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Jane’s Walk returns to Halifax with 17 events to learn about the city

Jane’s Walk returns to Halifax with 17 events to learn about the city

Jane Jacobs’ fight to save Greenwich Village in the ‘50s and ‘60s, and her later fight to stop Toronto’s proposed Spadina Expressway, inspired a generation of urbanists. A woman who made waves in the male-dominated field of urban planning, Jacobs sought to protect city blocks from being turned into high-rises, to keep mom ‘n’ pop shops from being razed to build highways and to keep urban communities affordable. She “wrote eloquently about sidewalks, parks, retail design and self-organization,” as New York’s Center for the Living City puts it, and “encouraged people to familiarize themselves with the places where they live, work, and play.”

After the longtime writer and activist’s death in 2006, Toronto created Jane Jacobs Day in her name, and across the country a series of walks—Jane’s Walks—began in her honour. The Halifax version of Jane’s Walk was put on hold for two years due to the pandemic, but the event returns for 2022: It happens this weekend, Saturday and Sunday May 7 and 8.

“The walks help bring people together, creating strong and resourceful communities, cultivating belonging and encouraging civic leadership,” the Jane’s Walk Halifax website says. The event is actually 17 different free, volunteer-led walks happening around the city, each focused on a different topic or area of HRM.

Saturday features 11 walks. At Birch Cove Saturday morning, for example, a Learn To Bird walk will teach the basics of spotting and recognizing local wildlife. In Dartmouth, local historian David Jones will give a history lesson during a walk around Lake Banook.

Journalist Lezlie Lowe—famed for her writing at The Coast and other outlets—will lead a walk around Needham Park, giving details on local women’s war efforts from her new book The Volunteers. And former MLA Lisa Roberts will lead a walk through the north end while talking about affordable housing.

The event continues with six walks Sunday, including author and illustrator Emma Fitzgerald leading a sketching “walk” at Peace and Friendship Park, with a focus on capturing accessible transportation. Another art-focused walk, this one led by Argyle Fine Art, will take you on a tour of public installations and murals around downtown Halifax.

The downtown walk titled Gay Old Halifax will explore the nightclubs and queer community scene of the ‘70s and ‘80s. And don’t forget the vibrant streets across the harbour: an afternoon walk will put the art in Dartmouth.

There is no advance sign-up required and all walks are free, though some recommend bringing special supplies. View the full list of walks on the Jane’s Walk Halifax website.

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Walk, special events planned in Toppenish for national day of awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls

Walk, special events planned in Toppenish for national day of awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls

TOPPENISH — Special events and a walk are planned Thursday on the national day of awareness for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

The awareness walk begins at Yakamart, 111 Fort Road, after an opening prayer and a speaker at 10:30 a.m. It ends at the Yakama Nation Cultural Center. Along with the walk, Yakama Nation Behavioral Health and the Yakama Nation Victim Resource Program will hold other events Thursday as part of the program’s REDgalia campaign.

They start at 9 a.m., also at Yakamart, with a T-shirt giveaway. People can also make posters or signs to honor a missing or murdered loved one or anything related to the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people.

After the opening prayer and remarks from a family member of a missing or murdered Indigenous person at 10:30 a.m., the walk will leave Yakamart for the cultural center at 100 Spiel-Yi Loop. Another family member, Cissy Strong Reyes, will speak there at 12:30 p.m., which will be followed by an open mic and other activities. Closing prayer is set for 2:30 p.m.

Reyes continues to seek justice for her sister, Rosenda Sophia Strong. The mother of four disappeared Oct. 2, 2018. Strong’s remains were found in an abandoned freezer outside Toppenish on July 4, 2019. Anyone with information is asked to call the Yakama Nation Police Department at 509-865-2933 or the FBI at 509-990-0857 regarding case number 18-010803.

More than 32 Indigenous women have been murdered or have gone missing on and outside the 1.3-million-acre Yakama Reservation over decades. Many men and boys have also disappeared, have been murdered or died mysteriously. Most of the cases remain unsolved.

Reyes is joined by their brother, Christopher Strong, at the many events she organizes and attends to keep their sister’s story in the public eye.

“We as a family fight every day for our sister. It’s hard and tiring at times. But we have to keep her visible so the FBI and Tribal authorities and the MMIP task force can see us and know we are still wanting proper investigation and searches,” Reyes posted Friday on Facebook. “We did not get that as a family in the beginning.”

Families of missing and murdered Indigenous people are the focus of events in Seattle on Saturday organized by Missing and Murdered Indigenous People & Families. They take place from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at 4351 S. Othello St.

The organization founded by Roxanne White represents all missing and murdered Indigenous people with its main focus on supporting families. For more information about the Seattle events, email mmip.families@gmail.com or visit the group’s Facebook page.