'No reason to celebrate': Canada Day muted as country reckons with dark
colonial history
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[July 01, 2021]
By Steve Scherer
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Multiple cities scrapped
Canada Day celebrations on Thursday after the discovery of hundreds of
remains of children at former indigenous schools sparked a reckoning
with the country's colonial past.
Calls to scale back or cancel celebrations snowballed after, beginning
in May, almost 1,000 unmarked graves were found at former so-called
residential schools in British Columbia and Saskatchewan, that were
mainly run by the Catholic Church and funded by the government.
Traditionally the holiday is celebrated with backyard barbecues and
fireworks much like July 4 in the United States, however this year
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the day would be "a time for
reflection."
A #CancelCanadaDay march is being held in Ottawa, the capital, and
Toronto is hosting rallies to honor the victims and survivors of
Canada's residential school system. The schools forcibly separated
indigenous children from their families, in what the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission called "cultural genocide" in 2015.
"Canada is having a reckoning with its history," said Akwasi
Owusu-Bempah, a University of Toronto sociology professor who studies
race, crime and criminal justice.
"I don't think we can celebrate this country for what it is without
recognizing this country for what it isn't: a utopia and a bastion of
equality and freedom and equal opportunity for all members of society,"
he said.
Canada's reputation for tolerance was built on its efforts, starting in
the 1970s, to create a multicultural society, but inequalities abound
both for indigenous communities and among visible minorities, data show.
STARK DISPARITIES
Indigenous people, who make up less than 5% of the population, face
higher levels of poverty and violence and shorter life expectancies.
The unemployment rate for visible minorities, who make up more than 20%
of the total population, was 11.4% in May compared with 7.0% for whites,
according to Statistics Canada. In 2020, the unemployment rate for
indigenous people in Ontario was 12.5% compared with 9.5% for
non-indigenous people.
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A memorial on the grounds of the former Kamloops Indian Residential
School is seen in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada June 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier//File Photo
Some 30% of visible minorities and indigenous peoples
feel treated like outsiders in their own country, according to an
Angus Reid Institute poll on diversity and racism published on June
21.
The discovery of the remains and a deadly attack on a Muslim family
in June that killed three generations of members has led to soul
searching in Canada about the country's oft-touted reputation for
tolerance. The suspect is accused of murder and domestic terrorism.
Hate crimes against Muslims rose 9% to 181 in 2019, according to the
latest data by StatCan. Some 36% of indigenous people and 42% of
visible minorities said Canada is a racist country, according to the
Angus Reid survey.
A number of Muslim women who wear hijabs have also been attacked in
Alberta in recent weeks, while in Quebec a law banning public
servants from wearing the hijab is facing legal challenges, and
critics have called the measure a form of institutionalized racism.
New Democrat lawmaker Mumilaaq Qaqqaq, who is Inuk, said she felt
unsafe in the House of Commons as an indigenous woman, and last
month announced she would not be running for re-election.
"I don't think there's any reason for celebration (on Canada Day),"
Qaqqaq said.
(Reporting by Steve Scherer, additional reporting by Julie Gordon;
Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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