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Can You Belong to More Than One Nation?

More news stories on Canada

Margaret Wente, Globe and Mail (Toronto), April 23, 2009

A few weeks ago, I ran into a traffic jam in downtown Toronto. Thousands of people were thronging the streets and waving colourful banners. Many were families with small children. Perhaps it was a religious festival, I thought—just another piece of the kaleidoscope that makes up our multicultural city.

I should be ashamed of my ignorance. But I suspect it’s shared by most Canadians. It’s safe to say that not one in 50 would be able to explain who these people are and what they want—even though, on Tuesday, more than 30,000 of them staged one of the biggest demonstrations that Parliament Hill has seen in years. “Canada don’t fail your people,” the signs demanded.

The people in question are Tamil Canadians. The banners they have long waved are the colours of the Tamil Tigers, a terrorist group banned in Canada whose goals (if not methods) are supported by most of Canada’s 200,000-strong Tamil community. They want Canada to intervene in the bloody civil war that may now be in its final stages, as the Sri Lankan government bears down on the Tigers’ last stronghold.

Is this our fight? I’d say no. But Tamil Canadians see it differently. Their relatives are being massacred as Canada stands by. Their government should be acting on their behalf. Otherwise, it will have blood on its hands.

In this new, transnational era, issues of identity and politics spill over national borders. And questions of citizenship and belonging become increasingly blurred. Tamil Canadians “belong to more than one nation,” says R. Cheran, a Tamil poet and sociology professor at the University of Windsor.

The Tamils are just one of several large ethnic groups that have sprung up in the urban ring around Toronto. Today, they are the biggest Tamil diaspora in the world. With their own newspapers, TV and radio stations (all pro-Tiger), strong community networks and Tamil-language services, they are a little world within a world. They are also a major source of funding for the Tamil Tigers, who, for decades, have been extracting “war taxes” from the willing and the unwilling alike—sometimes by threatening to harm relatives back home if people don’t pay.

The Tamils’ nationalism isn’t fading with the second generation. Instead, it’s more passionate than ever. Most of the demonstrators are second- or even third-generation Tamils. “There’s an important change taking place,” says Prof. Cheran. “They are reaffirming their ethnic identity. Their attachment to the collectivity has become much stronger.”

According to research by sociologist Jeffrey Reitz and others, this trend is increasingly pronounced among the second generation of immigrant visible-minority groups. Compared with their parents, they feel less, not more, “Canadian.” That doesn’t mean Tamil Canadians don’t engage in mainstream politics. They do—and they’re acquiring a lot of clout.

Stories about the Tamils often centre on the Tamil Tigers, who are infamous for pioneering the use of suicide bombing, recruiting child soldiers and massacring innocent civilians. To most Tamils, the Tigers are their only protection against a brutal government that has oppressed the Tamil population for years and killed its own share of civilians. But the real question for Canada is not about good guys or bad guys—it’s to what extent our government will respond to the pressures of transnational ethnic groups, as these groups become ever more influential.

There’s another question: How will Canada evolve when so many people have multiple allegiances, to homeland and to host land? “I believe it is possible for people to be loyal to more than one nation, one history and one idea,” says Prof. Cheran, who thinks we should embrace the idea of transnational citizenship.

I don’t know if he’s right, but I do know this. There are many mini-nations in our midst. And most of us don’t know anything about them.

Original article

(Posted on April 24, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Anonymous wrote at 7:01 PM on April 24:

It’s safe to say that not one in 50 would be able to explain who these people are and what they want—even though, on Tuesday, more than 30,000 of them staged one of the biggest demonstrations that Parliament Hill has seen in years.

As a Canadian, I would venture the odds are much higher than stated above and I can categorically state without shame or White-guilt that I have absolutely no interest in this alien group’s imported squabbles.

If Tamils feel this strongly about their homeland, take your voice back to Sri Lanka to fight for your cause.

Sri Lanka is not our problem!

This Canadian blogger usually has frequently updates on this Tamil problem.

2 — Southern Hoosier wrote at 10:50 PM on April 24:

“Can You Belong to More Than One Nation?”

Yes, as long as those nations share a common language, culture and values.

I think it is safe to say that Canada and Sri Lanka share none of these things.

3 — IndependenceHallJanitor wrote at 11:23 PM on April 24:

When an individual or group of another race and culture enters
a white civilization, it takes generations for them to assimiliate until they finally become loyal to white causes.
The fact is especially true when nonwhites immigrate from backrounds of extreme poverty.
A build up of one race within a white nation thins out a nonwhite
immigrants ability to self guide himself toward patriotism.
Thus rolls of race reverse with immigrants pillaging the treasury
and killing whites in their own nation.


4 — Anonymous wrote at 11:25 PM on April 24:

Just before the summer Olympics, the Chinese staged a similar demonstration on Parliament Hill.

They waved flags of the P.R.C. and signs proclaiming ‘One China - One Family’.

Thanks to cultural exposure from the motherland, Chinese ex-pats in Canada are flocking back to their roots. One Chinese gentleman came to Canada from Malaysia. Though his family hadn’t lived in China for centuries, he still knew who he was and who he wanted to be.

When asked for their feelings about Canada, some Chinese say the whites are ‘getting old’ and not reproducing enough, and therefore more Chinese should come over to this ‘under-populated’ country.

