Dr. Michele Yatchmeneff
National Day of Awareness for Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, Girls and Two-Spirit People (MMIWG2S)

Walking for Justice: UAA Community Honors MMIP on Red Dress Day with Healing, Storytelling, and Solidarity

In recognition of Red Dress Day and the ongoing MMIP crisis, we spoke with organizers from the University of Alaska Anchorage’s Walk for MMIP to learn more about the event, its purpose, and the deeper meaning behind it. In the following Q&A, they share reflections on community healing, the importance of visibility, and how both Indigenous and non-Indigenous people can stand in solidarity in the fight for justice.


We came together as a community to attempt to heal and draw awareness to MMIP.  Michael Livingston, an avid MMIP activist, was our speaker. He shared a poignant story about his experience as a police officer and the history of Benny Benson, the true Alaskan flag creator.  Antonia Commack, an MMIP activist, brought her posters showing many Alaskan MMIPs.  The purpose of the walk was to be seen – show our community we are here and need the recognition and support of the entire community to create the systemic change needed to battle this crisis. Many families brought their posters of family members. We also hosted 2 dance groups, Ingrimiut Yurartet—People of the Mountains and Anchichx kwaan. The dancing helps us call our ancestors to be with us and helps those hurting from this crisis some healing.

Because MMIP is not just an Indigenous crisis, it’s a community crisis – the entire community needs to be involved for there to be no more stolen Indigenous People.  

Misclassifications and underreporting are ways that law enforcement and media systems make Indigenous People invisible.  If a murder is misclassified as a suicide, that family will never be able to seek justice. That family won’t be able to heal from that injustice. This leads to generational trauma that gets handed down to our children/future ancestors and their children.  These waves of pain keep rippling into tidal waves for all of our communities.

It’s vital that UAA honors and acknowledges the Alaska Native it resides on.  One way to do that at UAA is that faculty and staff use all of our abilities, whether educational, advocacy, or institutional, to elevate Indigenous-led efforts.

It means showing up for community events, spreading the word about injustices, and demanding lawmakers and our state and federal representatives fight for visibility and justice.  Also elevate our community members, like Michael Livingston and Antonia Commack who do this hard work day in and day out because this work is very personal. Stand by them whenever they can because they need our support when they need rest and healing.

They can help support this crisis by learning more information, hearing the stories, and then elevating those stories.