{"id":4164,"date":"1997-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1997-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-78-no-1-winter-1997-the-prize-of-citizenship\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T01:59:35","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T01:59:35","slug":"vol-78-no-1-winter-1997-the-prize-of-citizenship","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-78-no-1-winter-1997-the-prize-of-citizenship\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 78 No. 1 &#8211; Winter 1997 &#8211; The Prize of Citizenship"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Citizenship in a democratic state is the                     product of a long and agonizing struggle. It continues to                     call for effort among those who possess it today. Its benefits                     should never be taken for granted. It is nothing less than                     what makes a person free&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> As Canadians mark the 50th anniversary of the Act of Parliament                     that gave them a citizenship of their own, they might consider                     just how lucky they are to have it. For to be a fully operational                     citizen of a democratic nation is a privilege that has been                     granted to relatively few in all of history; indeed, it is                     rare enough even today.<\/p>\n<p>Through the first few thousand years of human existence,                     the person we now call a citizen was nowhere in evidence.                     People banded together for mutual support in groups that came                     to be dominated by their strongest and most cunning members.                     There was no question of popular participation in decision-making                     or the rule of the majority. Anyone who disputed the policies                     of a ruler might be tortured or put to death.<\/p>\n<p>Citizenship had to wait for the advent of civilization,                     with which it is intertwined. To become citizens, and to be                     accepted as such, humans had to rise out of the darkness of                     barbarism, in which force was the sole determinant of societal                     affairs. The dawn of civilization brought an end, however                     temporarily, to the law of the jungle, by which the stronger                     always lord it over the weaker. The genius of democracy, the                     conceptual garden from which citizenship grows, is that it                     gives political strength to everyone who chooses to participate                     in it actively.<\/p>\n<p>It was not until the 5th century B.C. that the first glimmerings                     of democracy began to appear in the newly civilized city states                     of Greece, particularly Athens. There a succession of enlightened                     ex- rulers gradually handed over power to the people &#8211; but                     not to all the people. In the vaunted cradle of democracy,                     citizenship was nothing like the generalized status we in                     the western world now enjoy.<\/p>\n<p>It was restricted to male property-owners whose parents                     on both sides had been born in Athens. The women, immigrants                     and slave labourers who formed the bulk of the population                     had no formal say in how the state would be run, or by whom.<\/p>\n<p>For all their blinkered view of the qualifications for citizenship,                     the Athenians did have a firm grasp of its meaning. Democracy                     stemmed from a philosophy of fairness: if citizens were called                     upon to support the state, they should in fairness have control                     over the conduct of that state.<\/p>\n<p>In an autocracy, ordinary people were expected to obey the                     laws, to pay taxes, and to be available when called upon for                     military service. They did not necessarily receive anything                     in return for their efforts on behalf of the state. In a democracy,                     those paying for, and fighting for, the state were granted                     their just rewards in something intangible and yet priceless,                     namely individual liberty. Liberty is fully appreciated only                     by those who are deprived of it, as millions still are in                     the world today.<\/p>\n<p>It is no accident that the era of greatness in ancient Greece                     coincided with the era of democracy. Philosophy and the arts                     flourished because, with the citizens in control of things,                     the more creative among them felt free to express themselves                     in ways that might have been dangerous in an autocracy. In                     the dictatorships that exist in our own times, independent                     thinkers and artists continue to suffer brutal repression.                     Freedom of expression is one of the great overlooked benefits                     of citizenship in a democratic state.<\/p>\n<p>The philosophers who abounded in ancient Athens thought                     long and hard about the system of government under which they                     found themselves. They broadly agreed that democracy is a                     free exchange of obligations between the state and the citizen:                     The state helps to support the citizen, and the citizen helps                     to support the state.<\/p>\n<p>The aptly named Democritus declared that the welfare of                     the state and the welfare of the citizen were inseparable.                     Therefore the first concern of the dutiful citizen should                     be the welfare of the state. Democritus wrote that &#8220;a well-administered                     state is our greatest safeguard&#8230;. When the state is in healthy                     condition, all things prosper; when it is corrupt, all things                     go to ruin.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Since it is the nature of a democratic state never to stand                     still, the great Socrates was convinced that it was the duty                     of all citizens to work towards its improvement. He put his                     theory into practice by mercilessly criticizing the Athenian                     government. His political activity drew him a death sentence                     on a trumped-up charge of corrupting youth.