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Pink Shirt Day: Standing up to bullying together

 Every year on Pink Shirt Day, people in schools, workplaces and communities across the world reach for something pink as a quiet act of courage. That small choice sends a clear message about the kind of communities we want to build: places where people feel safe and respected. 

The first Pink Shirt Day started in Nova Scotia in 2007 when two students organized their classmates to wear pink after a boy was targeted for his clothing. The idea travelled far. Today, Pink Shirt Day is marked in many countries and across Canada. The heart of it remains the same: ordinary people deciding that bullying will not go unchallenged. 

Why Pink Shirt Day still matters 

Bullying can happen face to face. It can happen in group chats, gaming platforms, or on social media. It can be loud and obvious or quiet and isolating. However it shows up, bullying harms mental health

Children and youth who are bullied are more likely to experience anxiety, depression, loneliness and thoughts of self-harm. Those who bully others also face higher risks, including mental health and substance use concerns and trouble at school. For young people who already face barriers (like discrimination, poverty, or unsafe environments) the toll can be even heavier

Pink Shirt Day gives communities a focal point to talk about these realities. It opens space for real conversations in classrooms, staff rooms, board rooms and around kitchen tables. It also offers a chance to ask harder questions: How do we respond when harm occurs? How do we support the person who was targeted, the person who caused harm and everyone who witnessed it? 

A closer look at Ontario 

Pink Shirt Day is international, yet the impact of bullying shows up in very local ways. In Ontario, many children and youth live with mental health challenges and often support comes late or not at all. When bullying is part of the picture, those challenges can deepen. 

For example: 

What you can do on Pink Shirt Day 

Here are some options you can share that feel simple and doable: 

Where to turn for support 

If someone is dealing with bullying, they deserve support and safety. Many people stay silent because they feel ashamed, worried about making things worse, or unsure how others will react. One of the most powerful things we can say is: “You don’t have to handle this alone.” 

Here’s where to turn to: 

Pink Shirt Day is one moment in the year. The attitudes that support it can shape every day that follows. When we take bullying seriously and stand with people who are being harmed, we build communities where more people can feel like they belong.