Ottawa Citizen

Ethnic groups focus on ‘Canadian’ values

Celebratio­n a time to look at immigrant experience

- TOBI COHEN

As Canada contemplat­es its sesquicent­ennial in 2017, ethnic communitie­s say official commemorat­ions ought to be inclusive and reflective of the immigrant experience — the good, the bad and the ugly.

The diverse range of experience­s include the ascension of not one but two Sikhs to the federal cabinet, the Chinese head tax and the ongoing impact of immigratio­n on Canada’s first inhabitant­s who remain isolated and marginaliz­ed. Still, the anniversar­y, they say, is a time for celebratio­n, reflection and change all at once.

While most groups are in the preliminar­y discussion phase in terms of planning for the big event, if they’ve even started at all, the consensus also seems to be to focus less on diversity, but rather on what unites Canadians regardless of race, religion, ethnicity or country of origin.

Muslim Canadian Congress president Salma Siddiqui arrived in Canada from Pakistan in 1967. While visible minorities back then were few and far between, she argues those who did come to Canada managed to integrate better then than they do now without sacrificin­g their roots.

“I’m not saying that we should not be tolerant but I’m saying we’re more politicall­y correct. We are less (about) Canadian values. We look at how do we please everybody. We don’t look at what Canada is as one of the best countries to live in,” she said.

“I’m not going for the melting pot, no. But I definitely would like to put Canadian values (first) ... not the hodgepodge. And the rule of law is very important in that.”

Frank Dimant, of B’nai Brith Canada, agrees the “two solitudes” — French and English — that dominated during Canada’s centennial have given way to a multitude of solitudes and that many communitie­s are now living in isolation, none more so than aboriginal­s.

He’s also concerned about the future of religious and cultural minorities in Quebec that played host to the centennial’s centrepiec­e event — Expo 67. Noting Montreal was then home to 120,000 Jews and considered the “centre of the Jewish future in Canada,” it’s been reduced to a “geriatric community” of about 75,000. He argues the “strong hand” of the Quebec government in “trying to control the language” is “a tremendous discourage­ment to immigrants who are coming.”

Dimant said B’nai Brith is already looking into a Canada 150 event that will bring together different religious and ethnic communitie­s. A reassessme­nt of Canadian patriotism, a focus on the poor and marginaliz­ed, and a celebratio­n of “intrinsic Canadian values” are some of the themes he hopes to touch upon.

“I think Canada has served as an absolute role model in the world for the ability of multicultu­ral groups to exist side-by-side and I think it’s something we should be very very proud of,” he said. “But I think we should work harder on what unites us as Canadians as opposed to what divides us.”

To say the face of Canada has changed over the last 50 years, let alone the last 150, is perhaps an understate­ment.

Around the time of Confederat­ion, the vast majority of newcomers hailed from England, Ireland and Scotland, and were largely of Christian descent. Historic census data suggests 44 per cent of Canada’s 3.3 million citizens were Roman Catholic while just two per cent were of “miscellane­ous creeds.” All 36 so-called Fathers of Confederat­ion, says Library and Archives Canada, were white men.

When Canadians started preparing for its centennial, the British Isles remained the chief source of newcomers, though immigrants from Italy were adding significan­tly to what, at the time, was considered Canada’s racial diversity. The country was also welcoming significan­t numbers from Greece, Portugal and Commonweal­th countries such as India, though the British and French were still considered the dominant “ethnic groups,” show historic records.

In 1971, Canada became the first country to adopt multicultu­ralism as an official policy. The concept was included in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982, and the Multicultu­ralism Act finally became law in 1988.

Today, the Philippine­s, China and India are Canada’s chief source countries for new immigrants, and the latest census data suggests Canadians speak more than 200 different languages. One-infive Canadians speak neither French nor English at home.

And by the time the sesquicent­ennial fireworks go off on July 1, 2017, Statistics Canada predicts visible minorities will comprise one-fifth of the Canadian population.

Still, a number of ethnic communitie­s are quick to point out that their roots in Canada are deep, even if Canada’s ethnic landscape only appears to have switched to technicolo­ur more recently.

Balpreet Singh Boparai of the World Sikh Organizati­on of Canada said Sikhs are active throughout Canada today in Parliament, serving in the armed services or as profession­als and labourers, but that they’ve been a part of Canadian society for more than a century.

In 2008, Canada’s fastgrowin­g Chinese community also marked 150 years in the Great White North, beginning with the British Columbia gold rush in the 1850s and continuing with the constructi­on of the Canadian Pacific Railway. At the time, the Chinese Canadian National Council launched an online cultural project showcasing the work of Chinese-Canadian writers, musicians, videograph­ers and artists.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC/OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Muslim Canadian Congress president Salma Siddiqui says visible minorities who came to Canada in the 1960s managed to integrate better than they do now without sacrificin­g their roots.
JEAN LEVAC/OTTAWA CITIZEN Muslim Canadian Congress president Salma Siddiqui says visible minorities who came to Canada in the 1960s managed to integrate better than they do now without sacrificin­g their roots.

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