Hear Their Cries
Breaking the silence on the devastating epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women
- Historical Non-Fiction
- Religion & Spirituality
- True Crime
Six thousand. That is the staggering number of Indigenous women and children who go missing in the United States every single ySix thousand. That is the staggering number of Indigenous women and children who go missing in the United States every single year. The majority are girls between the ages of one and seventeen—lives interrupted by a crisis that the world chooses to ignore.
Hear Their Cries is a haunting and necessary exploration of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) epidemic. L. S. Jordan pulls back the veil on a systemic failure fueled by centuries of colonization, jurisdictional red tape, and blatant racism. From the 'Missing White Woman Syndrome' in the media to the legal loopholes that allow predators to vanish into the shadows of tribal lands, this book exposes why these crimes remain unsolved and why the federal government remains silent.
But this is more than a record of loss. It is a tribute to the spiritual resilience of Native communities and a roadmap for restorative justice. Through heart-wrenching case studies and stories of 'ambiguous loss' shared by families, Jordan demands that we look closer, listen harder, and join the movement for change.
Discover the truth behind the headlines. It is time to hear their cries and fight for the justice they deserve.ear. The majority are girls between the ages of one and seventeen—lives interrupted by a crisis that the world chooses to ignore.
Hear Their Cries is a haunting and necessary exploration of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) epidemic. L. S. Jordan pulls back the veil on a systemic failure fueled by centuries of colonization, jurisdictional red tape, and blatant racism. From the 'Missing White Woman Syndrome' in the media to the legal loopholes that allow predators to vanish into the shadowSix thousand. That is the staggering number of Indigenous women and children who go missing in the United States every single year. The majority are girls between the ages of one and seventeen—lives interrupted by a crisis that the world chooses to ignore.
Hear Their Cries is a haunting and necessary exploration of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) epidemic. L. S. Jordan pulls back the veil on a systemic failure fueled by centuries of colonization, jurisdictional red tape, and blatant racism. From the 'Missing White Woman Syndrome' in the media to the legal loopholes that allow predators to vanish into the shadows of tribal lands, this book exposes why these crimes remain unsolved and why the federal government remains silent.
But this is more than a record of loss. It is a tribute to the spiritual resilience of Native communities and a roadmap for restorative justice. Through heart-wrenching case studies and stories of 'ambiguous loss' shared by families, Jordan demands that we look closer, listen harder, and join the movement for change.
Discover the truth behind the headlines. It is time to hear their cries and fight for the justice they deserve.s of tribal lands, this book exposes why these crimes remain unsolved and why the federal government remains silent.
But this is more than a record of loss. It is a tribute to the spiritual resilience of Native communities and a roadmap for restorative justice. Through heart-wrenching case studies and stories of 'ambiguous loss' shared by families, Jordan demands that we look closer, listen harder, and join the movement for change.
Discover the truth behind the headlines. It is time to hear their cries and fight for the justice they deserve.