Is There a Deep Split between French and English
Canada?Canadas conscious and successful striving
after unity should be borne in mind as we examine another great and permanent
problem of the country: preserving and encouraging harmonious relations between
French Canada and English Canada. In this connection English Canada
means all the population, whether of British or other origin, that speaks English. Though
it is focused in Quebec and Ontario, the problem is Dominion-wide. A considerable
minority in Quebec, nearly 20 percent of the 3.3 million in that province, are
English Canadians. French Canadians form considerable minorities in every other
province except British Columbia. French is the native tongue of three out of
every ten Canadians. Many
Americans wonder why the French in Canada have not been assimilatedswallowed
up in the English majority. But assimilation was out of the question. The French
did not go to Canada to be Anglicized. They went there to live as French men under
the French flag. The history of Canada as a French colony is almost as long as
that of the United States as republic. After
the British conquest of this French colony in 1760, a quarter of a century elapsed
before any real English-speaking population settled on the soil of old Canada
(Quebec and Ontario). And three-quarters of a century passed before the English-speaking
population was as numerous as the French. There was little assimilation, and that
little was mostly of English-speaking people by the French. There
was no lack of attempts at assimilation the other way round, but they defeated
their own end. The attempts promoted bitter racial strife, and only hardened the
determination of the French to retain their separate identity. The
strife did not end until the middle of the nineteenth century. What stopped it
was the establishment of colonial self-government on a basis of equality for French
and English. That was an object lesson for all time to come. 
Most
Canadians live within 300 miles of the U. S. border Nationality
BackgroundsBritish Isles
49.68 English 25.80, Scotch 12.20, Irish 11.02, Others .66 French
30.27 Other European
17.76 German 4.04, Ukrainian 2.66, Scandinavian 2.13, Netherlands
1.85, Jewish 1.48, Polish 1.45, Italian .98, Russian .73, Hungarian .47, Others
1.97 Asiatic
64 Indian, Eskimo, Negro, Others
1.65 Occupations of Canadians over 14Agriculture
1,083,816 Trade 355,079 Logging, Trapping &
Finance & Industry 31,392 Fishing 131,700
Clerical 338,031 Mining & Quarrying 71,886
Service 734,424 Manufacturing 703,162
Laborers 263,544 Construction 202,848
Not stated 11,413 Transportation 268,656
Total 4,195,951 in Armed Forces on December 31, 1944
759,879 casualties to May 31, 1945
102,954 How deep is the division?Canada
is like -a double-yolked egg. French Canada and English Canada each form, as it
were, a nation within a nation. The Dominion is a country with a dual nationality.
Double nationality is very foreign to American ways of thinking, but it has to
he recognized before one can begin to understand Canada. There are few countries
in the worldand not another in this hemispherewhere such complete
duality prevails. It dominates Canadian politics, for almost every public question
must be viewed with a French eye and an English eye, or it will be seen out of
focus. Canadas
dual nationality is published on every postage stamp and on the paper currency
issued by the Dominion government, for they are printed in both French and English.
It is echoed in the Supreme Court of Canada and in the houses of Parliament, where,
according to the constitution, French stands on a par with English as an official
language. Every motion in Parliament has to be put in both French and English,
members may deliver their speeches in either tongue, and all federal publicationsthe
Dominion laws, the debates in Parliament, and government reportsappear in
two editions, one French and the other English. Both
languages are official in the province of Quebec, too, but not in any other provinceand
naturally the French do not like this. They insist that they should have in the
other provinces the same rights as English Canadians have in Quebec. The
difference in nationality, moreover, has endowed religion with special rights
unknown in our country, for the French Canadians are solidly Roman Catholic. In
the middle of the 1800s, when a public-school system was established in
old Canada, the English-speaking Protestant minority in Canada East, formerly
Lower Canada and now Quebec, insisted on having their own separate system of tax-supported
schools. Otherwise they would have had to send their children to French Roman
Catholic schools, a prospect that seemed intolerable to them. The
French Canadians granted the demand, but at a price. This was that the Roman Catholic
minority in Canada West, now Ontario, should have the same privilege. This bargain
was written into the constitution when the Dominion was formed a few years later. In
Quebec, also, the Roman Catholic church is supported by a tax called the tithe.
