The Origins of Multiculturalism in Canada: The Ukrainian Connection
Source: eurocanadian.ca
Multiculturalism arrived in Canada almost literally out of the blue. One moment we were improving our Bilingual and Bicultural character with a Royal Commission and the next moment all that was thrown out the window and a new concept adopted. I was alive during that period, but I must have been asleep, as were almost all of my fellow Canadians. I hardly noticed as the nature of the country was fundamentally changed.
Looking back I see Expo67 in Montreal as the theatre that deluded us all. It was a great world exposition. Anyone who attended was impressed with the swirl of ethnic diversity and colour, the music, the costumes, the pavilions, the delicious food and drink. Having a multicultural country seemed like a great idea. What we failed to realize was that the law governing the Exposition and the people who attended it was Canadian Criminal law which, in turn was based on English Common Law, British Parliamentary Traditions, English concepts of Liberal Democracy, the Separation of Church and State. We failed to realize that law itself is basically just codified culture. If we "opened" ourselves to all cultures and if we made them all equal to Canada’s identity, our laws, based on our English and French heritage, would eventually have to change into something else, our institutions would eventually have to reflect other values.
Just four years later, in 1971, Prime Minister Trudeau introduced his multiculturalism policy, which would, in effect, turn all of Canada into a world’s fair, announcing in Parliament:
It was the view of the royal commission, shared by the government and, I am sure, by all Canadians, that there cannot be one cultural policy for Canadians of British and French origin, another for the original peoples and yet a third for all others. For although there are two official languages, there is no official culture, nor does any ethnic group take precedence over any other.
No one noticed as this train left the station where it was heading. In the train wreck that is multiculturalism in Canada, Pierre Trudeau has to take pride of place. It was the above cited on Oct. 8, 1971 on presenting the fourth report of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, which created Canada’s policy of multiculturalism.
But even a clever and willful prime minister can’t act on his own. Trudeau was supported encouraged and prodded by others who wanted to do away with French and English culture and replace it with a mosaic, including their own. Who were these "guilty men" who played a part in ruining the country?
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Read the full article at: eurocanadian.ca
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Ricardo Duchesne - Hour 1 - Canadian Model of Multiculturalism & Degradation of European History
Ricardo Duchesne - Hour 1 - The Uniqueness of Western Civilization & Multicultural Madness
Dan Rayner - Hour 1 - Asatru Mindset & Reinvigorating the European Spirit
Thomas Sheridan - Hour 1 - Cultural Marxism & The Psyop in Europe
Radio 3Fourteen - Elizabeth Holgrave - Germanic Heathenism & Preserving European Heritage
Kevin MacDonald - The Dispossession of Europeans & Pathological Altruism
Stephen A. McNallen - Hour 1 - Asatro, Runes, Vikings & Norse Mythology
Radio 3Fourteen - Tom Sunic - Metapolitics, Paganism & European Identity
Ingunn Sigursdatter - Norway: Happiest Country on Earth Myth & Awakening the Norsemen