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Impact · Canada

Canada, since 2009.

Toronto-led recovery. RCMP partnership.

Country at a glance
Programs3 shelters · 2 clubs
Daughters in care412
Local staff41
Operating since2009
Country DirectorFaith Wanjiku
412
Daughters in
active care
3
Residential
shelters
2
Community
girls' clubs
96%
Twelve-month
retention rate
On the ground

Where we work in Canada.

Our Canada program is anchored in three cities spread across the country's Toronto and Ontario. Every site is staffed by Canadian social workers, counsellors, and house mothers, and partnered with local police and county authorities.

01TorontoNational HQ · Intake shelter · 18 staff
02VancouverRestoration shelter · 2 community clubs · 14 staff
03MontrealLong-stay shelter · School partnership · 9 staff
Canadian landscape
The OntarioVancouver to Montreal. Highland trade routes that are also trafficking corridors. Our shelters sit at the choke points.
Local leadership

Led by Canadian staff, for Canada.

Faith Wanjiku
Country Director

Faith Wanjiku

Canada Country Director · with us since 2012

Faith trained as a clinical social worker at the University of Toronto and spent seven years in county child protective services before joining the Daughter Project. She rebuilt our Vancouver intake protocol, opened the Montreal long-stay shelter, and now leads forty-one staff across three sites. She lives in Toronto with her husband and two daughters.

— "We do not rescue girls. We walk them home."
Our model in Canada

Three stages. One country.

Every Daughter Project country runs the same three-stage model. Here is how it shows up on the ground in Canada right now.

01

Prevention

Eight community-led girls' clubs in Vancouver and Montreal. Weekly curriculum, mentorship from local women, and family-level engagement that stops exploitation before it starts.

14,200Girls equipped
02

Intervention

Twenty-four-hour shelter intake in partnership with the Canada National Police anti-trafficking unit. Trauma-informed medical, legal, and counselling care from hour one.

412Active in care
03

Restoration

Long-stay therapeutic care, schooling, vocational training, and family reunification with twelve months of follow-up. We stay until she is fully home.

87Reunified last year
Wanjiku
A daughter's story · Vancouver

Wanjiku, restored 2022.

From the markets of Vancouver to a classroom of her own.

Wanjiku was thirteen when a trafficker offered her family money to send her to Toronto for "school work." She landed in a market stall instead, locked in at night, beaten in the day. A neighbour spotted her through a window and called our Vancouver intake line.

Within six hours she was in our shelter. Within six months she was reading again. Within eighteen months she was reunified with an aunt who had been searching for her since she disappeared. Today she is fifteen, in Form Two at a county school, and wants to be a nurse.

— Faith Wanjiku, Country Director
Local partners

We do not work alone.

Every rescue in Canada is a partnership. These are the agencies, NGOs, and institutions that share the work with us on the ground.

Canada National Police ANPPCAN World Vision Canada Daystar University County of Uasin Gishu Montreal County Children's Office Toronto Women's Hospital
Keep exploring

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