Tired of having their calls for a national inquiry fall on deaf ears, three aboriginal organizations have come together to launch a community-led database to document the lives and deaths of missing or murdered aboriginal women in Canada.

No More Silence, Families of Sisters in Spirit and the Native Youth Sexual Health Network say the website will also provide family and friends a space to memorialize their loved ones and celebrate their lives.

Called It Starts With Us, the site was launched on the anniversary of the unsolved death of Bella Laboucan-McLean, 25.

“This new website and database gives families like ours the ability to not only document the lives of our loved ones but also commemorate and celebrate their lives and achievements,” Laboucan-McLean’s sister, Melina Laboucan-Massimo, said.

The young Cree woman fell 31 stories from a highrise condo in downtown Toronto. Police deemed her death suspicious.

“We know there are many other stories, families and anniversaries, this is just the beginning,” Krysta Williams of the Native Youth Sexual Health Network said in a press release. “We continue to build capacity within our networks to respond and support.”

An RCMP report released earlier this year found 1,181 homicides and unresolved missing person cases involving aboriginal women between 1980 and 2012.

Amnesty International estimates Native women are five to seven times more likely than other women to die of violence in Canada.