{"id":3941,"date":"1966-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1966-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1966-vol-47-no-3-a-citizen-of-canada\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:20:48","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:20:48","slug":"march-1966-vol-47-no-3-a-citizen-of-canada","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1966-vol-47-no-3-a-citizen-of-canada\/","title":{"rendered":"March 1966 &#8211; VOL. 47, No. 3 &#8211; A Citizen of Canada"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">To be a citizen of Canada to be a citizen                     of no mean country. She may be an old-fashioned country in                     some ways; she has differences of language and economics and                     perplexities in government: but her foundations are solid                     and the spires of her many faiths point to the same ideal.<\/p>\n<p> There is something vital and singular about being a citizen                     of Canada. As J. B. Brebner said in his presidential address                     to the Canadian Historical Association in 1940: &#8220;Canadianism                     is made up of over three centuries of successful struggle                     with a recalcitrant environment, of over a century&#8217;s original                     and successful political adaptation and inventiveness, and                     of a kind of conservatism which history has shown can be converted                     by adversity into stubborn, indomitable will.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We have assembled in Canada the adventurous spirits of numerous                     races in surroundings favourable to the creation of a great                     citizenship. They have brought with them vivid ideas and principles                     a thousand years old. No commonwealth ever wished for more                     ideal conditions than are provided by the contribution all                     these people can make toward the good life.<\/p>\n<p>Centennial year offers us the opportunity to mobilize our                     imagination and our institutions in a vigorous national effort                     to improve knowledge about citizenship and expand participation                     in it. This will require commitment, energy and time from                     every well-disposed person and association, but we must not                     postpone it or the very undoing of our way of life could begin.<\/p>\n<p>Canada is something we are building. Canadians are on the                     move. They have been on the move west and north ever since                     Louis H\u00e9bert ploughed that first patch of farm land                     in the shadow of Port Royal in 1604 and then moved westward                     in 1623 to plant his seeds in ground that is today the Upper                     Town of Quebec. We are participating now in space exploration.                     Canada was the third nation to have a satellite in orbit around                     the earth.<\/p>\n<p>Canada has developed her thinking, too. This is a nation                     with its own cultural and political and social identity, and                     not merely a marginal tribe of French and English adventurers                     united only by the desire to make a living. Canada&#8217;s first                     government, made up of French and English cabinet ministers,                     proclaimed in the speech from the throne at the first session                     of the first parliament that &#8220;a new nationality&#8221; had come                     into being. From that time on, people had the opportunity                     to realize their highest potentialities as citizens of a democratic                     national state.<\/p>\n<p>But having made ourselves sovereign as a nation we must                     now behave intelligently as citizens.<\/p>\n<h3>The roominess of life<\/h3>\n<p>It is a pity that we worry so greatly about our diversity,                     because it is just this diversity that gives Canada individuality.                     Out of manifold talents and different ways of looking at things                     come originality, strength, and a forward-moving spirit. Out                     of our heritage have come our basic freedoms, our democratic                     way of life, our art, literature and music. Most important,                     we have inherited the spirit of challenge, of exploring and                     pioneering. We are pushing forward on many frontiers, geographical,                     scientific, cultural and spiritual.<\/p>\n<p>Canadians have always encouraged the newcomer to join them,                     and have been eager for him to find the roominess of life                     that Canada offers. This is a land where every man and every                     woman can find a place in society suited to his or her inclinations                     and capabilities. It is a country where the ordinary citizen,                     no matter how humble, has a chance to better his life. But                     he must accept the spirit of our institutions. It is upon                     observance of the spirit of the laws and customs by which                     we live that the worthiness of our citizenship is tested.<\/p>\n<p>In a democratic country like Canada the right to vote is                     a priceless gift of citizenship. Our way of government does                     not compel everyone to vote, but democracy may fall into disrepute                     if those who enjoy its rights and privileges fail to exercise                     them. In the general election of 1965 only 74.3 per cent of                     eligible voters cast their ballots.