• Kwakiutl Health Centre Supports Healing Through Culture and Connection

    The Kwakiutl Peoples are experiencing a mental health crisis and lack of short-term crisis response care in their community on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. In response, they have come together and are blending traditional Kwakiutl ways with modern approaches to create programs and services that protect and uplift their community at the Kwakiutl Health Centre.

  • Healing and Cultural Connection at Mashkwa Healing Garden

    Like other Indigenous Peoples, the Métis have endured colonial policies aimed at severing cultural ties and displacing them from the land. This disconnection has contributed to intergenerational trauma and a decline in well-being for over 8,000 Métis individuals and their families. For many, access to their traditional culture or a sense of belonging has been limited to services run through urban organizations or community groups.

  • We Heal Together

    The legacy of the residential school system has left deep scars on Indigenous Peoples across Canada. Survivors were forever changed by the treatment they endured, and families and communities who lost children to the system were never the same. Although the last residential school closed in 1997, many who were forced to attend are still with us today.

  • Indigenous Ministries Build Bridges for Healing and Reconciliation

    To address historical wrongs, rebuild trust, and foster lasting relationships, Catholic ministries across Canada are working toward reconciliation by bringing together Indigenous culture and the Catholic faith. This commitment has led to the creation of Indigenous ministries within dioceses nationwide, where cultural programs support healing and deepen connections between communities.

  • Honouring a Sacred Promise

    Shockwaves rippled across Canada and the international community in 2021 with the discovery of suspected unmarked graves in British Columbia. For the people of the Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc and Indigenous people across Canada, it confirmed what they already knew: that hundreds of loved ones who had never returned home from residential school remained forever children.

  • Bilijk First Nation Honours Residential School Survivors

    Bilijk First Nation, located along the Saint John River in New Brunswick, is home to nearly 700 on-reserve members. The community is looking to create a special space to honour its residential school Survivors - a place where Survivors, their families and visitors can come together to remember, reflect and heal.

  • Learning and Healing with Ojibwe Spirit Horses (2023 and 2024)

    Mādahòkì Farm, located in Ottawa’s Green Belt, is Canada’s only Indigenous Agri-Tourism destination and working farm. With a mission to preserve Indigenous culture and heritage, the farm offers projects, training programs and cultural events that connect visitors to the land and Indigenous traditions.

  • Indigenous Ministry Office Fosters Healing and Reconciliation in Northern Ontario

    True reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples requires more than words - it needs tangible actions that preserve and celebrate Indigenous traditions and heritage. The Indigenous Ministry Office at the Diocese of Thunder Bay has been doing just that, fostering healing and reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities across northern Ontario.

  • Anishnabeg Outreach Tackles Mental Health Crisis with Innovative Digital Support Platform

    Indigenous communities across Canada are facing a mental health crisis, with nearly one in three community members reporting severe psychological distress, compared to just over one in ten in the general population. This situation is worsened by systemic barriers that often overlook the unique cultural contexts and historical traumas of these communities. As a result, Indigenous peoples experience higher rates of suicide, addiction, intimate partner violence, and involvement in the criminal justice system.

  • Uut Uustukyuu: Bridging the Gap for Indigenous Wellness

    The Uut Uustukyuu Indigenous Healing Society, which operates out the Ahousaht First Nation on the West Coast of Vancouver Island, has been addressing the unique healing needs of Indigenous people through a trauma-informed and culturally grounded approach.