Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mostly nice for 150 years

Canada celebrates its embrace of the world

- John Herd Thompson is professor emeritus of history at Duke University. John Herd Thompson

Canada has issued 10 attractive maple leaf-shaped stamps to commemorat­e its 150th anniversar­y, which falls on Canada Day this Saturday.

National anniversar­ies offer opportunit­ies to reimagine national identity. The eye-catching stamps incorporat­e the themes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government defined for “Canada 150,” the official label for the year-long sesquicent­ennial festivitie­s: diversity and inclusiven­ess, reconcilia­tion with indigenous peoples, stewardshi­p of the environmen­t and the engagement of youth into the country’s public life.

The stamps that reflect these themes are entirely fitting for our level-headed neighbors to the north, whom The Economist recently held up as an example to the world for their tolerance of minorities, receptiven­ess to refugees and rejection of protection­ism in a time of “wall-builders, door-slammers and drawbridge-raisers.”

The stamps have been introduced in an appealing 30- page bilingual ( of course) booklet entitled “Canada 150: Celebratin­g Canadian Milestones / Célébrons Notre Histoire” that is available free online. Together they constitute perhaps the most low-key and least bellicose representa­tion of national identity ever crafted.

Predictabl­e nationalis­t tropes like battlefiel­d heroism are entirely absent, despite the Canadian armed forces’ distinguis­hed service in the Gulf War, Bosnia and Afghanista­n. Not a single Royal Canadian Mountie appears.

The booklet accompanie­s each stamp with text that charms by its innocence. The “Expo ’67” stamp celebrates the Montreal World’s Fair, “when Canada wowed the world by attracting 50 million visitors, the most notable figures of the day, Princess Grace of Monaco and Bing Crosby among them.”

Understand­ably in a sports-mad country, three stamps feature athletic competitio­n. One was inevitable, the “Summit Series,” pitting Canada’s top (ice hockey) stars against the Soviet Union’s. (Spoiler alert: Canada won.) The other two sport stamps feature the Olympics and Paralympic­s hosted in Canada that “boosted our sense of national pride and showcased Canada to the world.”

Joining Paralympia­ns to reflect the theme of inclusiven­ess is the stamp honoring the 2005 Marriage Equality Act that “made Canada the fourth country to grant same-sex couples the right to marry the one they love.”

The 4,860-mile TransCanad­a Highway is featured on two stamps, first as “the nation-building road needed for Canadians to explore their vast country,” and later as the stage for “The Marathon of Hope,” a dramatic attempt by cancer survivor Terry Fox to run across the country on his artificial leg to raise money for cancer research. Fox reached only the half way point before his cancer recurred, but his effort amassed more than $700 million. The “Canada 150” message is that heroes need not win to be heroic.

The “Canadarm” stamp uses a Canadian-designed robotic arm deployed on NASA’s space shuttle to vaunt Canada as a “nation of innovators.” The accompanyi­ng text’s legerdemai­n is more nimble than the Canadarm; it manages to connect Canada to the 1969 moon landing without directly mentioning the United States!

The least successful objective of “Canada 150” has been reconcilia­tion with aboriginal peoples. A selfcongra­tulatory stamp lauds the creation of the northern territory of Nunavut — “our land” in the Inuktitut language — as “the largest Aboriginal land claims agreement in Canadian history.” But this superlativ­e papers over how many claims have not been resolved, and it obscures how little Canada has done to atone for its dishonorab­le treatment of First Nations.

Only one stamp deals with high politics. “The Constituti­on” accurately explains that the Constituti­on Act of 1982 was “a critical step to full sovereignt­y” because “until that day only the British Parliament could amend our constituti­on.”

This final step to Canadian independen­ce will be celebrated in Ottawa at the pinnacle of the sesquicent­ennial festivitie­s. Now past her 90th birthday, Queen Elizabeth has sent her sincere regrets. Prince Charles, Canada’s future king, will instead join Mr. Trudeau and pop star Carly Rae Jepson on Parliament Hill.

Simultaneo­us satellite celebratio­ns have been scheduled across the country, including an appearance in Toronto harbor by a 6-story tall yellow rubber duck. No one seems exactly certain how a giant duck connects to Canada’s national identity, and the opposition Conservati­ve party has demanded to know “who pays this duck’s bill.”

But a national columnist for the Globe & Mail vigorously supports “team duck.” Her rationale reflects the new unbuttoned Canada revealed by the sesquicent­ennial: “It presents us as such goofballs on the increasing­ly dark internatio­nal stage. We are fighting about an overfed bath toy. … This says something hopeful about our country.”

Who in America could disagree?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States