<\/p>\n<p>Voting is not the only duty of a citizen. You cannot vote                     democracy and then go home and forget it. Democracy needs                     to be lived by every citizen so as to create the moral and                     spiritual atmosphere in which the government must operate.                     The elected representatives have to be assisted, inspired,                     and sometimes prodded, by public opinion if they are to provide                     the conditions in which men and women may set about making                     themselves happy.<\/p>\n<h3>Meaning of citizenship<\/h3>\n<p>Good Canadianism includes social membership. A citizen is                     not only an individual but a member of a family, one of a                     community, a member of a province and of the nation and of                     the world.<\/p>\n<p>Being a citizen means more than having technical knowledge                     of the government of the country. It implies the possession                     of an ideal, a sense of values, and a theory of what life                     in Canada may become. It takes in the whole scale of thought,                     knowledge and behaviour.<\/p>\n<p>A citizen is not content to be an anonymous face in the                     crowd, an unknown quantity to his associates, an item on his                     employer&#8217;s pay-roll, a tenant to his landlord, and a non-participating                     member of a union, church, trade association or fraternal                     society.<\/p>\n<p>Above all, the citizen is not a hanger-on. He does not look                     upon the nation as a co-operative business possessing great                     wealth in which all citizens have a right to share. The thoughtful                     citizen distinguishes between security, which means being                     taken care of, reducing him to the status of a baby, and stability,                     which does not give anything for nothing but makes sure that                     effort brings reward. The citizen must stand straight and                     proud, resisting any theories that would undercut the principle                     of personal accountability and self-respect.<\/p>\n<p>The business of growing up into a good citizen, or of becoming                     a good citizen upon coming here from another land, is not                     a matter of learning political science but of taking on maturity.                     This is made up of two parts: being healthily independent                     and being what one should be as a social creature.<\/p>\n<p>A good citizen develops his talents for the maximum benefit                     of himself and society. Canada does not seek to standardize                     men&#8217;s minds, producing deadly commonplaceness. Instead, it                     seeks co-operativeness and goodwill, and flexibility in the                     face of change dictated by intelligent appraisal of a situation.<\/p>\n<h3>Democracy and freedom<\/h3>\n<p>Good citizenship is important to those who think that democracy                     is worth more than a couple of cheers at a patriotic gathering.                     Citizens in a democracy are free and upright people who take                     pride in governing themselves and do govern themselves.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy is a spirit, not a law. It provides the environment                     for bringing out the extraordinary possibilities in ordinary                     people. Personal effort is of the greatest significance in                     keeping democracy on the rails and progressing.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s democracy is democracy in a changing society. It                     is not imprisoned by a rigid constitution that declares: &#8220;This                     is the extent and the limit of freedom which citizens shall                     enjoy for all time.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Other nations have changed, too, some of them for the worse.                     They thought their best way was to turn over their lives to                     unrestricted political control. They found temporary relief                     from some worries and gained the illusion of future security,                     but they lost their democratic liberty and sacrificed the                     prospect of gaining what their individual qualities fitted                     them to enjoy. Others have moved with brash arrogance into                     the state where they believe that &#8220;freedom&#8221; and &#8220;liberty&#8221;                     convey the right for every man to do as he likes.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy is something learned, not bestowed or legalized                     or seized. We learn about it by studying or working alongside                     people who do or say things unusual to us, and by listening                     sympathetically to people who question some of our assumptions.                     Without the interchange of ideas the human race would still                     be sitting in primitive darkness.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy presupposes the right of every minority, even                     of only one person, to dissent from the opinions of the majority.                     As George W. Brown wrote in <em>Canadian Democracy in Action                     <\/em>(J. M. Dent &amp; Sons, Ltd., Toronto, 1947): &#8220;Whatever democracy                     is, it is not government by brute force but by persuasion.                     It is a sense of fair play, of justice and sportsmanship in                     the highest sense of that term.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Democracy provides certain freedoms: of speech, of discussion,                     of assembly, of the press, of vocation, of ownership, of residence,                     of movement, of worship, of political belief, of association,                     and freedom from unjust arrest.<\/p>\n<p>We know that we are free when conditions permit us to make                     greatest use of our capabilities as individuals, and to develop                     to our full capacity materially, intellectually and spiritually.<\/p>\n<p>Charters of &#8220;Rights&#8221; should make clear that these charters                     do not set forth what men would like to have, or what men                     can manage to get, or what the State thinks it can safely                     allow them, but what men must have in order to function fully                     and freely as men. The only protection of these rights is                     the understanding of them by the people and the determination                     to preserve them, not only for themselves but for all other                     citizens. We acquiesce in the loss of freedom whenever we                     are silent in the face of injustice to anyone.<\/p>\n<h3>Many roles to play<\/h3>\n<p>The citizen has many roles to play on the nation&#8217;s stage.<\/p>\n<p>He is a good neighbour. As a member of the community he                     will have real consideration for the feelings and needs of                     other people. He will support his institutions, and will give                     people of another religion or race the same consideration                     as he expects. He will set apart some of his time and put                     forth some effort to help his neighbours to make the community                     a better place to live in. He will take an active part in                     helping his neighbours to make the government of the community                     work better.<\/p>\n<p>Plutarch, that extraordinary writer of the first century,                     drew attention to the importance of the contribution of humble                     citizens. &#8220;You will have no wars to wage,&#8221; he wrote to a friend,                     &#8220;no tyrants to put down, no alliances to consolidate. The                     utmost you can hope for is to abolish some petty abuse, fight                     some bad custom, revive some charitable foundation, repair                     an aqueduct, rebuild a temple, adjust a local tax.&#8221; These                     are duties well worth doing, he said.<\/p>\n<p>The good citizen knows the important problems that face                     his representatives in municipal, provincial and federal government.                     He studies and discusses these problems so as to make use                     of the knowledge when he goes to vote. This is an inescapable                     duty, because the strength of a democracy depends upon its                     electorate being well-informed.<\/p>\n<p>The citizen as a parent will teach his children to distinguish                     between right and wrong, and inspire them to prefer what is                     right. He will teach his children to get along well with other                     people, encourage them to get a suitable education, and teach                     them to accept more and more responsibility for their actions                     as they grow toward maturity. The first-rate citizen adds                     to good fellowship in his family the plus value of understanding.                     He guides and directs, participates sympathetically in the                     ups and downs of adolescent life, and provides fruitful soil                     in which young people develop settled roots. His children,                     governed by principles, are unlikely to be led astray by demeaning                     whims.<\/p>\n<h3>Sense of responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>It is evident, then, that more than the privilege of being                     inserted on the tax roll is meant by becoming a citizen of                     Canada. The essence of good citizenship is the acceptance                     of responsibility, and every citizen is under bond to do his                     best in caring not only for himself and his family but for                     society.<\/p>\n<p>Citizenship is not something for passive minds. The lonely                     person who stands on the side-lines watching the parade, speculating                     and conjecturing and criticizing, and thinking how much better                     the show might be, is not a citizen, for citizenship demands                     participation, involvement, and contribution. No man gains                     a feeling of significance in life if he lives in isolation.<\/p>\n<p>First of all a citizen must do what all good people are                     expected to do, and then he must do what his own particular                     position in the world demands of him and puts him in position                     to do. Pericles, Athenian statesman of the fifth century B.C.                     said: &#8220;We do not allow absorption in our own affairs to interfere                     with participation in the city&#8217;s.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canada is being enriched every year by the cross-fertilization                     of many different minds and many different abilities. Citizens                     are showing how people can be themselves and at the same time                     be part of the nation and of the human race.<\/p>\n<p>Our democracy is a way of living in which the people rule                     by discussion and compromise. You do not need to be the same                     as the man next door, but he and you need to have the same                     ideas about citizenship while differing as to the details                     of administration. Everyone going somewhere through a crowd                     must step aside, keep his elbows in, back up or advance, according                     to conditions.<\/p>\n<p>The most conspicuous enterprise of the citizen is that of                     discovering or creating relationships of sharing, not only                     the business and government of the land, but space, thought,                     esteem, dignity and tolerance.<\/p>\n<p>The citizen has a lifelong assignment in human relations                     if he is to share actively in the human enterprise. He belongs                     to a society of people united by agreement as to the things                     they love and working toward them.<\/p>\n<h3>Sense of values<\/h3>\n<p>The citizen needs to cultivate sharp-witted tests of values,                     or he will find himself at the mercy of professional purveyors                     of mistaken theories.<\/p>\n<p>Canadians have reached their present high standing among                     the peoples of the world by developing discrimination in the                     quality of things and ideas. If there are people who invoke                     new ways and praise new systems, they do not go so far as                     to say that democracy has been tried and found wanting, but                     only that democracy has been tried and found difficult. The                     new ways are not said to be better, but easier.<\/p>\n<p>It would be sad indeed if Canadians were to be seduced by                     this specious plea into casting away what has been so painfully                     built up by their ancestors and themselves. But, as Churchill                     said in addressing the House of Commons in 1945: &#8220;Very often                     the eagles have been squalled down by the parrots.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>People are likely to become confused by the babel of tongues,                     and to be misled into thinking of what keeps men apart rather                     than what brings them together. The surly nibbling at the                     institutions of democracy by people who have no hammer for                     building but only a torch for burning comes of a long line                     of destroyers. The Hittites, mentioned in Genesis as a powerful                     nation, have left nothing but the reputation of having destroyed                     many things which other people had built up with great pain                     and care.<\/p>\n<p>Some critics of Canadianism are anarchists, people who profess                     to believe in the right of every man to do what he likes.                     Some are jingoists &#8211; whose name was used in a music hall                     song in 1878 to set forth the character of rabid patriots.                     Some are hostile people, full of aggressiveness, who are merely                     showing evidence of immaturity of the sort that causes a small                     child to scream when things do not please him.<\/p>\n<p>But there is a reservoir of good sense and goodwill in Canadians                     which will prevent mischief-makers from making headway. Public                     opinion &#8211; and every citizen has some responsibility in                     making public opinion &#8211; ought to be intelligent and well-informed                     and constructive, in its own interests.<\/p>\n<p>A dominant feature about Canadianism is that our people                     have plucked beauty and satisfaction from dangerous crags                     and out of gloomy crevices. They applied their common sense                     and their sense of values to the situations of life so as                     to acquire not only a way of living together that works but                     some of the poetry of life itself.<\/p>\n<h3>Learning together<\/h3>\n<p>People who go through life with granite-like convictions                     on every subject under the sun lead a cheerless existence.                     They miss all the fun of exploring, all the challenge of debating,                     and all the thrill of finding something new.<\/p>\n<p>We are indulging in juvenile thinking if we expect life                     to be always smooth, fragrant and responsive to our wishes.                     Medical men must examine disease if they are to promote health;                     music, to create harmony, must investigate discord; the citizen                     has to learn what is ailing and discordant in society so as                     to produce a healthy, harmonious nation.<\/p>\n<p>It is natural that people should disagree on some points,                     but to disagree because of ignorance is deplorable and to                     disagree because of disinterest is not civil. This is why                     the Citizenship Branch of the Department of Citizenship and                     Immigration is charged with promoting greater understanding                     on the part of all Canadians of the privileges and responsibilities                     of citizenship. It publishes several books, available from                     the Queen&#8217;s Printer, Ottawa, and through Government book stores                     in several cities, and it encourages groups, agencies and                     organizations to participate in programmes designed to promote                     mutual understanding and co-operation among ethnic groups.<\/p>\n<p>The Canadian Citizenship Council, Ottawa, supported financially                     to the extent of two-thirds by business firms, individuals                     and voluntary organizations, was founded in 1940 to encourage                     training in citizenship and democracy.<\/p>\n<h3>Look at old values<\/h3>\n<p>The essence of citizenship is found in its values, in its                     preferences, its moral commitments, its deep loyalties, its                     conception of the good life, its standards of excellence,                     its measures of success, and its teachings regarding the things                     for which and by which men should live.<\/p>\n<p>This might be a good time for Canadians to look again at                     some old values and principles, perhaps using a hammer and                     chisel and sandpaper to remove the caked dust that covers                     them. When workmen were cleaning the walls of a London church                     they uncovered a sculptured tear-drop on a cherub&#8217;s cheek.                     What a touch of artistry; what an insight into the feeling                     of the man who sculptured it, how real and alive it makes                     the past appear!<\/p>\n<p>The customs, principles and values associated with Canada                     have taken their present form as a result of centuries of                     adaptation to the pressures of environment and the necessities                     of life. We cannot detach ourselves from vital principles                     and live.<\/p>\n<p>Take loyalty as an example. &#8220;Loyalty&#8221; is a noble word in                     the catalogue of social virtues. It is a quiet love of family                     and nation and a pride in the ideals which you are upholding.                     Leonard W. Brockington, Q.C., LL.D., distinguished member                     of the Canadian Bar, said in his radio tribute to Sir Winston                     Churchill on the day of the State Funeral of &#8220;this chivalrous                     and valiant knight&#8221;: &#8220;No man had greater loyalty than Sir                     Winston Churchill: loyalty to his friends; loyalty to the                     memory of his father; loyalty to the great causes to which                     he gave his unremitting toil; loyalty to all the sanctities                     and the deep unspoken certainties of family life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>How precarious would be our Canadian way of life if we were                     to fail in our loyalty to its principles. Being disloyal does                     not necessarily mean insurrection and other forms of violence.                     It can be what is called &#8220;incivism&#8221; &#8211; disloyalty to the                     spirit of Canadian life by neglecting one&#8217;s duty as a citizen.                     The virtues of western society are the product of education                     and discipline, and they need continued loyal support and                     cultivation.<\/p>\n<h3>A sense of direction<\/h3>\n<p>Citizenship gives orientation to life. Instead of taking                     a dark and brooding view of events, turning them into a sort                     of &#8220;G\ufffdtterd\ufffdmmerung&#8221; &#8211; a twilight of the gods in which                     frost and snow ruled the earth &#8211; our citizenship stirs                     us to enjoy and contribute to the best sort of society yet                     offered to people who are advancing together in search of                     the good life. This is a time to read the record and find                     our citizenship ten times more meaningful than it has ever                     seemed before.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, some will say: &#8220;all this is counsel of perfection:                     things are not so simple.&#8221; Good citizenship can be simple                     if Canadians will think of it as not something merely legal                     or intellectual, but something transcending law and reason,                     something deeply felt, deeply believed, dominant even in our                     dreams.<\/p>\n<p>Canada exists in terms of each separate citizen of Canada,                     and every person&#8217;s contribution through active citizenship                     benefits the nation. The worthy citizen is one who stands                     upright so that he looks beyond his own toes to get a long                     and wide view of the good of the whole country. It is upon                     that good that his own good depends.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[46],"class_list":["post-3941","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-46"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>March 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 3 - A Citizen of Canada - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1966-vol-47-no-3-a-citizen-of-canada\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"March 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 3 - A Citizen of Canada - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"To be a citizen of Canada to be a citizen of no mean country. 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She may be an old-fashioned country in some ways; she has differences of language and economics and perplexities in government: but her foundations are solid and the spires of her many faiths point to the same ideal. 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