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Sanctuary Found: Reflections from the Border

As hostility rises in the U.S., a lawyer helps 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals cross the border to Canada

A person waving a Canadian flag and two inclusive Pride flags.

I've been a lawyer for eighteen years. Most days, it's paperwork and deadlines—the quiet machinery of immigration law, forms stacked on forms, the slow grind toward someone else's freedom. But today reminded me why I ever wanted this job in the first place.

Over the years, there are moments that stick with you. A flash of relief in someone's eyes across a conference table. The crack in a voice when they finally say thank you. Tears you didn't expect, falling down your own face in a courtroom hallway. But this wasn't just a win on paper. This was a life. Two lives, actually. And a border that, for once, opened instead of closed.

The Intersection of Law and Survival

When Bill C-12 passed in late 2025, my office became a beacon. For American clients looking north, confirming Canadian citizenship isn't just about heritage anymore. It's a lifeline. A way out. Over the past year, helping 2SLGBTQIA+ asylum seekers has taken on a new, urgent weight. I've been working with non-binary folks fleeing escalating hostility in the United States. People who just want to exist without looking over their shoulders. People who are tired.

Then two worlds collided.

I met a client I will never forget. An American non-binary person trying to confirm their Canadian roots—and their partner, also non-binary, who simply wanted the right to live without fear. They had found a home waiting in the Vancouver area, an apartment with their name on it. But the 49th parallel still stood between them and safety. A line on a map. And sometimes, lines on maps become walls.

A Tense Vigil

I knew the risks. Through my network of fellow 2SLGBTQIA+ refugee lawyers, we'd heard the stories—non-binary travelers turned away by CBSA officers for no reason other than who they were. I couldn't let them face that alone. So, I gave them my cell number. A lifeline, just in case the gates stayed shut.

On Good Friday, I tried to eat dinner. I barely tasted it. Around me, the world moved at a casual Friday pace—people laughing, making plans, living ordinary lives. But my heart was at the border. I was a wreck. Eyes glued to my phone. Running through every possible scenario, every legal argument I might need to pull out in an instant to keep them safe. I barely slept the night before. Neither did they, I suspect.

The Gateway Opens

Then the text came.

"They're letting us in!!!"

I read it twice. Then a third time. My hands were shaking.

The officer had reviewed the citizenship application. It held firm. But the real miracle—the thing I keep coming back to—was the compassion shown to their partner. We had braced for the worst. Ready to file a Basis of Claim for refugee status right there at the land border, ready to fight. Instead, the officer issued a three-month visitor record. A bridge. A beginning.

My client messaged me, moved to tears by the respect they'd been shown. I started crying in front of the customs guy, they wrote. I was so scared they were going to turn us away.

The officer asked my client's partner what gender they wanted entered for the visa. He brought tissues. He said they didn't need to provide a specific instance of fear, just that they were afraid. He was kind. In a system that so often crushes people with its indifference, he was kind.

And soon, I will meet them for the first time. In real life. Not through a screen, not through text messages that make my heart race at dinner. Face to face. Safe.

Charting New Territory

Now they're settling into their new home in the Fraser Valley. There's still paperwork. There's always paperwork. Their car is financed, not leased. The registration is still good in Washington. They'll deal with it later. For now, they're sleeping. For now, they're home.

And I can't stop thinking about what this moment really means.

In eighteen years, I've seen a lot. Deportations that broke my heart. Wins that felt like losing because of what came after. But this? We're charting new territory. It looks a lot like the stories from The Handmaid's Tale, except it's real, and it's happening now, and the people crossing the border are not characters in a novel. They are someone's partner. Someone's neighbour. Someone who cried in front of a customs officer because they were so afraid, and then cried again because they didn't have to be.

I hope I can keep helping. Because of the current political climate, the shifting tides of history, this work has become more than a profession. It's a mission. A calling. A responsibility I carry to bed with me at night and wake up with in the morning.

Knowing I played a small part in guiding two people out of fear and into the safety of the Canadian wilderness? That's a reward I can't put a price on.

That's why I became a lawyer.

That's why I'll stay one.