So You Thought Canada Was Not Being Re-Colonized? HaHaHa
So You Thought Canada Was Not Being Re-Colonized? HaHaHa
Our
latest bulletin : “So You Thought Canada Was Not Being Re-Colonized ?”
features below a disturbing and revealing Vancouver Sun OP ED written by
an arrogant [some will say racist] Henry Yu, a Professor of History at
UBC.
As readers will see, there is not a great amount of logic in Mr. Yu’s OP-ED but there is a considerable amount of arrogance.
Yu is Canadian-born of Chinese origin. He does not represent the ethnic
Chinese who are making an effort to adjust to Canada, but he probably
expresses the view of a significant number of those who want to
re-create China here. He clearly believes in having his ethnic group
increase in numbers so that they can equal and out-number the white
population of Vancouver. He probably would like to see the same thing
happen in the entire province of British Columbia and probably in as
much of Canada as possible.
He
occupies a supposedly-objective academic position. However, he is
obviously dedicated to using his position to promote high immigration of
his ethnic group whom he describes as “people long-silenced”. To him,
Canada must do this in order to compensate for the wrongs he alleges it
committed. He will not admit that accepting Asia’s excess population
over a century ago would have meant suicide for Canada. He also will not
admit that it will mean the same thing today.
Yu
cheers the immigration-driven demographic revolution that has made
Asian immigrants a very large group. He boasts that the term ‘visible
minority’ “has become an oddity” and that the area’s large Asian
population now raises “the question about who is the minority”. Yu
refers to an area of Vancouver that is mostly white as “an aberration”
which is duplicated in “many newsrooms and boardrooms in Vancouver”.
He
says that Vancouver’s “major universities have a majority of non-white
students, but … retain an overwhelmingly white leadership”. His absurd
logic is that universities must hire Asian administrators and faculty,
and fire much of the white staff. This sounds like the reasoning of some
Vancouver lawyers about 15 years ago. They were hired by ethnic Chinese
to go before the Vancouver School Board to complain that the teachers
in Vancouver schools were almost all white. They said little about the
fact that many of the students had just gotten off the plane from Hong
Kong or Taiwan. Of course, they or Mr. Yu never raised the most
important issue of all : whether Canada even needed most of them in the
first place.
Yu
mixes older eastern Canadian history and its younger western Canadian
counterpart as if they were the same age. He exaggerates British
Columbia’s brief time as a colony. He goes through mental contortions to
compare the racial diversity of Olympic athletes to racial diversity in
Vancouver. He goes through even more contortions when he talks about
the teaching of Asian languages. To him, making our children monolingual
in a colonial language like English is like infecting them with a
disease and is a waste of human capital.
To Henry Yu, British colonization of Canada was a bad thing, but re-colonization by Asia is an unmitigated good.
For
his efforts, Henry Yu has become a darling of the sycophants at CBC
Radio in Vancouver and other locations; of like-minded media; of many
politicians; and of Canada’s entire immigration industry. At the moment,
all gloat that a senseless and abnormal high immigration intake has
continued unabated for 20 years.
If
some Canadians ever needed to be convinced that one of the major aims
of some members of immigrant groups is re-colonization of Canada, Henry
Yu has done it for them.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Vancouver’s Not-So-Quiet Revolution
City Has Far To Go Before It Can Match Diversity Reflected By Participants In Upcoming Winter Games
City Has Far To Go Before It Can Match Diversity Reflected By Participants In Upcoming Winter Games
By Henry Yu, Special to The Vancouver Sun
February 2, 2010
February 2, 2010
On
the eve of the Winter Olympics, there is a not-so-quiet revolution
going on here every bit as important as that which transformed Quebec a
half a century ago, even if the anglophone journalists and commentators
of this city and of our nation seem oblivious to its consequences.
Inexorably,
the tenor of civic debate in this city is no longer being carried out
only in the colonial language of English. But rather than in French, it
is in a multiplicity of Asian languages — Mandarin, Cantonese, Punjabi,
Tagalog — that the voices of people long silenced are talking. What are
they discussing? Important issues that bespeak both the deep colonial
past of “British” Columbia and the need for a frank and open discussion
about our collective future.
Our
city will soon be over 50% “visible minority,” with the vast majority
of these “non-whites” of Asian heritage. The very term “visible
minority” has become an oddity, raising questions about who is the
“minority” in a city that has such strong historical and demographic
connections across the Pacific.
When
Captain John Meares arrived in 1788 to be greeted by Chief Maquinna of
the Nuu-chah-nulth, there were Chinese aboard his ship. Right from the
earliest moments that migrants from around the world came to the land of
first nations peoples in B.C., we have had both trans-Pacific Asian and
trans-Atlantic European migrants.
It
struck me last weekend when I was shopping in Kitsilano what an
aberration that neighbourhood is — one of the few areas in Vancouver
that has not been transformed in the last three decades by new migration
from Asia. Kits, for instance, does not have a significant ethnic
Chinese Canadian presence in a city where almost every other
neighbourhood has percentages of ethnic Chinese that range from 20% to
55%. What is wrong with Kits? The same thing that is wrong with so many
newsrooms and boardrooms in Vancouver, where a quick glance around at
who shapes opinion and leadership decisions reveals a blinding
uniformity of faces as white as driven snow.