The law by which this tax is levied was continued from the French regime with
an amendment exempting Protestants from having to pay tithes to the Roman Catholic
church. Why the trouble over conscription?The
most serious difficulty that has arisen between
English Canada and French Canada in our own day has been over conscription. It
flared up in World War I and again in World War II. Voluntary
military service is an old British tradition. Britain did not abandon it until
1916, in the midst of World War I, and Canada was the only British dominion to
follow suit. That was because casualties in the Canadian army in 1917 were greater
than the voluntary system could replace: Voluntary
recruiting in French Canada had not kept pace with recruiting in English Canada
for a number of reasons. The French were naturally more isolationist because they
had lived in Canada for many more generations. Practically every French Canadian
had to go back nearly two centuries and a half to find an ancestor who lived on
the other side of the Atlantic. Another reason for their isolationism was their
non-British origin. It inclined them to see the war as a British war in which
Canada had no business to be fighting. Moreover they married younger and had larger
families, so that a smaller percentage of their young men were free of the ties
of wife and children. Their religion also held them back because of two peculiar
circumstances of the time, one in France and the other in Ottawa. In
France the government of the Third Republic had turned on the church and driven
out many of the antirepublican clergy. Some of these exiles found a refuge in
Canada. From them and from their own priests as well, the French Canadians had
been hearing bitter denunciations of the French government. Therefore when Germany
invaded France in 1914, French Canada was disposed to regard the attack as a judgment
of God; upon what was to them the wicked and irreligious republic. The
other peculiar circumstance was that the Canadian minister of militia, the cabinet
member responsible for raising and training the Canadian army in 1914, was the
outstanding Orangeman in the country. This means much to Canadians but little
to Americans, few of whom have ever heard of the Orange Order. This
secret order arose in Ulster, now Northern Ireland, where it stood for Protestant
supremacy and is still a great power. More than a century ago it entered Canada,
and there it throve mightily on the anti-Catholic and anti-French prejudices that
have been so marked in Ontario. It was nothing short of tragic that a well-known
Orangeman held such a key position during the war. The opening chasmEnglish
Canada did not understand the situation in French Canada and impatiently cried
out for conscription in order to draft the French. There was a general election
on the issue: English Canada imposed its will on French Canadacontrary to
assurances given when the Dominion was formed that the French Canadians could
trust the English-speaking and Protestant majority never to run a steam roller
over them. The French Canadians
were crushed. They had horrid visions of being crushed again in the dark, uncertain
future. Conscription came to have a strange and terrible meaning for them. It
implied the ultimate loss of the liberty they cherished above all else: the liberty
to be themselves. The
French Canadians received such a jolt that in later years, even after World War
II began, both major political parties pledged themselves, as the only way to
win votes in Quebec, never to conscript men for overseas service. At
the time France fell in 1940, the Canadian government rushed through Parliament,
with almost no opposition, a law giving the government nearly unlimited power
over persons and property. Compulsory military training was then adopted, but
the Prime Minister said he would not abandon the voluntary system for service
overseas. The Canadian expeditionary army was built entirely of volunteers. Still
the French Canadians were nervous and their fears were roused by English Canadians
who began to raise the old cry again. Some of them did it honestly, some in order
to bait French Canada and embarrass the government. To clear the air, a national
plebiscite was held in the spring of 1942, when the people were asked if they
would release. the government from its pledge. English Canada voted Yes,
French Canada No. The
result was more tension, which the government relieved by getting Parliament to
legalize the draft for overseas and promising not to apply it until absolutely
necessary . It. was not necessary until the autumn of 1944, when the Canadian
army battering its way into Germany had suffered heavy casualties. The government
then extended the draft from home to foreign service. Meanwhile hot
words flew back and forth between the two peoples of the country. English-speaking
Canadians attacked the government for coddling Quebec. But the dual nationality
of Canada makes it a hard country to govern, particularly in wartime. |