You don’t forget moments like this…
It was Wednesday, July 9th, 2025, and I was sitting in CIBC Square, watching a room filled with immigrant professionals, mentors, employers, and government representatives. One by one, people took the stage to honour the journey of some really incredible individuals. That day, I learned what mentorship really is: a lifeline. A door. A second chance.
The TRIEC Mentoring Partnership (TMP) Impact Awards 2025, co-hosted by TRIEC and CIBC, was a bold, beautiful reminder that mentorship is one of Canada’s most overlooked superpowers, and one we desperately need to tap into, now more than ever.
Over 200 guests gathered to celebrate a program that’s supported 27,000+ skilled newcomers over the last two decades, but the numbers only tell part of the story. The real impact lives in the faces, the fireside chats, the proud mentors who have walked beside someone through the most uncertain chapter of their life, and refused to let them settle for less.
I heard stories like Raunica Ahluwalia’s, a former newcomer now a Professor at Seneca Polytechnic and Ramy Bakir, once unsure how he would fit in, now leading a design team at Syllable Inc. I listened to mentors share how guiding others helped them grow too. I watched employers like Loblaw and CIBC be honoured for real, measurable leadership: 100 and 2,000 matches made, respectively.
Somewhere in all of this, something inside me shifted, because if you’re like me (a born-and-raised Canadian) you might have walked into that room thinking mentorship was about “helping someone out.” I walked out realizing it’s about building a better country.
Canada talks a big game about skilled immigration, but what happens after people arrive?
Too often, talent gets lost in translation. Credentials are questioned. Networks don’t exist. People who were: engineers, educators, strategists back home are suddenly taking “survival jobs” just to make rent. One mentee shared that after a year of rejection, he began to wonder if moving to Canada was a mistake. His mentor didn’t just help him fix his resume; they helped him rebuild his sense of self.
TRIEC’s model is intentionally designed. One mentor. One mentee. One professional conversation at a time. The program doesn’t try to fix broken industries overnight. Instead, it exposes the invisible doors, and shows people how to walk through them, how to pivot into adjacent roles, how to navigate cultural norms, how to align what you know with how this country works.
“We’re not in it for the short term,” said Charmaine Bryan (Communications Specialist, TRIEC Mentoring Partnership). “This isn’t a tick-box exercise. It’s about lasting change.”
Here’s the part that floored me: mentorship doesn’t just change the mentee. Mentors grow too: learning, unlearning, building empathy, expanding their worldview. In fact, many said the experience helped them become better leaders, managers, and people.
So, what does success look like? It’s seeing skilled immigrants get back to the level they were at before they arrived, especially if it is something that they enjoy doing. It’s watching Canada stop wasting talent. It’s when TRIEC can say, “We’ve worked ourselves out of a job.”
Until then, events like the TMP Impact Awards are a crucial reminder: we all have a role to play. Whether you’re a professional who can spare a few hours a month, a company ready to invest in equity, or someone who simply believes that potential deserves a chance, this is your invitation.
The next success story could start with you.