mysteriew
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Daleen, then 26, was last seen on May 18, 2004 in Saskatoon.
She was close to her daughter Faith, now four, a curly-haired youngster who walked amongst the marchers as they arrived from the Onion Lake First Nation, 350 kilometres north of Saskatoon.
Daleen had started a photography course just before she vanished after going out with some friends. She has not called home since.
She had also recently taken a teacher training course.
Her mother says there was no hint that her daughter would simply walk away from her life.
A $5,000 reward is offered for any information about the young mother, who is approximately five-foot-five and weighed 170 pounds when she disappeared. She wears glasses or contact lenses.
Daleen is just one of about 500 women who have disappeared or been murdered in the last 20 years, says Beverley Jacobs.
That figure is an estimate based on preliminary research and anecdotal evidence, said the president of the Native Women's Association of Canada. She suspects the total is higher.
Most Canadians don't realize the seriousness of the issue, Jacobs said.
http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/news/story.html?id=64a1f9bd-f68b-466c-8ffc-3051acb1d5ab
She was close to her daughter Faith, now four, a curly-haired youngster who walked amongst the marchers as they arrived from the Onion Lake First Nation, 350 kilometres north of Saskatoon.
Daleen had started a photography course just before she vanished after going out with some friends. She has not called home since.
She had also recently taken a teacher training course.
Her mother says there was no hint that her daughter would simply walk away from her life.
A $5,000 reward is offered for any information about the young mother, who is approximately five-foot-five and weighed 170 pounds when she disappeared. She wears glasses or contact lenses.
Daleen is just one of about 500 women who have disappeared or been murdered in the last 20 years, says Beverley Jacobs.
That figure is an estimate based on preliminary research and anecdotal evidence, said the president of the Native Women's Association of Canada. She suspects the total is higher.
Most Canadians don't realize the seriousness of the issue, Jacobs said.
http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/news/story.html?id=64a1f9bd-f68b-466c-8ffc-3051acb1d5ab