National Post (National Edition)

The conflict that changed Canada

COUNTRY BECAME MORE DEMOCRATIC BUT MORE DIVIDED FOLLOWING FIRST WORLD WAR

- Lee Berthiaume in Ottawa

The legacy of the First World War will be omnipresen­t when Canadians stop on Sunday — the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the War to End All Wars — to pay tribute to those who sacrificed for the country and its way of life.

There will be the red poppies pinned to lapels; the haunting words of In Flanders Field; the National War Memorial, originally built to commemorat­e the 60,000 Canadians who died during the war, and Remembranc­e Day itself, which has been recognized every Nov. 11 — the day the Great War ended — since 1931.

Yet the enduring impact is felt in countless other ways as well, many of them subtle — and not all of them positive, despite the popular refrain that Canada came into its own as a country during the First World War.

That’s because while the war ushered in many changes as the country pulled together during those four bloody years in a way it never had before, it also created deep divides and challenges — some of which remain today.

“The war enhances divisions between French and English, between east and west, between rural and urban. It tends to exacerbate and divide based on income and inequality,” historian Mark Humphries of Wilfrid Laurier University says.

“So these are kind of the lasting legacies for Canadians.”

No event was more divisive — or politicall­y transforma­tive — than the introducti­on of conscripti­on. It was the issue upon which the December 1917 federal election was fought and broke the country along both linguistic and geographic lines.

French-canadians were deeply angry at being forced to fight a war they didn’t believe in, while many rural Canadians and union workers felt betrayed after the government broke its promise during the election to exempt them and their sons.

Mixed into the equation was a great deal of disillusio­nment as companies made huge profits off the war, even as average workers struggled with low pay and returning veterans faced difficulty finding work or accessing services and benefits.

The result was a rise in Quebec nationalis­m — the first independen­ce motion was introduced in Quebec’s national assembly in 1919 — and the death of the twoparty system as new federal and provincial parties espousing progressiv­e agendas were born.

“You had class parties, regional parties, left-wing and right-wing parties, separatist parties,” says military author and historian Jack Granatstei­n, who recently co-curated a new exhibit on the last 100 days of the war at the Canadian War Museum.

“They all took form as a result of the events that took place in the First World War, and we live with them still. There are five or six parties in the House of Commons and we will never again, I suspect, have a two-party system.”

The emergence of new political parties was only one change in Ottawa as the federal government also took on a more prominent role in Canadians’ lives than ever before — and in ways that continue today.

That included the introducti­on of a “temporary” income tax to help pay for the war, which by 1918 had left the government around $2 billion in debt — not counting the money that would eventually be needed to support the returning veterans.

Both the income tax and veterans’ support would foreshadow the federal government’s eventual and longstandi­ng role in providing various social services and benefits to Canadians.

“The government that develops in the war, looking primarily after the welfare of soldiers’ families, what develops out of this ... is a much stronger state,” University of Toronto historian John English says.

“And income tax gave government the funds that allowed it to expand more fully in the social-welfare direction. So income tax in that sense was a very progressiv­e reform and made possible what came afterwards.”

Another side effect of the war was the rapid industrial­ization of Canada’s economy. Factories had already started to pop up, but the need to mass-produce everything from clothing to artillery shells to aircraft and ships pushed things along faster.

While thousands of women entered the workforce to help at those factories, their numbers largely returned to pre-war levels afterward. More substantia­lly, women — specifical­ly those related to soldiers — were allowed to vote in 1917 for the first time.

The reason was quite political: the government believed those women were more likely to support conscripti­on. Yet while the motivation­s may have been suspect, the long-term impact is now evident.

The result was that despite short-term disillusio­nment, the war had a great equalizing effect on many aspects of Canadian society, as women got the right to vote, workers demanded better rights and wages and Canadians railed against graft and corruption.

“People were dying for the country and they believed they should come home to a land that was a fairer one, that had better distributi­on of wealth and that wealth and privilege were not gained by birth but rather by service,” English says.

While it didn’t happen overnight, English believes there was over the long run “an economic democratiz­ing aspect to the war, and also an overall democratiz­ing element to it.”

Many Canadians understand the First World War as the birth of modern Canada, as the country took more ownership over its own affairs and demanded — and was given — respect for the price it paid at Vimy, Passchenda­ele and other battlefiel­ds.

But, Canadian War Museum historian Tim Cook says, there is no denying that with the conscripti­on crisis and the schisms it brought, there was a cost to Canada coming into its own as a country.

“It was a war that nearly broke us as we were stepping out onto the world stage. As we are signing the treaty of Versailles, as we are becoming a part of the League of Nations, we are a broken country.

“And the legacy of that war continues with us to this day.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Wild poppies grow on the verge of a Flanders field near Tyne Cot Military Cemetery in Passchenda­ele, Belgium. Sunday marks the 100th anniversar­y of the day the Great War ended.
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES FILES Wild poppies grow on the verge of a Flanders field near Tyne Cot Military Cemetery in Passchenda­ele, Belgium. Sunday marks the 100th anniversar­y of the day the Great War ended.

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