Cassandra shared her powerful story of survival and healing at the Sip & Support fundraiser for Aurora House in August 2025.
My name is Cassandra. I am a mom, a student, and a community advocate. I have experienced trauma and healing. My story is sad, but sometimes I share it with laughter because humour helped me survive and heal.
I was raised in an unstable community where the system – schools, child welfare, policing – failed children like me. By my teens, I had fallen through the widened cracks and was manipulated and trafficked before I even knew what trafficking was.
From a tender age, I took care of my mom who struggled with addiction, learning to hold everything together, except myself. I bounced through foster homes, often afraid of what I would find at the end of each school day. Survival became my only focus. At 16, I became a mom, dropped out of school, and accepted survival as my fate, until I decided I wanted better for my kids. I returned to high school, graduating with my eldest on my hip, while pregnant with my youngest.
In the thick of it, I lost my mom to a drug overdose. Broken and grieving, I ended up being trafficked by three different people, two of whom I knew and trusted. That’s the reality of trafficking; it often comes from close people you think you can trust. It rarely looks like in the movies – not strangers in white vans or people chained in basements. Often, it’s someone you trust and love, someone who knows and manipulates your weaknesses.
Through it all, I had to survive and ensure safety for my dependents, but my dreams felt impossible.
Aurora House
On several nights I had to choose between enduring abuse or risk sleeping on the streets. In the pandemic, I eventually fled my trafficker in Ottawa, arriving in Toronto with my toddlers and just $40. We cycled through shelters before securing community housing. While the shelters offered temporary relief, we could not breathe, relax, or heal.
I still didn’t even know I had been trafficked until I met amazing people Kelly Beale and Cassandra Diamond through Bridge North program later spoke to detectives that I finally understood what I had been through. Understanding what I had endured was painful but unexplainably freeing. Through them, I found Aurora House.
Aurora House didn’t just help me; it helped my daughters too. As a mom, that meant everything. Today, we live in a bigger home, I’m working as a legal assistant while studying law, and I have become a proud community advocate. I’m proof that healing is possible when the right supports are in place.
I arrived in February 2021 expecting just another shelter, but it was so much more. I could breathe, relax and let my guard down. For the first time, I envisioned progress rather than mere survival. Aurora House gave me safety and stability. It isn’t just a temporary bed; it gives women time and space to rebuild. When you’ve been through trauma, healing doesn’t happen overnight, it takes time–and they understand that.
I stayed for five months until I found an apartment. During this time, I started therapy and slowly began my healing journey. There, I secured a strong support system. Without Aurora House, I probably would have ended up back in the community that broke me – the last place I wanted to raise my daughters.
Aurora House understood that healing doesn’t just mean helping survivors, it also means supporting their families, and as a mom, that meant the world to me. We recently moved into a bigger place after four years. Aurora House wasn’t the end of my story; it was a foundation for our future.
Now, I’m a full-time law student, a mom raising my kids in safety, a legal assistant, a community advocate, and a speaker working with educators, policymakers, and law enforcement. I am living proof that healing and change are possible. With the right support, survivors don’t just survive; we thrive.
My story isn’t unique. Many survivors are still struggling in silence, waiting for safe housing and hope.
A Call to Action
Ending trafficking takes more than awareness campaigns and checking a box for “Yep, we got survivor input.” It takes investment – in youth, in safe housing, Awareness and rescue aren’t enough; ending trafficking requires investment, mental health services, mentorship, and opportunities before traffickers exploit the gaps and before youth become traffickers themselves.
It takes long-term support – scholarships, job training, livable wages, ongoing therapy, community support, and a seat at the table in shaping policies that affect our lives.
It means ending tokenism – because inviting a survivor to share their story without supporting them beyond that moment is not enough. We need systemic change.
Aurora House does this work. It’s not easy or cheap but it works. Every day, survivors await a chance for a space like it.
My journey—from trafficking to Aurora House to where I am now—is proof of what’s possible when systems support people. Let’s end human trafficking not by words alone, but by action. Your support can make a difference to help survivors start healing. Your support enables Aurora House to continue opening doors for survivors, keep families safe, and change lives.