Infosession Donate Register Login
  • About us
    • Our mission and vision
    • Our staff
    • Our group facilitators
    • Our board
    • Our history
    • Our stories
    • Our blog
    • Annual report and audited financial statements
    • FAQ
  • Programs & Registration
  • Information & Resources
    • About eating disorders
    • Eating disorder treatment & support
    • Emergency & crisis support
    • Eating disorder-sensitive dental services
    • Food banks
  • Outreach & Education
  • Get involved
    • Donate
    • Host a fundraiser!
    • Donation FAQ
    • Volunteer
    • Art Show
    • Careers
    • Contact us
  • About us
    • Our mission and vision
    • Our staff
    • Our group facilitators
    • Our board
    • Our history
    • Our stories
    • Our blog
    • Annual report and audited financial statements
    • FAQ
  • Programs & Registration
  • Information & Resources
    • About eating disorders
    • Eating disorder treatment & support
    • Emergency & crisis support
    • Eating disorder-sensitive dental services
    • Food banks
  • Outreach & Education
  • Get involved
    • Donate
    • Host a fundraiser!
    • Donation FAQ
    • Volunteer
    • Art Show
    • Careers
    • Contact us

Monthly Gifts




Footer menu
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Accessibility
  • Art gallery
  • Careers

87 Spadina Road
Toronto, Ontario
Canada M5R 2T1
416-927-8900
info@sheenasplace.org

Subscribe to our newsletter

©Sheena’s Place. Charitable BN 89878 8948 RR0001. All rights reserved.

We appreciate the land on which we currently reside and recognize those who have taken care of this land for generations. Toronto is located within the ‘Dish With One Spoon Territory’, a treaty between the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas, Haudenosaunee that bound them to share the territory and protect the land. As a non-Indigenous person, acknowledging these traditional territories is a reminder to appreciate and recognize not only the physical land, but also the history of those who were living here before European settlers. Indigenous people of many nations have lived on Turtle Island for the last 15,000 years and continue to live here. To learn more, you can read the Indigenous Ally Toolkit created by the Montreal Indigenous Community NETWORK.