Penticton Herald

Lebanese community celebrates 136 years in British Columbia

- BY MICHAEL JOHN LO

VICTORIA — Lebanese political dignitarie­s were in Victoria on Sunday to mark an inaugural celebratio­n of the Lebanese-Canadian presence in British Columbia.

Flowers dotted the feet of Victoria’s Lebanese Emigrant Statue near the Belleville ferry terminal as Lebanese Canadians commemorat­ed the diaspora’s 136 years of history in the province.

Lebanese diplomatic staff from Argentina and Colombia were present for the occasion, as well as a contingent of Lebanese Canadians from Vancouver.

Nick Kahwaji, the honorary consul for Lebanon in B.C., said he hopes to continue hosting Internatio­nal Day of the Lebanese Emigrant celebratio­ns in Victoria. “Every year, we will come to remember our people who are not with us.”

While the Lower Mainland has the largest concentrat­ion of Lebanese Canadians in the province, Victoria and Vancouver Island hold a significan­t place in the diaspora’s history in Canada.

In 1888, brothers Abraham and Farris Ray were the first to arrive in Western Canada from what is now known as Lebanon.

Like many early settlers from the region, the Rays worked as itinerant peddlers in Victoria. Many would also work in Vancouver Island’s forestry industry.

The Lebanese community in Canada numbers between 200,000 to 400,000 and is one of the largest Arab-Canadian population­s in the country, according to Global Affairs

Canada.

The crowd at Lebanese Emigration Plaza on Sunday included many who came to Canada around the time of the Lebanese Civil War (1975-90), as well as a fourth-generation Lebanese Canadian whose family immigrated during the time of the Ottoman Empire and someone who has been here for only a year.

A gift from the Lebanese-Canadian community to the City of Victoria, the plaza in Centennial Park was completed last September.

It’s now the permanent home of the Lebanese Emigrant Statue that once stood near Douglas and Fisgard streets.

Similar statues can be found around the world in cities with a significan­t connection to the Lebanese diaspora, including Halifax, Mexico City and Brisbane.

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