Lethbridge Herald

Canada has accepted refugees for many years

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The Indigenous nations accepted refugees and settlers from other lands. Newcomers were horrible to the hosts. Throughout history, invaders were often more aggressive to the natives. Neverthele­ss, together we built Canada.

In June 1979, I attended a UN conference held in Geneva to discuss refugees from Vietnam. Canada was represente­d by Flora MacDonald, Secretary for External Affairs of Joe Clarke’s federal Conservati­ve government. She pledged that Canada would accept and resettle 100,000 so-called “Boat People.”

I was so proud of Canada. Compared to the most recent attempt to resettle 25,000 Syrians, it was quite a generous gesture. Vietnamese were such a success story. Many of them are now business owners, profession­als and entreprene­urs. Vietnamese noodle soup — Pho — is now as Canadian as poutine.

Canada was built by the generosity of Indigenous people who received settlers from different continents, many of whom were refugees: the founders of English Canada were American refugees, not migrants straight from Britain, escaping revolution­aries into the North still held by the Crown. They were “United Empire Royalists.” They laid the foundation of English-speaking Upper Canada. Without them, Canada would have been a Frenchspea­king country. Many Europeans from places like Ireland came escaping hunger and poverty. We now called them economic migrants, but they were escaping intolerabl­e conditions like refugees.

The Undergroun­d Railroad brought many African descendant­s who were escaping slavery; Ukrainians escaping Stalin; Jewish people escaping anti-Semitism in Europe; Doukhabors and Mennonites escaping from the persecutio­n of pacifists; Chinese from Hong Kong from Japanese invasion and later Communist takeover (one of them became Governor General); Hindus and Muslims escaping Idi Amin in Uganda (one of them is now mayor of Calgary); Hungarians and Czechoslov­akians; Latin Americans escaping civil unrest; the list goes on.

Let us not forget Americans, many of them well-educated intellectu­als, came to Canada because they did not want to be involved in the war in Vietnam. Some of them constitute­d the cores of the faculties of universiti­es, including our University of Lethbridge, which sprung up everywhere in Canada since the 1960s. We don’t call them refugees but they were.

Jesus and Mohammad were refugees at some points in their lives. Thank God for refugees who helped build Canada, and thank God for the original people of this land who welcomed them at a great cost to them.

Tadashi (Tad) Mitsui

Lethbridge

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