It’s
odd that the upcoming Winter Olympics, whose participants also used to
reflect the dominance of northern European origins, have become quite
diverse with Asian faces in skating and skiing events. And yet our city,
so proud of our diversity, has still so far to go in understanding just
what it means to have a majority of its residents of Asian heritage.
Canadians
are wonderful at criticizing other societies for inequity and their
inability to overcome racial discrimination and colonialism. Canadians
helped lead worldwide opinion against apartheid in South Africa. If the
major universities in South Africa after apartheid had a majority of
their students non-white and nearly every single one of their
administrators blindingly white, Canadians would know that this was a
legacy of white supremacy and further change was necessary.
And,
yet, here in Vancouver, our major universities have a majority of
non-white students, but we retain an overwhelmingly white leadership,
and yet no one even notices that this might be the legacy of a long
history of apartheid and white supremacy. Why not? Perhaps it is because
we had a relatively peaceful transition from apartheid and so we are
able to be deaf and blind to its legacies here. We are so quiet about
our colonial past that we so easily forget it existed.
There
are many legacies of our colonial past and the white supremacy that
undergirded it– residential schools, the reserve system, the Indian Act,
Chinese Exclusion, the Continuous Journey Act, housing covenants in
Shaughnessy and other neighbourhoods that prevented Jews, Asians, and
natives from buying houses. We have overcome much of the racial
discrimination of the past and we continue to deal with many of the
problems left unresolved, but the most dangerous are those legacies to
which we are deaf and blind.
One
of the major unresolved legacies of colonialism and white supremacy in
B.C. is our language policy. We are so proud that businesses in
Vancouver can advertise for workers who need to speak Chinese or Punjabi
or Hindi or French or German, and that it is possible in this
multilingual city of diversity that we can fill the applicant pool. But
we are misled by the availability of bilingual speakers who can read and
write both English and Chinese, or English and Punjabi. We did not
educate and create them — many of them came here already functionally
bilingual or learned English to supplement existing fluencies. We will
ruin their children.
My
parents spoke multiple dialects of Chinese when they arrived in Canada
and learned English within five years. We spoke English and Cantonese at
home, and I eventually received a full scholarship to Princeton to do
my PhD.
But
I took 10 years of French in school and can barely order a sandwich in
Quebec. My Cantonese is good enough to order food and, in an emergency,
ask for a bathroom.
You
are better off coming to Canada as a 10-year-old than being born here.
If you come as a 10-year old, you have a chance to learn English even as
you retain some fluency in whatever non-English language you learned as
a child. If you are born here, you will grow up in an anglophone
society that derides “accented” English (except if you have an alluring
British accent). At the end of K-12 education, you will only be able to
speak and write English and perhaps have enough baby talk in your home
language that as an 18-year-old you might speak as if you were an
overgrown five-year-old.
We
are complacent and cruel. We ask our job seekers to have multiple
language skills so that our companies can compete in a global economy
where Mandarin, Hindi, Japanese, and other Asian languages are a
tremendous competitive advantage. We do not have any problem finding
such employees. And yet we produce monolingual children who are
ill-equipped compared to their immigrant parents. Why?
Over
a century of anglophone dominance in B.C. led to policies designed to
erase non-English language use among children. Residential schools set
out to eradicate aboriginal language use; hiring policies rewarded
native English speakers and reduced those who had the “wrong” accent to
subordinate roles even as they were useful as translators. Perversely,
speaking only English was considered superior to speaking multiple
languages, as long as the English had the right accent and the face was
the right colour.
Edmonton,
a city that Vancouverites almost universally deride as uncivilized and
backward — we have sushi they have cattle and oil! — has had bilingual
Mandarin-English programs from K-12 for 26 years, with 13 schools and
thousands of children learning Mandarin and English on a 50/50 basis.
There
is a healthy mix of children who spoke Chinese and English as toddlers
before entering these programs in kindergarten, so that kids in their
daily interactions feel that the two languages are equally useful and
important and feel motivated to learn both.
Every
time I mention to a Vancouverite that Edmonton has had these programs
for over a quarter of a century, and ask them how many schools in
Vancouver have such programs, they assume that we have such a
progressive city that we must have dozens. We have none.
Beginning
in fall 2010, after the Olympics, the school boards of Coquitlam,
Vancouver, and Burnaby will begin early start Mandarin programs. Only
Coquitlam has made its program open to all learners. Vancouver and
Burnaby have made the mistake of limiting entrance to English speakers
only.
These
classes need kids who can speak Mandarin. Decades of scholarly research
has shown that without Mandarin speakers in the classroom, English
speakers will not effectively learn how to speak Chinese. Like my 10
years of French from Grade 3 to Grade 12, not having native French
speakers in the classroom led to a stunted language learning experience.
We
are undergoing a not-so-quiet revolution in this city. The daily
circulation of our Chinese language newspapers dwarf the readership of
The Vancouver Sun and Province, and our common future will be determined
in a variety of languages, both English and non-English.
If
we cannot cure ourselves of the colonial legacies of making our
children monolingual in English, we will stunt the next generation and
waste the incredible human capital that we welcome each year to out
shores.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Henry
Yu is a professor of history at the University of British of Columbia.
He was born in Vancouver and graduated from UBC, the son of immigrants
from China, but also the fourth generation great-grandson of Chinese
migrants who came to B.C. in the 19th century.
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