Walking causes talking. Talking causes healing it allows you to rebuild yourself inside.
Author of the article: Amanda Short
Publishing date: Jul 09, 2021 • 6 hours ago • 2 minute read • A walk to honour Ashley Morin travels through Saskatoon along 25th Street. For the third year, the family of Ashley Morin, joined by the family of Megan Gallagher, embarked on a walk to North Battleford to bring awareness and support to families who have had loved ones murdered or go missing. Morin was 31 years old when she was last seen in North Battleford on July 10, 2018. Photo taken in Saskatoon on Friday, July 9, 2021. Photo by Matt Smith /Saskatoon StarPhoenix
Prince Albert Daily Herald
Dannataya Burns holds a photo for her mother Monica, who was found dead north of Prince Albert in January 2015, during a walk at Kinsmen Park on Wednesday in remembrance of Canada’s missing and murdered Indigenous women. Monica’s killer plead guilty to manslaughter and one other charge in 2016, and was sentenced to 13 years in jail. Jason Kerr/Daily Herald
One of Dorothy Burn’s biggest wishes in life is that she had the chance to get to know her niece.
Monica Lee Burns was in her late 20s when she was found dead roughly 15 km north of Prince Albert on Jan. 17, 2015. On Wednesday, Dorothy and her husband Ron were among the dozens of friends and family members who gathered in Kinsmen Park to remember Monica and the many other Indigenous women who were murdered.