
an Indigenous woman, girl, or two spirit person goes missing or is
murdered," said a December state report.
Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American U.S.
cabinet secretary, said on Thursday that the extensive media
coverage of Petito was a reminder of the hundreds of missing and
murdered indigenous women and girls.
"Hopefully, the folks who are writing the news, and broadcasting the
news will understand that these women are also friends, neighbors,
classmates and work colleagues," Haaland, who has set up a Native
missing and murdered task force, told reporters.
Redhair's mother, King, said she was finding some solace in support
from Native American groups and media attention to her daughter's
case, more than 18 months after she disappeared.
"It makes me feel like I'm not alone," King said.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Donna
Bryson and Daniel Wallis)
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