Thursday, April 9, 2009 6:42 PM
Waking up in a Canada that includes Tamils
swicary
The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration says that, on April 17, some of us will wake up Canadian. We will do so "surrounded by important Canadian symbols and icons including a hockey player, a beaver and a moose, a portrait of the Sovereign, and national and historical flags."
As Andrew Potter points out, "that's Canada alright. As seen through a beer ad."
Meanwhile, for the past three days, those of us living in the nation's capital have been waking up to something different. The Canada we've been waking up to is a loud, cacophonous place full of drumming and traffic delays - a place in which the Minister of Foreign Affairs refuses to bow to diplomatic pressure and put an end to protest because "we live in a democracy" where "people are allowed to go and express their ideas, their concerns."
Lawrence Cannon's noble words aside, his ambitious cabinet colleague Jason Kenney won't have any of it. The federal government, his spokesman says, won't associate "with a group that flies the flag of the Tamil Tigers." Never mind that to those vocal Canadians (many of whom are young and brown skinned) camping out on Parliament Hill, that flag "is not a terrorist flag," rather "it means everything that means everything to us back home."
No, in Mr. Kenney's Canada, you wake up (middle-aged and white) eating poutine surrounded by Maple Leafs, beaver, moose and hockey players.