Founded in Brampton, Ontario, the Federation of Black Canadians emerged from grassroots conversations among 37 concerned Black Canadians who recognized the need for a dedicated national voice addressing issues affecting Black communities. Born from a desire to create meaningful change following significant community challenges, FBC has evolved into a pan-Canadian organization driven by Black organizations across the country. The federation celebrates the diversity, resilience, creativity, and multifaceted nature of Black communities while working to discuss opportunities, contributions, and challenges facing people of African descent nationally. FBC's core values—caring, respect, integrity, responsibility, inclusiveness, and appreciation for those who fought before—guide all organizational efforts. Operating from Brampton, ON, the organization has demonstrated remarkable growth since its inception, expanding from initial steering committee meetings in 2017 to establishing provincial hubs in Alberta and Quebec, acquiring thousands of active supporters nationwide, and developing strategic partnerships with major institutions including the University of Toronto. The organization's journey reflects commitment to fighting racial injustice and creating better lives for Black Canadians through community building and anti-racism work. FBC's success is measured not only through program participants and partnerships but through the voices it amplifies and the systemic barriers it challenges. By centering the experiences and expertise of Black Canadians themselves, FBC continues building coalitions across the country, ensuring that the growing Black Canadian population has meaningful representation in national conversations shaping policy, opportunity, and community well-being.
Founded in 2013 as a survivor-led initiative in Toronto, Ontario, Black Women in Motion emerged from a York University research project and has grown into a vital community organization dedicated to empowering and celebrating Black and African-Caribbean diasporic women. The organization operates on the principle of 'For Us, By Us,' amplifying the voices, perspectives, and wisdom of Black survivors while boldly investing in Black lives and futures. Rooted in the belief that collective care and healing are essential, Black Women in Motion recognizes the interconnectedness of community struggles and the personal responsibility members have to care for one another. The organization's founding vision, articulated by Founder and Executive Director Monica Samuel, centers on ensuring the well-being, prosperity, and advancement of Black survivors who have endured profound challenges yet remain poignant, prolific, and radiant. Operating with core values of intersectionality, collaboration, and curiosity, Black Women in Motion acknowledges the complex, overlapping barriers faced by marginalized Black survivors and centers their needs in all prevention, intervention, and advocacy efforts. Based in Toronto, the organization facilitates access to holistic, integrated, culturally-relevant healing spaces that honor the strength drawn from Black identity, ancestry, and lived experience, while actively preventing all forms of structural oppression and violence within the community.
Blacks In Technology Toronto represents a transformative movement dedicated to addressing systemic underrepresentation of Black workers in the technology industry. Based in Toronto, ON, this non-profit organization was founded on the mission to 'stomp the divide'—fundamentally changing an industry that has historically failed to achieve parity with Black workers. The organization recognizes a critical reality: Black professionals often find themselves as the only Black person on their team or in the room, facing barriers to pay equity and equal opportunity across all technology-related career demographics. Through a comprehensive approach combining training, education, networking, and mentorship, Blacks In Technology Toronto works to level the playing field with support from allies, partners, sponsors, and most importantly, its global member community. The foundation is built on core tenets of trust and transparency, with leadership comprising seasoned professionals with lifelong careers in technology and education. By hosting premier events like BITCON—the Conference for the Culture—and providing complimentary membership benefits, the organization creates spaces where Black technologists can connect, learn, and advance together. The community encompasses diverse roles and career stages, from aspiring professionals transitioning into tech to established entrepreneurs and C-suite leaders. Blacks In Technology Toronto's impact extends globally, representing the largest community of Black people in the technology industry and establishing a blueprint for world-class technical excellence that drives innovation while actively dismantling barriers to representation and success.
Founded in Brampton, Ontario, the Federation of Black Canadians emerged from grassroots conversations among 37 concerned Black Canadians who recognized the need for a dedicated national voice addressing issues affecting Black communities. Born from a desire to create meaningful change following significant community challenges, FBC has evolved into a pan-Canadian organization driven by Black organizations across the country. The federation celebrates the diversity, resilience, creativity, and multifaceted nature of Black communities while working to discuss opportunities, contributions, and challenges facing people of African descent nationally. FBC's core values—caring, respect, integrity, responsibility, inclusiveness, and appreciation for those who fought before—guide all organizational efforts. Operating from Brampton, ON, the organization has demonstrated remarkable growth since its inception, expanding from initial steering committee meetings in 2017 to establishing provincial hubs in Alberta and Quebec, acquiring thousands of active supporters nationwide, and developing strategic partnerships with major institutions including the University of Toronto. The organization's journey reflects commitment to fighting racial injustice and creating better lives for Black Canadians through community building and anti-racism work. FBC's success is measured not only through program participants and partnerships but through the voices it amplifies and the systemic barriers it challenges. By centering the experiences and expertise of Black Canadians themselves, FBC continues building coalitions across the country, ensuring that the growing Black Canadian population has meaningful representation in national conversations shaping policy, opportunity, and community well-being.
Founded in 2013 as a survivor-led initiative in Toronto, Ontario, Black Women in Motion emerged from a York University research project and has grown into a vital community organization dedicated to empowering and celebrating Black and African-Caribbean diasporic women. The organization operates on the principle of 'For Us, By Us,' amplifying the voices, perspectives, and wisdom of Black survivors while boldly investing in Black lives and futures. Rooted in the belief that collective care and healing are essential, Black Women in Motion recognizes the interconnectedness of community struggles and the personal responsibility members have to care for one another. The organization's founding vision, articulated by Founder and Executive Director Monica Samuel, centers on ensuring the well-being, prosperity, and advancement of Black survivors who have endured profound challenges yet remain poignant, prolific, and radiant. Operating with core values of intersectionality, collaboration, and curiosity, Black Women in Motion acknowledges the complex, overlapping barriers faced by marginalized Black survivors and centers their needs in all prevention, intervention, and advocacy efforts. Based in Toronto, the organization facilitates access to holistic, integrated, culturally-relevant healing spaces that honor the strength drawn from Black identity, ancestry, and lived experience, while actively preventing all forms of structural oppression and violence within the community.
Blacks In Technology Toronto represents a transformative movement dedicated to addressing systemic underrepresentation of Black workers in the technology industry. Based in Toronto, ON, this non-profit organization was founded on the mission to 'stomp the divide'—fundamentally changing an industry that has historically failed to achieve parity with Black workers. The organization recognizes a critical reality: Black professionals often find themselves as the only Black person on their team or in the room, facing barriers to pay equity and equal opportunity across all technology-related career demographics. Through a comprehensive approach combining training, education, networking, and mentorship, Blacks In Technology Toronto works to level the playing field with support from allies, partners, sponsors, and most importantly, its global member community. The foundation is built on core tenets of trust and transparency, with leadership comprising seasoned professionals with lifelong careers in technology and education. By hosting premier events like BITCON—the Conference for the Culture—and providing complimentary membership benefits, the organization creates spaces where Black technologists can connect, learn, and advance together. The community encompasses diverse roles and career stages, from aspiring professionals transitioning into tech to established entrepreneurs and C-suite leaders. Blacks In Technology Toronto's impact extends globally, representing the largest community of Black people in the technology industry and establishing a blueprint for world-class technical excellence that drives innovation while actively dismantling barriers to representation and success.