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Mind | Body | Soul

Justice Is Healing: How one program is rewriting the rules for our community

“We’re not asking the system to be kind, we’re demanding it follow its own rules while we heal from the harm it’s caused.”

Photographer: Pablo Stanley

When a new advocate from Inner Child Curative Inc. says their Justice Is Healing program is about “Anything related to forcing the system to follow the law,” he’s talking about something revolutionary. This isn’t just another legal aid service, it’s a trauma-informed, culturally responsive approach to justice that recognizes what our community has always known: the system wasn’t built for us, but that doesn’t mean we can’t make it work.

For too long: Black, Indigenous, racialized, LGBTQ2S+, neurodivergent, and low-income individuals have found themselves caught in legal systems that criminalize survival, poverty, and difference. Inner Child Curative Inc.’s Justice Is Healing program is flipping the script, offering comprehensive legal advocacy that treats justice as a pathway to healing rather than punishment.

The program’s scope is breathtaking in its comprehensiveness. From criminal record relief and parole support to housing justice and immigration advocacy, ICC covers the full spectrum of legal challenges our community faces. They’ll help with pardon applications for cannabis convictions, recognize the racist enforcement of drug laws, support parole applications with trauma-informed personal statements, and advocate for emergency housing placement when survival is on the line.

“What sets this program apart isn’t just what they do, but how they do it.”

What sets this program apart isn’t just what they do, but how they do it. ICC understands that legal advocacy without cultural competency is just another form of violence. That’s why they offer Gladue-informed narratives for Indigenous clients, spiritual impact statements for Rastafarian and Afro-Caribbean clients, and neurodivergent accommodation mapping for those whose brains work differently.

This approach acknowledges something profound: justice without healing perpetuates harm, and healing without justice is incomplete. When ICC writes intergenerational trauma statements, or develops cultural healing narratives, they’re not just fighting cases, they’re fighting for our humanity to be recognized within systems that have historically denied it.

The program’s reach extends into areas often overlooked by traditional legal services. They’ll advocate for medical cannabis use in housing and workplaces, support transgender individuals seeking safer placement in custody, and help survivors of intimate partner violence navigate emergency protection orders. They understand that justice touches every aspect of our lives, from the workplace discrimination we face to the police encounters that can derail everything we’ve built.

Perhaps most importantly, ICC refuses to work within the system’s limitations. While they won’t provide legal representation, they’ll prepare you to represent yourself effectively. They’ll help you navigate court forms, write victim impact statements for survivors of state violence, and support diversion program applications that keep people out of the system entirely.

Their healing-centred documentation represents something entirely new in legal advocacy. Where traditional services might focus solely on legal technicalities, ICC creates healing plans, cultural healing narratives, and spiritual impact statements that honour the fullness of who we are. They recognize that for many of us, contact with the legal system is itself a form of trauma that requires healing.

“ICC’s approach offers something beyond crisis response, it offers transformation.”

This program emerges at a crucial moment. As we witness ongoing police violence, housing crises, and systemic discrimination across institutions, the need for justice advocacy that centers healing has never been more urgent. But ICC’s approach offers something beyond crisis response—it offers transformation.

When we center healing in our pursuit of justice, we stop accepting crumbs and start demanding fundamental change. We stop seeing ourselves as victims of systems and start recognizing ourselves as agents of transformation. We stop separating justice from healing and start understanding them as inseparable parts of liberation.

Inner Child Curative Inc.’s Justice Is Healing program proves that another way is possible. In a world where the legal system often feels designed to break us down, they’re building something designed to lift us up. Healing truly is the new Black, and justice, real justice, is how we get there.

For more information about the Justice Is Healing program, contact Inner Child Curative Inc.

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