<\/p>\n<h3>Lesson from Athens: when you kill informed dissent,                     you kill democracy<\/h3>\n<p>While awaiting execution, Socrates declined an offer from                     his friends to organize an escape and spirit him away to another                     country. He explained that, if he fled, he would be weakening                     the state by breaking its law. He counselled his followers                     to remain faithful to the government, and to loyally and lawfully                     criticize it with a view to correcting its faults and errors.                     Concerned citizens of democracies have been doing just that                     ever since.<\/p>\n<p>Socrates believed that the highest concern of any citizen                     should be the quest for knowledge. Only a knowledgeable person                     could tell when politicians were attempting to dupe the people                     or were pursuing harmful policies. The most useful citizen                     was one who brought a critical mind to public affairs and                     was constantly trying to find the real truth in political                     questions. The idea that citizens of a democracy have a positive                     duty to take a critical and well-informed approach to politics                     is a theme that has run through history from Socrates&#8217; time                     to ours.<\/p>\n<p>You do not need to be a brilliant philosopher to know that,                     deep in their hearts, bad politicians fear and hate informed                     criticism. They will dodge, deflect, and attempt to suppress                     it whenever they can.<\/p>\n<p>The final act in the killing of knowledgeable dissent is                     the killing of democracy. That is what happened in Athens                     when, under terrific internal and external stresses, its rowdy                     democratic government was replaced by an oligarchy known as                     the Twenty Tyrants.<\/p>\n<p>The democratic system had lasted for less than a century                     before it collapsed under the weight of the inborn tendency                     in human affairs to replace popular rule with authoritarianism.                     It is a tendency that has shown amazing strength over the                     ages. Scores of democratic regimes have been replaced by dictatorships                     in our own 20th century. The price of liberty is indeed eternal                     vigilance, and a refusal to believe that &#8220;it can&#8217;t happen                     here.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Popular rule of some sort &#8211; it could hardly be called democracy                     &#8211; was practised on and off for some 400 years in the Roman                     Empire. Rome had its citizens, but many were of the second-class                     variety, equal before the law but denied any part in politics.                     The fortunate individual who enjoyed both civil and political                     rights was singled out as a &#8220;free man,&#8221; a status we in the                     West now blithely take for granted. The Romans regarded their                     citizenship as well worth fighting for. The legendary hero                     Horatius was essentially defending citizens&#8217; rights when he                     made his celebrated stand against the Etruscans at the Sublician                     Bridge in the 6th century B.C.<\/p>\n<p>The fall of the Roman Empire sent citizenship into eclipse                     in the so -called civilized world as one form of authoritarian                     government succeeded another. Under the feudal system that                     eventually became dominant in Europe, peasants and artisans                     did the bidding of their overlords &#8211; often to the death, in                     battle &#8211; out of simple fear of being abused.<\/p>\n<p>The theory that kings drew their authority from God was                     especially effective in subjugating people in Europe in the                     latter Middle Ages. They were afraid to disobey their rulers                     because they believed this would amount to disobeying God,                     inviting eternal punishment.<\/p>\n<p>As long as ordinary people remained under the heel of authoritarian                     rule, the only way to assert their demands for a voice in                     their own destinies was through armed rebellion. Rivers of                     blood were shed in attempts to gain some semblance of what                     we now call citizenship. Numerous peasant revolts were waged                     throughout Europe from the 12th to 16th centuries. They usually                     ended in the slaughter of the rebels and harsher rule than                     ever over the general populace.<\/p>\n<p>The first successful mass revolt against authoritarianism                     in the western world did not occur until the late 18th century,                     when the Americans overthrew their British colonial masters.                     Citizens of the new United States of America won that enviable                     title at the price of much anguish in a bitter, hard-fought                     war. But U.S. citizenship was not, to say the least, for everyone.                     The American Constitution declared that all men were created                     equal, but said nothing about women. Nor did the definition                     of men include the multitude of black men being held in bondage                     in all of the founding states.<\/p>\n<p>The revolution that followed in France spread citizenship                     broadly throughout the population. The word &#8220;citoyen&#8221; became                     the touchstone of the movement; it replaced &#8220;madame&#8221; and &#8220;monsieur&#8221;                     as the standard form of address. But the revolution dealt                     a set-back to the march of citizenship when the lower classes                     took vicious revenge upon their upper-class compatriots. They                     went on to engage in a horrific internecine struggle which                     made a mockery of their slogan, &#8220;liberty, equality, and fraternity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Across the English Channel in Great Britain, a civil war                     had been fought in the 1640s to assert the rights of Parliament                     vis-a-vis the monarch. But it was only the beginning of a                     protracted see-saw struggle over who would reign supreme.                     The right to vote and be elected to Parliament was strictly                     confined to affluent Anglicans; no Roman Catholics or non-Anglican                     Protestants could run for office. The great majority of residents                     of Britain were disenfranchised by property requirements.                     For them, citizenship in the modern sense of the word was                     a next-to-impossible dream.<\/p>\n<p>The British people did not think of themselves as citizens,                     but as subjects of a monarch. In theory, a subject owes allegiance                     to a ruler, right or wrong. The allegiance of the British                     ruling class to the crown at the time of the French revolution                     was such that when the parliamentarian Charles James Fox proposed                     a toast to &#8220;our sovereign, the people,&#8221; he suffered the disgrace                     of having his name stricken from the rolls of the Privy Council.                     His offence was to suggest that ultimate political authority                     could possibly reside in what the elite saw as an ignorant                     and volatile mob.<\/p>\n<h3>The shocking notion of equality and majority rule<\/h3>\n<p>Ironically, much of the theory of modern participatory citizenship                     was developed by thinkers who would unhesitatingly have called                     themselves the British king&#8217;s or queen&#8217;s loyal subjects. First                     among them was the 17th century English philosopher John Locke,                     who held that all men were inherently free and equal, a shockingly                     bold notion at the time. Locke argued that the power of the                     state should always rest with the people. The function of                     rulers should be restricted to carrying out the people&#8217;s wishes,                     as expressed by their elected representatives.<\/p>\n<p>Republican-style rule by citizens was anathema to many in                     King George III&#8217;s North American colonies. Indeed, the founding                     fathers of the English-speaking parts of present-day eastern                     and central Canada were loyalists who had rejected American                     citizenship and moved north under conditions of severe hardship                     in order to remain subjects of the British crown.<\/p>\n<p>The constitutional history of French Canada began with a                     direct threat to the political rights of the majority. The                     Royal Proclamation of 1763, which laid down the ground rules                     for the governance of the present Quebec after the British                     conquest, called for an elected assembly. Since British law                     at the time still stipulated that Roman Catholics could not                     hold elected office, the creation of an assembly would have                     meant that a few hundred newly arrived British settlers would                     control the affairs of some 65,000 French-speaking Catholics.<\/p>\n<h3>Paying the price of citizens&#8217; rights in                   blood and imprisonment<\/h3>\n<p>The British governor, James Murray, refused to hold elections                     for the assembly on the grounds that it would alienate the                     French- speaking population. Finally, after considerable coming                     and going, the British Parliament in 1791 passed the Constitutional                     Act, which established an elected assembly open to all. A                     majority of French- speaking Roman Catholic members were duly                     elected some 50 years before their co-religionists in Great                     Britain were permitted to sit in Parliament.<\/p>\n<p>The electoral franchise was much more widely and evenly                     spread throughout society in British North America than in                     Britain. This was because there were proportionately many                     more land-owners entitled to vote here than in the &#8220;old country.&#8221;                     There was also more of an inclination to exercise the political                     power of the majority.<\/p>\n<p>Much as they might abhor the excesses of popular rule in                     their former homeland, the loyalists had brought quasi-democratic                     ideas over the border with them. They successfully agitated                     for greater representation and a stronger voice in running                     local affairs. Still, the early assemblies had a consultative                     role only. The British governors of the colonies could overrule                     any law they passed.<\/p>\n<p>The rebellions in 1837-38 in Lower and Upper Canada were                     basically aimed at overthrowing the authoritarian ruling cliques                     that had clustered around the governors. Though militarily                     unsuccessful, the revolts opened the door to the recognition                     that the governor must accede to the wishes of the voters&#8217;                     representatives. Thus, in Canada as elsewhere, the price of                     the rule of the citizenry was paid in the blood and imprisonment                     of an idealistic and intrepid few.<\/p>\n<p>More Canadian blood and tears would be shed before the achievement                     of the distinctive citizenship which we now know in this country.                     In World War I, though still officially British subjects by                     virtue of their colonial past, Canadians fought together as                     a unified national force. The shared experiences of that ghastly                     war gave Canadians a sense of identity, and won for Canada                     a permanent place in the community of nations. Never again                     would Canadians think of themselves as colonials. Their major                     role in the great struggle in Europe had given them a quiet                     but sure-minded national pride.<\/p>\n<p>World War I indirectly extended the reach of civil rights                     in Canada. Partly in recognition of their wartime contribution,                     women were accorded the right to vote in 1919. Yet Canada                     was anything but a paragon of equality. At a time when racial                     discrimination was a way of life, people of Asian origin were                     systematically denied British subject status, which had come                     to amount to a fairly comprehensive package of civil rights.<\/p>\n<h3>The sight of Canadian soldiers&#8217; graves inspired the Citizenship Act<\/h3>\n<p>It took another excruciating war to finally put the stamp                     of distinctiveness on Canadians&#8217; civil status. In World War                     II, they fought on land, in the air and at sea under their                     own national symbols and command. Despite its small population,                     Canada was a leading contributor to the allied victory. The                     vast achievements of the Canadian war effort brought another                     upsurge in national pride.<\/p>\n<p>The irony was that, while they were fighting to restore                     the rights of national citizenship to Europeans whose lands                     had been occupied by brutally repressive forces, Canadians                     themselves did not have a national citizenship. Canada had                     been running its own affairs for many years, but Canadians                     officially remained British subjects. The arrangement was                     not without its benefits; for instance, Canadian- born British                     subjects abroad were able to call on the assistance of Britain&#8217;s                     worldwide network of diplomatic missions. But by the end of                     World War II, the day of clinging to the mother country&#8217;s                     apron strings had clearly passed.<\/p>\n<p>In the aftermath of victory, a Canadian cabinet minister,                     Paul Martin (Senior), visited the graves of soldiers who had                     fallen at Dieppe in a tragic military misadventure. Touched                     by the sight of the remains of fighting men from every part                     of the country lying together, Martin decided there and then                     that Canadians fully deserved their own unique citizenship.<\/p>\n<p>He became the political father of the Canadian Citizenship                     Act, which came into effect half a century ago in January,                     1947. The act contained at least one feature that set Canadian                     citizenship ahead of that of other countries in terms of rights                     and equality. It provided that married women would not lose                     their citizenship if their husbands became citizens of another                     country. The lumping-in of a woman&#8217;s citizenship with that                     of her husband was then common practice in most of the world.<\/p>\n<p>The Citizenship Act was thoroughly revised in 1977 to keep                     pace with trends in society. The 1977 Act confirmed Canada&#8217;s                     commitment to complete equality for all of its citizens. It                     acknowledged Canada&#8217;s character as a multicultural nation                     by reducing the waiting period for naturalization from five                     to three years. This was done at a time when other countries                     were busily making their citizenship laws more restrictive.                     The Act was a reflection of the sense of fairness and tolerance                     for which Canadians are renowned.<\/p>\n<p>Today, a Canadian citizenship certificate is a sought-after                     prize among people born in countries where civil rights are                     limited or non -existent. It formally guarantees freedom of                     religion, expression, and lawful assembly, and freedom from                     discrimination on the basis of gender, ethnic origin or disability.                     People born in this country do not give much thought to the                     preciousness of their birthright in a world in which discrimination                     and injustice remain rampant. Nor do they stop to think about                     the selfless sacrifices that have been made throughout the                     ages to arrive at the liberty and equality they are privileged                     to possess today.<\/p>\n<p>Twenty-five hundred years after citizenship first emerged                     in the ancient world, nothing has changed in the basic concept                     formulated by the Athenian philosophers. An unspoken pact                     still exists between the citizen and the state. For their                     part, citizens are still expected to do their best to support                     and promote the welfare of the state, to obey its laws, to                     take a knowledgeable and rigorous view of public affairs,                     and to get out and vote as an implicit matter of duty. Socrates&#8217;                     exhortation to do all in one&#8217;s power to improve the state                     extends into what we now call &#8220;being a good citizen&#8221; by taking                     an active part in local community affairs.<\/p>\n<p>Being especially blessed in the benefits of their citizenship,                     Canadians should be especially bound by the voluntary obligations                     it carries. Only by consciously and diligently fulfilling                     those obligations can they ensure that the phrase &#8220;a citizen                     of Canada&#8221; will continue to excite admiration and envy around                     the world.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[63],"class_list":["post-4164","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-63"],"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>Vol. 78 No. 1 - Winter 1997 - The Prize of Citizenship - 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\/vol-78-no-1-winter-1997-the-prize-of-citizenship\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 78 No. 1 - Winter 1997 - The Prize of Citizenship - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Citizenship in a democratic state is the product of a long and agonizing struggle. 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It continues to call for effort among those who possess it today. Its benefits should never be taken for granted. 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