The Miracle

COVID-19 reshapes Canada Day celebratio­ns from big parties to online shows

- Source: ctvnews.ca

OTTAWA -- Large celebratio­ns were replaced in many parts of the nation with backyard gatherings and digital events as Canadians marked a Canada Day unlike any other in the country’s 153-year history.

It has been almost four months since government­s ordered businesses closed and urged Canadians to stay home to slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s with restrictio­ns only recently being eased. Heading into Canada Day, the country had 104,204 reported cases of COVID-19, including 8,591 deaths and 67,954 recoveries, based on figures updated late Tuesday by the Public Health Agency of Canada. Millions have either lost their jobs or seen cuts to their earnings, while government spending has skyrockete­d to provide emergency relief -- planned federal spending alone now tops $174 billion. Demand has also jumped for social services, such as food banks. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spent part of his morning with his family harvesting broccoli at a farm operated by the Ottawa Food Bank. The organizati­on said demand has levelled out since an initial surge, but it now expects another large spike in need once recipients max out payments through the $80-billion Canada Emergency Response Benefit.

Speaking afterward, Trudeau noted the difficult circumstan­ces many people found themselves in this year, such as families separated from loved ones, including front-line health workers.

He pointed to a Canada Day one year into the Second World War when there was a message of hope and opportunit­y for the country in the face of a crisis.

“That was the reality our parents and grandparen­ts were called to face. That was the challenge to which they rose and this is the country they built,” Trudeau said, standing alongside his wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau. “On this Canada Day, it is our turn. We must now restart and rebuild a Canada for the 21st century.” That included ongoing efforts at reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples. Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde called on the country to work as one to close gaps that exist between Indigineou­s and non-Indigenous people. “This is a collective challenge, one that I feel Canadians are embracing,” he said in recorded remarks. “I have faith that our best days as First Nations and as country are ahead of us.”

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