When the Mosaic Fractures

 

Toronto Star
OPINION 
Thursday, October 26, 1995


As autumn comes to an end and the last solitary leaves flutter to the ground, I fear for the Canadian maple leaf. I wonder if it also will wilt and fall to the ground, to be roughly trampled by uncaring, unfeeling "patriots."

The Canadian mosaic is falling apart at the seams and we may be allowing it to happen.

In the resounding crescendo of the Quebec referendum as it comes to a climax, many voices are heard. Buried beneath the cacophony is the small yet clear voice of new Canadians - the silent minority who are seen but seldom heard. It's time for them to stand up and be counted as caring, responsible Canadians with a distinct say and vested interest in Canada's future. Alas, it may be too late already.

Many people have taken refuge in Canada from regimes that promote religious or political persecution. Others are the product of a land divided.

In either case, the assimilation process is painful. But over a period of time, these immigrants start to call Canada home. They have found permanence and stability here. Now, there is fear they may be uprooted again.

As the offspring of a "separatist" country, let me assure you that the division of a country is never easy. Neither is it as smooth a transition as politicians would have us believe. Canada's possible separation has the sound of doom for people like me.

Half a century after the violent division, we still suffer the bitter legacy of partition in my native land. People still have not recovered from the wounds of the bitter divide, and the younger generation bears much of the burden. The separated lands did not become the utopia promised by the leaders. Today, many people regret making a decision in favor of separation - but for them it is too late.

Caught in limbo between English and French

Therefore, I cannot begin to understand how anyone, especially minorities, can think of voting in favor of breaking up Canada. To what end? The reasons given for the separation of Quebec are childish and selfish. For a "distinct" society? For language? For culture?

We, as immigrants, find ourselves in the unique and unenviable position of being caught in limbo between anglophones and francophones, when many of us are neither. While some find the language and culture of both sides alien, many have adapted to both without a murmur.

What matters to us is a united Canada: a united Canada that always will remain a "distinct" society because it absorbs a variety of different people with ease; a Canada that encourages multitudes of people from diverse cultures, religions, backgrounds and languages to live together under the protective banner of the maple leaf; a Canada that has given us what our homeland failed to do, pride in a national identity and a second home. We are here to stay and we don't want to see that home broken.

For Quebec to separate is to break Canada. Quebecers planning to vote Yes obviously have no long-term vision of Canada. They selfishly are thinking of themselves and not of Canada as a whole. They don't stop to think for a moment how the rest of the world views Canada. This is a country that has the reputation of being an exemplary society. Yet now it is being seen as a battleground for French- and English-speaking Canadians. Can Canada afford such a reputation?

At this critical point in Canadian history, Quebecers need to stop for a moment; to think and ponder before casting the crucial vote. A country can be divided at any given time, but once it is broken nothing can put it together again.


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