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Health & Wellness

Canada Invests $2.8M in Black-Led Mental Health Initiatives

“Black Canadians face significant barriers to accessing mental health services and support.”

Photographer: Brandy Kennedy

In Caribbean kitchen, mental health was never discussed. We talked about “nerves” and “bad feelings,” but never depression, or anxiety. This silence isn’t unique to one family; it echoes across Black communities in Canada, where stigma and systemic barriers create dangerous gaps in care.

The problem runs deeper than cultural reluctance. Black Canadians navigate a healthcare system that often fails to recognize how anti-Black racism, intergenerational trauma, and cultural disconnection impact mental well-being. When seeking help, we frequently encounter professionals who lack cultural competence, or awareness of our lived experiences.

We have heard of community members waiting months for therapy, only to feel misunderstood by her counselor who couldn’t grasp how workplace microaggressions were triggering her anxiety. Stories like theirs are common, revealing a system not designed with us in mind.

This is why the recent announcement of $2.8 million in funding for 26 Black-led mental health initiatives matters so profoundly. These community-based projects recognize that healing happens within cultural context, that mental health support must acknowledge the unique stressors Black Canadians face.

The Promoting Health Equity: Mental Health of Black Canadians Fund represents a growing understanding that solutions must come from within communities themselves. As someone who has both sought and provided mental health support, I know culturally appropriate resources can be life changing.

The funding announcement acknowledges what Black communities have long known: we need practitioners who look like us, programs that speak to our experiences, and spaces where we don’t have to explain ourselves. The 29 projects supported through this initiative will help create these essential resources.

As Parliamentary Secretary Yasir Naqvi noted, these organizations have “A deep understanding of the cultural realities of their members.” This community wisdom cannot be replicated by one-size-fits-all approaches.

Still, questions remain. How will these initiatives reach those most in need? What happens after the funding ends? How do we ensure this investment leads to lasting systemic change rather than temporary solutions?

The answers will determine whether this moment becomes a turning point, or merely another well-intentioned effort. For now, it represents hope; hope that future generations in our communities will speak openly about mental health and find support that truly sees them.

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