Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction blends activism and creativity to raise awareness for ongoing injustices

Brianna Olson-Pitawanakwat, a founding member of Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction.
By Sorousheh Salman
Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction (TIHR), a non-profit organization created by Indigenous and First Nations activists, hosted their art exhibition, “UNSANCTIONED,” during Nuit Blanche this year on Oct. 4.
“Tonight is a mixture of everything. It’s the gallery space being open to the public,” said Brianna Olson-Pitawanakwat, a founding member of TIHR.
The counter-event showcased art pieces from the organization’s permanent collection and the local community at the Native Arts Society.
“Our permanent collection has art from people who have done art through our program, people who we’ve met along the way and it’s all [through] a lens of harm reduction, land defence and social justice,” said Olson-Pitawanakwat.
“UNSANCTIONED” was a night of unapologetically platforming resistance. According to Olson-Pitawanakwat, the exhibition aims to shed light on the ongoing attacks on harm reduction in the city through a series of bills.
Some of these bills include: the closure of safe consumption sites under Bill 223, “Safer Streets, Stronger Communities Act” and the criminalization of people living in encampments or using substances under Bill 6, “Safer Municipalities Act.” There is also an attack on Indigenous people’s sovereignty resulting from Bill 5, “Protect Ontario by Unleashing our Economy Act,” that enables Ontario’s municipalities to expand their infrastructure without having Indigenous voices involved.
The exhibition’s main highlight was their photo collection, covering their Indigenous-led Winter Night Outreach program. According to the collection’s photojournalist, Joshua Best, the exhibition is a display of how TIHR engages with unhoused people in Toronto every winter.

“During the brutally cold nights, [TIHR] ensures they have what they need to get through the night,” he said.
“We call it Indigenous-led Winter Night Outreach, because we are Indigenous people who are doing this work in our community and nobody’s asked us to do it. We’re doing it because we see a need and it’s important,” said Olson-Pitawanakwat.

Best spoke about a particular image, where a man succumbed to the snow. He said it captures the essence of the intense environment unhoused people are dealing with.
“It’s a guy. You wouldn’t even know it was a human being. His blankets and everything is covered in snow and he’s right behind the Toronto Eaton Centre. The entire scene is just white and you could just see the outline of a blanket and you wouldn’t think that was a human being — but that’s a human being. And it’s the type of person that you do outreach for,” he said.
According to the City of Toronto, approximately 86 per cent of people were turned away or dismissed as “unmatched” for shelters due to a lack of available beds as of September 2025.
Olson-Pitawanakwat emphasized the vast majority of unhoused people are senior citizens. “I’ve seen awful situations for a really long time, but I think one of the things that struck me is that you see the same people every year and they are all seniors,” she explained.
During the winter, Best recalled seeing people in -30 °C weather on the streets with no shoes on.
“That’s the big thing about Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction. There is no judgment. You ask people what they need and if they can facilitate that, they give that to them with no judgment.”
For Best, the exhibit was not so much about the photography as it was about the intention to support unhoused individuals.
“The reality of living on the street, especially during Toronto’s winters, shows the level of direct compassion that people have and the way others receive it. Sometimes we walk up and the person will say, ‘Thank God you guys are here,’” he explains.
When offered coats and jackets, Best saw instantaneous relief on people’s faces, explaining the immediacy the cold demands. He said many fear not making it through the night.

Mixed media piece “Land Back” by Kizmet.
Kizmet, artist of the mixed media piece “Land Back” revealed the portrait is a critique of Canadian police institutions. It addresses how the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) often act as enforcers for corporate interests, aiding in the exploitation of resources, including Indigenous land, oil and minerals.
“If you can’t go out and burn a police car in real life, you can do it through art,” he said.
Kizmet shared how “Land Back’s” usage of different media came to be. “There was a time many years ago when I put down every single other kind of painting utensil. I just tried to do spray painting and master spray painting and I did that for about 10 years.”
“Land Back” is part of his collection with 20 other paintings, which are not limited to just the spray painting medium.
Kizmet’s art is a culmination of intentional meanings and his journey in reconnecting with his Peruvian-Indigenous heritage. Growing up disconnected from his roots, witnessing and experiencing covert anti-Indigenous racism, he explained he was only able to understand some of those childhood experiences later in life.
“I started hanging out with other Natives… a lot of things started clicking for me. It kind of gave me the want to go reconnect with my roots and spend time with my family and learn from them,” said Kizmet.
His fearlessness in tackling themes of resistance in his art stems from his beginnings with graffiti in his teenage years.
“If you painted over somebody, they might try and come and stab you,” he said.
This early exposure to extreme rejection shaped his resilience, making threats and backlash against his art manageable.
“If you can’t go out and burn a police car in real life, you can do it through art.”
According to Kizmet, some art institutions, venues and people will not touch his artwork, regardless of whether or not they are opposed to its creation. “They’re just afraid of ‘controversy’ or what they see as a ‘controversial thing,’ which is Native people being a Native.”
He said Indigenous art can be held to an unfair standard and matched with reductive stereotypes.
“Real Native art is art made by Indigenous people. It doesn’t matter what you make,” said Olson-Pitawanakwat. “UNSANCTIONED” challenges these stereotypes against Indigenous people by opening its platform to a range of artistic mediums.
“We have a lot to share and we have a lot to lead and we have a lot to do in our community and we just want to share that with people,” said Olson-Pitawanakwat.
More of “UNSANCTIONED” by Tristan Forde:





















