diaspora

Bhutanese Community in Toronto, Canada

Last updated: 2 July 2026697 words

Toronto is home to one of the largest Bhutanese diaspora communities in Canada, concentrated in Scarborough and North York, with cultural organisations, Hindu temples and annual festivals.

The Bhutanese community in Toronto is one of the largest and most established Lhotshampa diaspora populations in Canada. Formed primarily through the third-country resettlement programme coordinated by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) from 2008, it numbers an estimated 4,000 to 6,000 individuals across the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Toronto became one of the earliest and largest Canadian destinations for Bhutanese refugees, owing to its existing South Asian communities, settlement services and employment opportunities.[1]

Note: there is no official census count of the local Bhutanese population; the figures in this article are community estimates that vary between sources.

Most Bhutanese in Toronto are ethnic Nepali-speaking Bhutanese displaced from southern Bhutan during the Bhutanese refugee crisis of the late 1980s and 1990s, who spent nearly two decades in refugee camps in eastern Nepal before resettlement.

History of Resettlement

The first significant arrivals to Toronto came in 2008 and 2009, with the city receiving the largest single share of the roughly 6,500 Bhutanese refugees resettled across Canada between 2007 and 2018.[2] Early arrivals faced language barriers and difficulty translating skills from agrarian camp life to the Canadian labour market. Settlement organisations including the Centre for Immigrant and Community Services (CICS) and Catholic Crosscultural Services provided orientation, language training and employment support. Many early settlers found work in manufacturing, food processing, hospitality and cleaning in the Scarborough and Markham industrial areas.[3]

Community Organisations

The Bhutanese Community Association of Toronto (BCAT) functions as the primary umbrella organisation, coordinating community events, providing interpretation and settlement assistance, and representing the community to municipal and provincial bodies. It runs cultural programming, youth mentorship and seniors' support.

The Bhutanese Canadian Community of Ontario (BCCO) advocates for the broader provincial population, working on credential recognition for Bhutanese professionals, mental health services and intergenerational programming. Smaller groups serve women, sports and students at Toronto-area colleges and universities.[4]

Cultural Preservation

The annual celebrations of Dashain (Vijaya Dashami) and Tihar (Deepawali) in October and November are the most significant communal events, drawing hundreds of families to rented halls across Scarborough and North York. They feature Nepali and Bhutanese music, dance, religious ceremonies and communal feasting, and serve to transmit cultural knowledge to the Canadian-born generation.

Hindu temples in the GTA, including the Vishnu Mandir in Richmond Hill and a Hindu mandir in Scarborough, serve as regular gathering places for the Hindu majority. A smaller number of Buddhist Bhutanese families participate in Tibetan Buddhist centres in Toronto. Community members also run informal bhajan (devotional singing) groups in private homes.[5]

Nepali remains the primary home language for most families, though younger members increasingly use English. Community leaders have organised weekend Nepali language and cultural classes for children.

Challenges

Mental health concerns are prevalent, particularly among older members who experienced displacement and prolonged uncertainty in the camps; access to culturally appropriate, Nepali-speaking services remains limited.[6] Economic integration has been uneven: while many have secured stable employment, a significant portion remain in precarious low-wage work, and credential recognition continues to be a barrier. Housing affordability has concentrated many Bhutanese households in subsidised or rent-controlled apartment complexes in Scarborough and the city's northeast. Intergenerational tensions have emerged as younger, Canadian-educated members navigate between parental expectations and Canadian norms; community organisations have responded with youth leadership and family mediation programmes.

Achievements and Integration

Community members have served on Toronto District School Board parent councils, volunteered on electoral campaigns and obtained Canadian citizenship in large numbers. Young Bhutanese Canadians have enrolled in post-secondary study in nursing, engineering, information technology and social work, a shift from the first generation's predominantly manual employment. Bhutanese youth are active in futsal and cricket leagues, and community performers have appeared at multicultural festivals organised by the City of Toronto.

See also

References

  1. "Refugee Resettlement." UNHCR Canada.
  2. "Bhutanese refugees mark major resettlement milestone." UNHCR, 2015.
  3. "Centre for Immigrant and Community Services." CICS Toronto.
  4. "Settlement.Org — Resources for newcomers to Ontario." Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants.
  5. Toronto Star — GTA news.
  6. "Mental health of Bhutanese refugees resettled in the United States." BMC Psychiatry, 2016.

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