Prevention & Healing of Child Sexual Abuse

Providing education and support for victims.

Watch Our Video

Today is the day to reach out and lend a helping hand

About Sweet Water Foundation

Welcome

Sweet Water Foundation is dedicated to the worldwide healing of Child Sexual Abuse. We are strong advocates for child protection with a special focus on the Caribbean, on Indigenous populations, and on the LGBTI and other vulnerable communities. We conduct research, publish findings, develop policy and practice recommendations, provide psychological treatment programs, and design training in psychological approaches to ending gendered inequalities and violence. We incorporate climate change awareness and environment protection in all of our group programming.

Established in 2008 by Hazel Da Breo and Linda J. Butler, other members of the Board of Directors and our Advisory Council, Sweet Water is headquartered in Toronto with a sister agency in Grenada. We work internationally with all levels of government, civil service organizations, and community groups, as well as individuals and corporations.

The Foundation has developed a framework for the delivery of several programs and services which comprise an amalgamation of three methodological frameworks.

Our Social Ecological Model considers the complex interplay between individual, relationship, community and societal factors, as a means to identify and address the factors that put people at risk for experiencing or perpetrating sexual violence.

We also take from the Public Health Model in which the ultimate goal is to stop violence before it begins.

Additionally, we take from Psychodynamic and Depth Psychological traditions in regards to designing and managing healings for both child and adult victims of trauma; both child and adult perpetrators of abuse.

Sweet Water Foundation distinguishes itself by the emphasis it places on Research, Writing, and the Development of a body of Knowledge and Evidence, in regards to what works best in both the prevention and treatment of gendered abuses against vulnerable populations in the Caribbean.

The Foundation

Asked Questions

We need your help

The Sweet Water wholeheartedly invites your participation. Please find our contact information below. 

In 2006, when Hazel returned to Grenada, her intention was to work within existing psychosocial programs that sought to restore livelihoods and emotional balance to a country devastated by the disastrous Hurricanes Ivan and Emily, of 2004 and 2005 respectively.

Along with issues arising from immediate post-catastrophe needs – shelter, employment, income, medical care and other basics – she (along with many different individuals and agencies working in the same realm) found that the natural disasters had literally lifted the roof off of other deeply entrenched ills. These included a trend towards the commercial sexual exploitation of children (transactional sex for material benefit) and that trend’s off-shoot legacies – alcoholism and other substance abuse, intimate partner violence, incest, addiction, rape, depression, low work-place productivity and a general submission to gender-based, hegemonic and disaster-related problems.

Indeed, a 2003 World Bank Country Study, “The Caribbean Youth Development Report”, identified that the Caribbean Region is the place where “the onset of sexual initiation by force is the earliest in the world”.

helplines

Lets Talk

Image hover effect image

key populations helpline

Sweet Water Foundation, in partnership with Caribbean Vulnerable Communities (CVC), reaches out to the key populations of the Caribbean with a free, confidential, anonymous, online counselling service.

Image hover effect image

Child Helpline

Sweet Water Foundation operates a free, online, confidential, and anonymous service for talking about sex, with a focus on stopping sexual practices which may harm a child.

0 k+

People We Helped

0

years of experience

our achievements

Small changes make a big impact on people’s lives

Sweet Water Foundation has become a leading voice in child protection across the Caribbean, dedicated to preventing and healing childhood sexual abuse through free, confidential, and anonymous counselling services that support children, adults, families, and communities in understanding and responding to harmful situations. The Foundation’s child helpline and partnerships—such as with the Sandals Foundation and Caribbean Vulnerable Communities—have expanded access to psychological support, education, and awareness-building at a time when open conversations about sex and safety are critically needed. Its work includes direct support for those at risk, professional training, community outreach, research, and advocacy, helping to fill gaps in services and build safer environments for vulnerable populations.