5 — Alan wrote at 12:14 AM on April 25:

If Tamils feel this strongly about their homeland, take your voice back to Sri Lanka to fight for your cause.

Indeed. Wikipedia list a Sri Lankan population of about 20 million people. 200,000 soldiers fresh from Canada would do the Tamil Togers a world of good.

This is the future that Canada, the USA, Great Britain and, well hell, the whole West has created for itself. Anything for cheap labor and nifty food, right?

6 — watfordman wrote at 6:30 AM on April 25:

We have the same situation here in London with 5,000 tamils occupying parliament square and one protester close to death through hunger strike. People here are just can’t understand what this will achieve.

7 — Alan wrote at 3:46 PM on April 25:

Keep in mind that the 200,000 Canadian-resident Tamils now account for about 1% of Canada’s population. 1%, from a tiny group from a tiny island on the far side of the world. I don’t know why our politicians are letting this happen. I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but I sometimes think that sheer stupidity or brazen corruption just isn’t enough to explain it.

8 — dc wrote at 4:29 AM on April 26:

My, my, what a coincidence - the same thing is happening in Australia, Sydney to be precise. Hundreds of Tamils making a nuisance of themselves by holding up peak hour traffic with demonstrations demanding that the Australian government become involved in the troubles of their homeland.

But don’t they wish all ‘Western Imperialists’ to keep out of Third World countries? Or does that belief only count sometimes?

9 — Sonny wrote at 11:42 AM on April 26:

The process of risking life and limb to leave a country, then try to recreate that country within the confines af an established culture is nothing short of warfare.

10 — Anonymous wrote at 7:16 PM on April 26:

Their obsession with the Turks is my biggest objection to the Armenians. I don’t care if they want to hate them, but when they start agitating for the US govt to pass resolutions condemning the actions of the Ottoman Empire or to take sanctions against the Turks until they apologize for what happened in 1915, it makes me want to lead them out into the desert and leave them.

11 — SKIP wrote at 7:09 PM on April 27:

But don’t they wish all ‘Western Imperialists’ to keep out of Third World countries? Or does that belief only count sometimes?

I’m gonna have to go with “option B” here.

12 — Anonymous wrote at 8:21 PM on April 27:

Tamils were completely unknown in Canada until about the 1970’s. The Liberal government under Pierre Trudeau let them in. They have been nothing but trouble since. In 1986 a shipload of illegal Tamils emerged off the coast of Newfoundland and claimed “refugee” status. Subsequently it was shown that they were from a country in Europe. But the government let them stay and gave them welfare. They have exploited Canada’s “refugeee” laws and have soaked us dry for undeserved welfare payments. In the early 1990’s I was summoned for jury duty here in Toronto. I spent a week being shuffled back and forth as a potential juror pick for about twenty trials. They all involved Blacks (usually Jamaicans) or Tamils. The Tamil cases all involved stabbings and all required interpreters - thus doubling the length and costs of the trials. Recently the Tamils have been marching in downtown Toronto blocking public roads and acting with extreme arrogance and disrespect in doing so. They have no loyalty at all to Canada, only to themselves. We were a thousand times better off without them. If it were up to me I wouldn’t sacrifice one Canadian soldier or one dollar for the whole miserable island of Sri Lanka.

13 — SKIP wrote at 1:52 AM on April 28:

Can You Belong to More Than One Nation?

You certainly can, the British government is about 30% NON BRITISH BORN membership, mostly Paki and Indian and ALL MUSLIM!! The same appears to be about right for the Canadian government too. We in the U.S. now have some sneaky muslims in office and where there is one, there are soon more.

14 — Anonymous wrote at 4:45 AM on April 28:

“Can You Belong to More Than One Nation?”

Yes, as long as those nations share a common language, culture and values.
Posted by Southern Hoosier

But you left out genetic kinship. This is, after all, a RACIAL site. And race matters. Why be afraid to say so?

15 — BW Sam wrote at 1:34 PM on April 29:

“Canada don’t fail your people,” the signs demanded.

Agreed. Canada, my neighbor to the north, don’t fail your people, by wasting their time or resources on Sri Lankan and Tamilese primitives.

Tamil Canadians “belong to more than one nation,” says R. Cheran, a Tamil poet and sociology professor at the University of Windsor.

No, they belong to one country, and feed parasitically off the bounty of Canada.

Stories about the Tamils often centre on the Tamil Tigers, who are infamous for pioneering the use of suicide bombing, recruiting child soldiers and massacring innocent civilians.

Gee, what a lovely and wholesome group. Can’t imagine why Canada doesn’t get right in behind them. Of course I’m sure the Sri Lankans are no better, so I suggest we just sit back, and may whichever group of backward third worlders proves to be the most depraved and soulless win.

There’s another question: How will Canada evolve when so many people have multiple allegiances, to homeland and to host land?

Answer: In reverse.

“I believe it is possible for people to be loyal to more than one nation, one history and one idea,” says Prof. Cheran, who thinks we should embrace the idea of transnational citizenship.

Go to Hell.

16 — Anonymous wrote at 9:13 PM on May 4:

“They are also a major source of funding for the Tamil Tigers, who, for decades, have been extracting “war taxes” from the willing and the unwilling alike—sometimes by threatening to harm relatives back home if people don’t pay.”

I assume this indcludes money from their Canadien welfare payments and affirmative action jobs.


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