Liberal MP Giovanna Mingarelli opened this year's national news conference on Parliament Hill.
Celebrating intergenerational bonds and community support during National Kindness Week in Canada.
There is a specific kind of silence that lives in nursing homes. It’s heavy, like an old wool blanket, filled with decades of stories that rarely get an audience.
I thought about this while hearing Member of Parliament Giovanna Mingarelli talk about her ‘seniors’ home blitz.’ The idea of kindergarteners from Casselman spending an afternoon with people who have lived through eighty or ninety years of history is honestly the vibe shift we need right now.
We spend so much time in our own age-gated bubbles, scrolling through feeds of people who look and think exactly like us, that we forget there is an entire world of wisdom sitting just down the street.
When we talk about community resilience, we’re really talking about these invisible threads between generations. There is something profoundly healing about a five-year-old who doesn’t care about your politics or your mistakes, just your company. And for a senior who might feel like the world has moved on without them, that presence is everything. It’s a reminder that they are still part of the fabric.
Mingarelli’s focus on visiting every residence in Clarence-Rockland isn’t just a political stunt; it’s a recognition that loneliness is one of the quietest killers we face in 2026. It’s the antidote to the division we feel everywhere else.
I think we underestimate how much we need the perspective of people who have survived things we can’t imagine. They’ve seen the world break and mend itself a hundred times over.
When we show up for them, we aren’t just doing a ‘good deed.’ We are grounding ourselves in a lineage of endurance. Kindness, in this intergenerational sense, is a two-way street. You go in thinking you’re giving your time, but you leave realizing you’ve been given a sense of belonging that you can’t find on a screen.
This week, maybe consider the seniors in your own life or neighborhood. A quick check-in or a ten-minute conversation can be the highlight of someone’s entire month. It costs nothing but a bit of focus, yet the ROI on human connection is infinite.
We are all just people looking to be seen, regardless of whether we’re just starting out or nearing the finish line.
That’s the real heart of what it means to build a community that actually lasts.
National Kindness Week 2026
National Kindness Week is celebrated across Canada each year during the third week of February, following the passage of Bill S-223, the Kindness Week Act. Championed by Senator Jim Munson and inspired by the late Rabbi Reuven Bulka, founder of Kind Canada, this legislation officially made Canada the first country in the world to dedicate a week to promoting kindness, compassion, empathy, and community service.
This annual celebration encourages Canadians from Manitoba, Ontario, and coast to coast to participate in acts of kindness, volunteer in their communities, support charitable initiatives, and strengthen social connections. National Kindness Week also provides an opportunity for schools, workplaces, nonprofits, and local organizations to share stories, ideas, and resources that foster empathy, respect, inclusion, and positive social impact.
From simple gestures, like checking in on a neighbor or helping a senior, to larger community projects, National Kindness Week reminds us that every act of compassion matters. By celebrating kindness in daily life, in schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods, Canadians can help build a culture of generosity, unity, and hope across the country.
Find more motivational short stories, community projects, and ideas for spreading kindness at Art Borups Corners.