National Post

Getting to know Viola Desmond

- Kelly McParland

Iadmit that until Thursday I had never heard of Viola Desmond, the woman who will be the first non- Queen to grace the front of a Canadian banknote, nor of the other four finalists who made the short-list for the $10 bill.

This is embarrassi­ng and despicable for a number of reasons, not least because it shows that an expensivel­y- educated Canadian who has spent years writing about the country can still be clueless about people with some pretty impressive credential­s. I imagine I’m not the only one, however, and the demonstrat­es the larger problem, i. e. that we do such a poor job of passing on the memory of important people who have done much to help make the country what it is.

Recently Canada has fallen victim to the unfortunat­e fad of championin­g national “values” as a test of someone’s validity as an authentic Canadian. It’s a by-product of the equally regrettabl­e rise of identity politics, which assigns worth based on individual gender, ethnicity, sexual inclinatio­n or whatever other personal attribute people choose to see when they look in the mirror. There is a evidently a measurable portion of the population that puts a premium on “values” — usually as defined by themselves and people they agree with — yet remain grossly uninformed about the people, like Desmond and the other short-listers, who actually helped develop and implant those values.

Desmond, for those who don’t know, was a Nova Scotia woman who refused to sit in the blacksonly section of a movie theatre, like she was expected to do. Pauline Johnson was a part- Mohawk woman who establishe­d herself as an accomplish­ed poet, speaker and performer in Canada’s earliest days. Elsie MacGill was an aeronautic­al engineer at a time women simply didn’t earn such degrees, who overcame polio to establish a successful career, contribute to Canada’s war effort and become a leading advocate of women’s rights. Fanny Rosenfeld was an astonishin­gly versatile athlete who became one of Canada’s best female hockey players, set numerous track and field records and win two medals at the 1928 Olympics. Idola Saint-Jean was a Quebec professor who spent years campaignin­g for women’s right to vote.

Although Desmond did get her name on a ferry in Halifax, you won’t find many buildings, monuments or mountains celebratin­g these women, because we’ve been too busy letting politician­s name them after themselves and their heroes. If you’re flying to Montreal you might land at Pierre Elliott Trudeau airport; if you’re headed to Toronto you’ ll probably put down at Lester B. Pearson airport; if it’s Saskatoon you’ll find yourself at John G. Diefenbake­r airport. Canada’s busiest highway is named after Sir John A. Macdonald and George-Etienne Cartier. The federal Public Works department invites visitors to tour 17 bronze statues scattered across Parliament Hill, only four of which are devoted to politician­s or monarchs. Until now Canada’s currency has been almost exclusivel­y the preserve of politician­s and the Queen.

We don’t teach much beyond that group in our schools. We barely teach our history at all, in fact. A young Canadian can easily make it to university and beyond without even a rudimentar­y understand­ing of Canada’s past or the important figures ( besides politician­s) who peopled it. It may reflect the national propensity to eschew boasting (other than at internatio­nal hockey tournament­s), but it leaves millions of people in the dark about what their country is and how it got here. It also feeds opportunis­t politician­s who think a quick appeal to prejudice is a swell way to pick up some support. I bet some of the loudest campaigner­s for “Canadian values” would struggle to pass a basic Canadian citizenshi­p quiz, while denouncing applicants we expect to have the answers down pat.

The reason is that we don’t teach it adequately in schools, and seem to share a bizarre sense that it’s not that important. We leave it to Canadians to educate themselves on the history of the country, if they happen to feel motivated. It’s a lousy way to treat a country, especially our own country.

Here’s an idea: after putting Viola Desmond on the $10 bill, the Finance Department and Bank of Canada should pool their resources to fund a book containing biographie­s of the five final candidates, and others on the lengthy list of suggested honorees, to be followed by a collection of equally worthy males. It could prove quite effective if distribute­d to schools for students young enough not to realize it’s cool to be ignorant of Canada.

WE LEAVE IT TO CANADIANS TO EDUCATE THEMSELVES ON THE HISTORY OF THE COUNTRY.

 ??  ?? Viola Desmond
Viola Desmond
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada