{"id":4050,"date":"1967-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1967-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-vol-48-no-11-after-the-centenary-whither-now\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:12:11","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:12:11","slug":"november-vol-48-no-11-after-the-centenary-whither-now","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-vol-48-no-11-after-the-centenary-whither-now\/","title":{"rendered":"November &#8211; VOL. 48, No. 11 &#8211; After the Centenary, Whither Now?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">This has been Canada&#8217;s Centenary                     Year, and a few reflections are in order before it is written                     into our history books.<\/p>\n<p> The captains of industry, the kings and queens and presidents                     of nations, and all the other notable visitors, have departed                     after helping us to commemorate our nation&#8217;s birthday. Now                     we must beware lest our Centenary should become an episode                     that has no sequel.<\/p>\n<p>What has been learned from our own efforts, from our millions                     of visitors, and from the display of culture, industry, and                     way of living presented by our own country and by other countries?<\/p>\n<p>We paid tribute to our founders and our pioneers, to their                     gallantry and their magnificent achievements. We displayed                     our scientific and technical triumphs, our regional production                     of forest, farm, fisheries, mine and industry, our manufactures,                     our trade and commerce. We showed our paintings, our sculpture,                     our architecture and our performing arts.<\/p>\n<p>The confederation we celebrated was a great achievement,                     but now we are looking to the future. We have made some encouraging                     progress. It is only 475 years since Columbus set sail out                     of an ancient port 120 miles from Gibraltar toward the rim                     of the world and opened up America; it is only 433 years since                     Jacques Cartier cruised into the Gulf of St. Lawrence; it                     is only a hundred years since the colonies and provinces of                     Canada united to become a nation; but look at what has been                     accomplished.<\/p>\n<p>This gigantic half continent has been explored, settled,                     and linked together with railways, highways, waterways and                     airways. Canada has become one of the greatest producing and                     exporting nations in the world, and is a good customer of                     other nations. At the turn of this century, affluence was                     confined to a minority, and a low level of living was shared                     by the majority: this is no longer so.<\/p>\n<p>But the Centenary events have opened new doors. We have                     been shown how other countries do things, some of them better                     than we do. We have been given an incentive and are under                     compulsion to take new steps forward.<\/p>\n<p>Another benefit &#8211; a great one &#8211; was that Centennial                     Year not only gave Canada confidence in her ability to do                     big things when everyone lent a hand, but revealed that she                     is not so stodgy as general repute led us to think. There                     was a lot of sparkle in the show we put on.<\/p>\n<p>We have ended our birthday celebrations more confirmed in                     our good opinion about Canada as a homeland, as a nation,                     and as a world figure, but what has happened in our country                     during 1967 has given us rather more intelligent reasons for                     this opinion. We have had a fresh and valuable look at ourselves                     alongside all the rest of the world.<\/p>\n<h3>No longer young<\/h3>\n<p>We have no reason now to keep harping on the string that                     Canada is a young country. Youth means the absence of history                     or background; youth is a catalogue of untapped resources;                     youth relies upon others for original thought in culture and                     science. In every area of life we have attained heights that                     would make any other country feel proud. Our constitution,                     which we celebrated in 1967, is far older than those of all                     but a few nations.<\/p>\n<p>Is there anything that is an epitome of Canada&#8217;s history                     and culture&nbsp;&#8230; something representing or standing for                     all that changes and all that remains the same&nbsp;&#8230; a                     living, robust idea?<\/p>\n<p>We keep poking around for a supposed identity, groping for                     a role. We mourn our lack of the myths of nations whose heroes                     have been elevated in pantheons. Our own events have been                     modest. We have no Runnymede to inspire our people with thoughts                     of Magna Chartal or the brave ground of Bannockburn celebrated                     in poetry and song, or a Bastille where France tore down the                     walls of injustice. But through our founding fathers and all                     those who have come to us over the years we have a share in                     everything that is freedom-loving and democratic and best                     in all the past and in all countries, and we have achieved                     our own sort of distinction through our own efforts.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps we need something softer than an Act of Parliament,                     yet more animating than the compulsion of necessity. As we                     think of Mother England or Mother France or whatever motherland                     our ancestors came from, can we think of Canada as our Father                     Figure to whom we can relate emotionally?<\/p>\n<p>Canada is a rugged land, with few effeminate characters                     in the cast of those who developed it. Given it as a Father                     Figure we may work at the job of our further development with                     the spirit of men, realizing our true potentiality and having                     the sturdiness to be great.<\/p>\n<p>This is the sort of forward looking into which the natural                     retrospection of Centennial Year led us. The world has a new                     pattern. The idealistic thoughts of a century ago have become                     the material realities we saw at the International Exhibition.                     Our ideals for the second century should be a challenge to                     us and to our children to bring them to fruition.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Manchester Guardian <\/em>said editorially about our                     Centenary that this hundredth birthday marks both an old and                     a young age: &#8220;Old, because Canada&#8217;s traditions of domestic                     stability and international responsibility seem to stem from                     a solid past; young, because with a population of only 19                     million in an area larger than India, Canada still promises                     more than she has fulfilled.&#8221; To fulfil the promise of our                     youth demands manliness and vigour.<\/p>\n<h3>The great values<\/h3>\n<p>Among the great values of national life are freedom and                     democracy, and these require tolerance and compromise for                     their preservation.<\/p>\n<p>Freedom includes the prerogative of changing and growing                     in accord with new social and individual ideas which are emerging.                     It includes the right of dissent to express itself, but it                     does not give unbounded liberty.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy is a positive faith expressed in respect for the                     equality and rights of others, limited only by the bounds                     of justice for all. It is, in the words of the school textbook                     <em>Civics and Citizenship<\/em>, written by L. D. Baker and                     J. M. Brown: &#8220;An ethical faith expressed in the willingness                     and desire of human beings to work together in the pursuit                     of the common good.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>With all the shortcomings that may be charged against it,                     Canadian democracy possesses the instruments by which it can                     make more complete the promise of equality and freedom it                     contains. So long as the conditions for opposition and innovation                     remain, every remediable social evil can be conquered by courage,                     organization, co-operation and hard work. What we must determine                     is that the people of Canada accept, and care deeply about,                     the principles upon which democratic government is based.<\/p>\n<p>The democratic method is that of persuasion and education:                     the only other way is that of what Mao Tse-tung calls &#8220;commandism                     and coercion&#8221;. Democracy means having the right to raise questions,                     voice opinions, and criticize defects, but once a decision                     has been reached it obligates its members to give full support                     in carrying out what has been decided upon.<\/p>\n<h3>All sorts of views<\/h3>\n<p>The golden rule of democracy is tolerance, through which                     we recognize and admit that there are all sorts of views about                     everything. Differences of opinion between people in such                     a society need not be the cause of strife: they only become                     so when they are combined with fanatical narrowness,<\/p>\n<p>It helps in a touchy situation when people on both sides                     are big enough to acknowledge the good will of those on the                     opposite side. Every mature personality is unique, just as                     the experiences that have created it are unique, but everyone                     can find common interests instead of stressing separate prejudices.<\/p>\n<p>The best thing to help troubled people is perspective. Being                     broadminded does not mean being so pliable, so flexible, so                     indecisive in all things that we have no personal standards.                     We know that neutrality is not always a virtue. Every person                     has the privilege and responsibility to think, to study, to                     reason, to listen, and to accept differences in opinion, and                     to decide for himself where he stands on all subjects affecting                     his life and actions.<\/p>\n<p>There is one sort of intolerance that should be upheld by                     every Canadian. It does not discharge a person&#8217;s duty to refrain                     from committing any of the hundreds of offences listed in                     the Criminal Code. The Old Testament prophets did not chastise                     their people only for such sins, but also for day-to-day lapses                     like tolerating poverty, bribery and corruption. For sins                     such as these the whole nation is held responsible.<\/p>\n<p>Compromise is a quality that runs in harness with tolerance.                     There have to be agreements between what we should like emotionally                     and what is workable practically.<\/p>\n<p>Theories and desires do not change phenomena. Electricity                     remains the same whether we consider it a fluid, a repulsion                     of molecules, or vibrations of the ether. As one writer put                     it: &#8220;If a man held the theory that electricity is a flock                     of invisible molecular goats he would still have to insulate                     the wire.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Methods and plans which cannot be accepted and used as they                     now are can frequently be adapted by adding a &#8220;twist&#8221; or taking                     a new slant. Many things we get peevish about are things that                     we could adjust to or correct if we looked at them intelligently                     and stirred ourselves to thoughtful action.<\/p>\n<p>This means avoiding sharp angles. All beautiful forms in                     nature are composed of curves. A dialogue consists in setting                     forth facts and circling around them, reasoning things out                     so as to resolve contradictions.<\/p>\n<h3>A home for all<\/h3>\n<p>Many races have helped to shape the character of Canada                     so that this country is a home for all.<\/p>\n<p>At a time when the authorities in France were calling Canada                     &#8220;a few acres of snow&#8221; and in the English Parliament the legislators                     were calling her &#8220;a mill-stone round the neck of the motherland&#8221;,                     stout French and British pioneers were laying the foundation                     of a great nation, to the building of which they invited many                     other peoples.<\/p>\n<p>The human composition of Canada, added to the native Indians                     and Eskimos, is the British part, the French part, and the                     fourth part made up of all those others who have chosen Canada                     in which to build their homes and careers.<\/p>\n<p>Some 27 per cent of our population is of neither French                     nor British origin. More than 180 foreign-language publications                     are produced regularly in 27 different languages. In 1966                     the Citizens Civic Action Association was organized nationally                     by 33 of Canada&#8217;s ethnic groups, made up of six million people                     who are not of French or British stock, seeking a Canadian                     Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Canada helps immigrants to find their place in life without                     losing their individuality. They have come here for release                     from bad economic conditions, to preserve their spiritual                     freedom, to escape from pogroms, to breathe freely politically.                     All of them brought with them their cultural heritages.<\/p>\n<p>It is to the advantage of everyone to see that all our people,                     from the most lowly worker to the most powerful executive,                     from the twelfth generation child born in Canada to the latest                     newcomer from another land, shall have an interest in seeing                     Canada endure.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the factor which most clearly distinguishes                     Canada from other nations, and might give her the basis for                     a national identity, is her Anglo-French partnership. So long                     as a dialogue goes on among reasonable people there is hope                     that the extreme exponents of racial separation within this                     partnership may moderate their attitudes. To have a community                     or a nation in which to live happily, men must work together,                     having common principles and purposes.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean the death of individuality. England and                     Scotland have been united under one parliament for more than                     two and a half centuries, but Scotsmen still have a sense                     of communal identity. The National Congress has always maintained                     that the people of India, in spite of their religious, linguistic,                     and ethnic differences, are members of one nation; that differences                     among the various groups do not make the Indian society fragmented;                     on the contrary, they enrich the Indian culture shared by                     all.<\/p>\n<p>Canada may solve its problems within the rules of the game.                     As was said of the United Nations Charter: &#8220;A charter or constitution                     which cannot be adapted to changing conditions is likely to                     be inadequate for survival.&#8221; And the Queen, speaking in the                     Quebec Legislature in 1964, said: &#8220;To be happy, a people must                     live in a climate of confidence and affection. But a dynamic                     state should not fear to re-assess its political philosophy.                     That an agreement worked out a hundred years ago does not                     necessarily meet all the needs of the present should not be                     surprising.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>National unity<\/h3>\n<p>We need to play our parts on the provincial stage and on                     the federal stage, and to play both parts with equal comeliness.                     Excellence and wisdom have no provincial or county boundaries.<\/p>\n<p>This was well illustrated in the herculean task of organizing                     the International Exhibition. In January 1963 the formal Exhibition                     agreement was signed by representatives of the federal and                     provincial governments and the City of Montreal. Mayor Jean                     Drapeau, who presided at the ceremony, said in part: &#8220;It is                     the duty of every one of us to mark in every possible way                     the solid reality which is Canada, its real personality.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canadians must not grow away from one another regionally                     in their day-to-day contacts any more than in their great                     events. We are closely bound by common interests and shared                     ideals.<\/p>\n<p>Some provinces of Canada have economic difficulties, and                     other provinces should not be indifferent, because all provinces                     are involved in the economic health of all Canada. Forest                     fires in British Columbia, a drought on the prairies, a manufacturing                     slump in the central provinces, a slow down of industrial                     development on the Atlantic seaboard: all these have an impact                     on life everywhere in the country.<\/p>\n<p>There are, despite over-all prosperity, still economic disparities                     between Canadians in various regions. The equalization formula                     has for many years made it possible for the poorer, or less                     developed, provinces to provide basic minimum services for                     their people. But if Canada is to be truly a nation, all of                     its component parts must seek a decent measure of prosperity                     for everyone. There can be no provincial right to default                     on a national duty.<\/p>\n<h3>Co-operation<\/h3>\n<p>Around the confederation table was assembled as brilliant                     a handful of practical men as any other 34 you could gather                     on the globe. They were strong in their belief that national                     responsibility could be effected only by national solidarity.                     They gave an example to a sceptical world of how two people                     of different origins and creeds could live together, not without                     friction, but without disruption and strife. They came together                     by compromise, rationality and hard effort. To paraphrase                     what Tacitus said about Rome in his <em>Histories<\/em>, their                     work &#8220;cannot be unraveled without destroying those who unravel                     it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is true that there were strong compulsions of self-defence                     and economics pressing Canada at that time. Confederation                     was founded on a successful attempt to avoid internal revolution                     or foreign conquest. It was a collective determination to                     live together in harmony. And last July 1st, a hundred years                     later, the Biblical lesson read by the Prime Minister at the                     ecumenical service on the lawn of Parliament Buildings contained                     this exhortation: &#8220;Be ye all of one mind, having compassion                     one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Confederation started with negotiated unity, and as we enter                     our second century we need to continue resolving differences                     through criticism and correction and compromise. This co-operative                     behaviour directed toward the solution of common problems                     is possible only to enlightened, reasoning, men and women.<\/p>\n<p>We had a good illustration in 1967. The country came alive                     from coast to coast through the joint efforts of men and women                     of every ethnic origin. That they put into their celebration                     of Canada&#8217;s birthday many and varied examples of the customs                     of their birthplaces is evidence that confederation achieved                     national political unity without imposing racial, cultural                     or linguistic uniformity.<\/p>\n<h3>A world view<\/h3>\n<p>The centennial celebrations held out hope to the world.                     Canada took on new stature. While asserting afresh our solidarity                     as an independent nation, we showed that we recognize the                     interdependence of nations on one another.<\/p>\n<p>What are the bases of our claim to world attention? One                     reason may be that more than other countries we have experienced                     the successful development from a natural and political wilderness                     to a measure of economic stability and to unity in citizenship.                     We have survived invasion by the forces of &#8220;Manifest Destiny&#8221;                     four times; we have opened our doors to exiles from many countries;                     we have placed our land and our harvests at the disposal of                     hungry and penniless people.<\/p>\n<p>We have, in many ways, an open society. By importing people                     from all the world we have added their virtues and talents                     and skills to those we already had.<\/p>\n<p>We have not withdrawn from the great issues stirring the                     world, though our efforts have been steadily designed to stop                     the stirring or to keep it from spilling over. Our contribution                     to the maintenance of world peace has been distinguished,                     and a maintained peace is our surest defence against aggression.<\/p>\n<p>Changing times require rethinking of old thoughts. An imaginative                     leadership in government at all levels is needed to cope with                     problems of our time. Lord Hailsham told a convocation of                     the Fund for the Republic that &#8220;there is no political theory                     at present canvassed which is not implicitly pre-Darwinian                     in character, and therefore in need of drastic revision.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Government must be dynamic, thorough and speedy. The way                     of working is this: locate a problem, validate it, awaken                     public concern about it, set up research, collect information,                     and get busy to solve the problem. An example of dilatoriness                     was given when someone praised an Egyptian king for keeping                     his army and himself in an admirable state of discipline and                     exercise. A critic remarked: &#8220;always preparing, and never                     performing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is little that is purely technical about government.                     Much is dependent upon basic human attitudes, much is governed                     by human dictates, much is guided by human dignity. For these                     reasons political life demands high standards of conduct in                     its practitioners, carried out in the interests of the people                     and not of self-interest.<\/p>\n<h3>Canada&#8217;s second century<\/h3>\n<p>It is un-Canadian to be satisfied with stagnation, or to                     be content to look at ourselves and think: &#8220;We are all right&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>In the ruins of Pompeii may be seen a wall painting of a                     youth who did just that. Narcissus is pictured as a beautiful                     young man admiring his image reflected in a pool. He became                     enamoured of it, and his self-love led to his death.<\/p>\n<p>All the fine words spoken by visiting dignitaries, all the                     splendid structures erected, all the birthday parades and                     shows and celebrations, should not lure us into narcissism.                     We should enter our second century as self-confident Canadians,                     not dazzled by our past, not dismayed by our present, and                     not afraid of our future.<\/p>\n<p>The prospect before Canada is one to command enthusiasm.                     We can paraphrase a saying of the Athenians: &#8220;We have extolled                     our ancestors, now let us behave as valiant men.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In our second century we might set ourselves to provide                     widened scope for the exercise of human potentialities and                     human excellences, and for recognition of them. We might improve                     ourselves as Canadian human beings, without ethnic hyphens.<\/p>\n<p>We do not need to fix our eyes unblinkingly upon what is                     remotely ultimate, but we do need a sense of direction, to                     see clearly the trend of events so as to make the best of                     them. While we debate about ends, we need to put the means                     toward them into action.<\/p>\n<h3>The future is ours<\/h3>\n<p>We do not merely hope for a bright future in Canada, but                     we perceive that it is there for our making and taking.<\/p>\n<p>It would be wrong not to lay the examples of the past before                     the future, and we have done that in 1967. We have looked                     at and lauded the people who had the initiative, tenacity,                     courage and good sense to deal with fortune and all its changes,                     and who had the gifts of compromise and tolerance in getting                     on with one another. It is the opportunity of second-century                     Canadians to bring it all to fruition. There is nothing in                     the massive structure of the oak tree that was not potentially                     in the acorn.<\/p>\n<p>Though Canada is not such a place as is famed in song and                     story, she can be great in the hearts of those who live here.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone cherishes a desire to belong to something big.                     This half continent that is Canada, with its political federation                     that retains cultural freedom, regional variety and individual                     opportunity, is surely big enough to challenge anyone&#8217;s creative                     power.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[47],"class_list":["post-4050","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-47"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.7 (Yoast SEO v26.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>November - VOL. 48, No. 11 - After the Centenary, Whither Now? - 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\/november-vol-48-no-11-after-the-centenary-whither-now\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November - VOL. 48, No. 11 - After the Centenary, Whither Now? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"This has been Canada&#8217;s Centenary Year, and a few reflections are in order before it is written into our history books. 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The captains of industry, the kings and queens and presidents of nations, and all the other notable visitors, have departed after helping us to commemorate our nation&#8217;s birthday. 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