The Peterborough Examiner

Virus has family hating my American boyfriend

- Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: My boyfriend lives in the United States and I’m in Canada. He’s the love of my life. We’ve long been the masters of distance, with frequent visits to each other and healthy communicat­ion. Until COVID-19.

Visiting had to stop for obvious reasons. But now, because of xenophobia in the media and from friends/family, we’re starting to feel new pressure on our relationsh­ip.

We’re both patient and passionate enough to wait out the border closure and physical distancing requiremen­ts, but how can we stop/overcome these other external pressures from taking a toll on our relationsh­ip?

I know there are bigger matters at hand and stopping COVID-19 is a top priority, but I’d be lying if I said this wasn’t upsetting. Prejudice in the Pandemic

A: Xenophobia is as ugly and hurtful as any other form of discrimina­tion and hatred — racism, misogyny, homophobia, Islamophob­ia, anti-Semitism.

When it’s expressed by family, it’s even more hurtful because it reveals a strain of fear and ignorance toward anyone — including you, a family member — who’s aligned (indeed, loves!) someone “different” or “foreign” in nature, and therefore potentiall­y “dangerous.”

So let’s cut to the chase. Your boyfriend, an American citizen, is apparently being judged by your Canadian family for the views and behaviours of some of his country’s politician­s and citizens.

In the U.S., President Donald Trump made uninformed, misleading statements that the coronaviru­s would disappear quickly. On Jan. 22, he said in a TV interview: “We have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China.” In the following weeks, he continued to blame “foreigners.”

By late March, when some states like Florida finally issued lockdown orders, much of the American public doubted the need. Yet, by June 1, the U.S. — which dwarfs Canada in population — had 1.8 million coronaviru­s cases, with more than 100,000 deaths compared to Canada’s 92,000 cases and just over 7,000 deaths.

Canadians, by contrast, quickly accepted public health and political leaders’ orders, and observed social distance and selfquaran­tines starting several weeks prior to many Americans. Now, with no vaccine widely available for perhaps 12 to 18 months, many Canadians want a closed border with their giant neighbour.

None of this can lay fault to you and your partner who only wish to be together.

IF the borders open (and they will, in time, due to trade and other economic factors), you’ll likely have to choose in which of the two countries to make your permanent residence.

Regretfull­y, some people may still display the ignorance of xenophobia. Asians in both Canada and the U.S. have been experienci­ng this ever since the pandemic’s beginning.

With family, make a one-time plea that they end their hostility to Americans (Asians too, since hate is hate) or risk losing contact. With others, walk away from ignorance since it’s “upsetting” but not worse.

FEEDBACK Regarding an exhausted boyfriend’s distance as a front-line worker (May 13):

Reader: My daughter’s a nurse. She’s worked in the COVID unit since the outbreak started. The staff’s overwhelme­d, they don’t have enough PPE contrary to what the government says, she’s worried about catching or transferri­ng the virus.

When she goes home at night she’s only interested in food and sleep. She’s had a major panic attack over this crisis.

The writer seems unsympathe­tic. These health-care workers are human beings that have suddenly been turned into superheroe­s. They need support, not criticism. Proud Mom

Ellie’s tip of the day

When xenophobic statements come from a political leader, haters repeat it and the media must expose it.

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