La Fete du Canada
is the French phrase for Canada Day, First of July, when the color red this
year streamed across the TV screens across Canada. Being a full resident of China where the East
remains Red, I was not prepared for the preponderance of Zhongguoren (Chinese) north of the 48th parallel in
North America. When I lived in
Saskatchewan in the 70s, it was always a delight to stop by the local
restaurant ran by a Chinese family. The
red of Canada and the red of China are obviously not the same, but the presence
of Chinese in the land of Truth North Strong and Free has become prominent in
this year’s celebration, judging from TV clips.
But first, in the official celebration of La Fete du Canada
aired from the Quad of the Parliament Hill in Ottawa, the first song sang that
got the Governor General and everyone else on their feet was “God Save the
Queen,” followed by “Oh, Canada”. As a Commonwealth of the United Kingdom, Canada does
recognize the Queen of England and the segment of the Canadian population that
walks with a straight upper lip tend to mind their manners revering the aura of
Kate and William when they visit the realm.
So, for Canada Day, I walked down 8th Ave in
downtown Calgary last Tuesday from the Municipal building to the entrance of
Stephen Ave Walk by Toronto Dominion (TD) square. Like other festive occasions, the day has vendors
lined up along the pedestrian-only avenue with tents and stalls selling food,
handicrafts, and beverages even as entertainment is heard from neighboring
parks; troubadours along the walk act their gig with open hats on the ground for
donations under the long yellow-red banners draped on the street lights for the
occasion.
I was told at Cole next to Brooks Brothers by TD Square that
the establishment had to put notices of “for paying customers only” on the
tables because Chinese workers would bring their food and occupy tables without
buying anything from the food stalls.
There is a racist resistance to the rapid ascent of Asians, for what
used to be “Little Italy” north of the city has become an Asian enclave. Unfortunately, as Asians seems to look alike,
Vietnamese, Koreans, Japanese and anyone else from Central Asia and Southeast
Asia are dubbed “Chinese”!
The Mayor of Calgary is of South Indian descent named Nenji,
a candidate to replace Rob Ford of Toronto is a Chow, and Chinatown by the Bow
river show magnificent structures and establishments trading not only Chinese
goods but also patrons to the Bank of China, not a mere hole-in-the-wall offshore
financial service in the downtown area, so the tinge of jealousy on things
Chinese laces the perceived taint on a racial reputation.
The Imperial “God Save the Queen” has not been an ethos historically
friendly to the land of 56 ethnic groups of China though its influence on Hong
Kong is considerable. Thanks to the
handover in 1997, the human and money capital exited Victoria Island swiftly
and swelled the Chinatowns of the East Pacific Shores of the West Coast of NA,
particularly Vancouver in BC.
“Oh, Canada,” billed as the “Truth North Strong and Free” on
this Canada Day had CTV launch a highly participatory definition of the
celebration’s theme by asking everyone, “What is Canada to you?” Open, welcoming, and diverse, are themes
repeatedly uttered. “Free/Libre” is
emblazoned on the TV screen.
The Boys’ Choir of British Columbia led the Ottawa audience
in singing both songs. The Governor
General gave a very spirited rendition by looks though the audio was not tuned
up. And I sat as my brain cells shifted
to lyrics learned in the Prairies of the 70s:
I have welcomed the dawn from
the fields of Saskatchewan
Followed the sun to the
Vancouver shore
Watched it climb shiny new up
the snow peaks of Caribou
Up to the clouds where the
wild Rockies soar.
I remember leaving Saskatoon just about the time Neil Young
started humming his “Four strong winds” song, and on this the occasion of my
fare-thee-well of North America, I was reminded once more:
Think I'll go out to Alberta,
weather's good there in the fall
I got some friends that I
could go to working for
Still I wish you'd change your
mind
if I asked you one more time
But we've been through this a
hundred times or more.
One of my daughters was a Canadian for 18 years. Born in Saskatoon, of the options for travel
papers from the US, Philippine, and Canada passports she was allowed to have,
Canada’s was the cheapest. My
peripatetic family presented a border-crossing challenge as spouse and daughter
(born in Manila) crossed sovereign boundaries with United States’ passports
while father and second daughter presented a Pea Eye and Canada passports.
Not a groupie for the defense of the original French O Canada, now, Oh, Canada in English, but being with Canucks in the remembered
land of Chinooks in Calgary this past week made me feel warmly welcomed home
once more.
j'aime la vie
pinoypanda2031@aol.com
yesterday, appreciate; tomorrow, anticipate; today. participate. In all, celebrate!