Review
of The Invisible Empire: Racism in Canada
An American attempts to discover the truth about race relations in
Canada
By Emily Helgersen
A few years ago an African-American friend from Michigan visited me
in Toronto. He was amazed at how integrated the city appeared to be:
there were even people of different races standing together at the
same bus stop. He later told me he aspired to live in Canada some
day. While I was touched by his admiration for my country, I warned
him that unfortunately racism does exist in Canada. I would hate for
him to come here under the illusion it did not and then be bitterly
disappointed on discovering the truth.
Many Americans, both Black and White, are taken in by Canada's seeming
racial harmony. One (White) American who immigrated here in the 1970s
with this vision in mind but who later found out otherwise is Margaret
Cannon, a social worker, professor at York University, Globe and Mail
columnist, and author of The Invisible Empire: Racism in Canada. The
book is a chronicle of her investigation into the presence of racism
(and anti-Semitism, which for the purpose of this review will be subsumed
under the heading racism) in her adopted country.
______________________________
There were even people of
different races standing together at the same bus stop.
______________________________
The Invisible Empire: Racism in Canada was first published in 1995.
While it may appear a bit outdated (Preston Manning and the Reform
Party are frequently mentioned, for example), it is still relevant
today in understanding racial discrimination in this country. It is
written in a personable but not overly informal style. The Invisible
Empire makes references to a number of well-known individuals, such
as University of Western Ontario psychology professor Philippe Rushton,
late journalist and philanthropist June Callwood, and Catholic Archbishop
of Toronto Aloysius Ambrozic. Perhaps the real substance of the book,
though, lies in Cannon's interviews with people on the ground, so
to speak: White Supremacists, police officers, immigrants, and native-born
Canadians of all colours. To her credit she does her best to get feedback
from all sides of the various issues she addresses. For instance,
a young Black man in Toronto talks about receiving death glares from
complete strangers right after a White girl was fatally shot by a
group of Jamaican youths at a downtown café. On the other hand,
Cannon hears from a policeman who when describing the shootings of
African-Canadian men by the police explains the dilemma officers face
in trying to use as little force as possible while at the same time
keeping crime under control.
The Invisible Empire begins with a description of White Supremacist
organizations and their members. Cannon attempts to discover what
attracts people to such groups. Her final conclusion is that many
of these individuals join out of a need to belong to something larger
than themselves, just as she in her younger years became part of the
Young Socialists Alliance in the United States. She goes on to discuss
several major players in the movement, some still famed like Holocaust
denier Ernst Zundel and the late Heritage Front leader Wolfgang Droege
and others who have since faded from collective memory, such as Carney
Nerland, the Fuhrer of Saskatchewan, who was convicted
in the shooting death of a Native Canadian man.
One controversy that emerges is the clash between the freedom of expression
of people like Zundel and the desire to protect Jews and other minorities
from hate speech. The issue gets thornier yet when it involves educators
telling their students the Holocaust never occurred, as Eckville,
Alberta high school history teacher Jim Keegstra did. Even individuals
like myself who would, albeit reluctantly, defend Zundel's right
to spew any nonsense he wished in self-published pamphlets would draw
the line at teachers doing the same with impressionable young minds
in the classroom - though I might also agree with a trustee at the
Eckville school board who said the matter should have ended with Keegstra's
dismissal, not in a court of law.
Other race-related controversies take up the pages of The Invisible
Empire as well. Among them are the Into the Heart of Africa
exhibit at Toronto's Royal Ontario Museum, the North York Performing
Arts Centre's decision to feature the musical Show Boat, and the resignation
of social activist June Callwood from Nellie's, the Toronto battered
women's shelter she had founded. Though Cannon refrains from taking
sides in these battles, she says the side you do end up taking is
literally the side of the colour line on which you fall. For example,
in viewing Into the Heart of Africa, which displays the
paraphernalia of Canadian missionaries to Africa in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, Cannon saw an ironic look at
a lot of dead white people who thought they were doing the right thing.
Black critics of the exhibit however spoke of its false representation
of African people, denigrating language and images, and perpetuation
of colonialist and imperialist thinking about Africa. Similarly
while Show Boat was originally meant to be a statement against anti-miscegenation
laws in the United States, Blacks in 1990s Toronto focussed on lyrics
like Niggers all work on the Mississippi. June Callwood
was forced to resign from Nellie's following charges that women of
colour were being excluded from positions of power on the hostel's
board of directors. A number of (presumably White) corporate sponsors
withdrew their support for Nellie's after she stepped down, but many
non-White observers felt her accusers had some legitimate points.
______________________________
The stereotype of the greedy
Jew has after all figured behind everything from pogroms to the Holocaust
to the exclusion of Jews from institutions of higher learning.
______________________________
The book attempts to portray how racism permeates Canadian daily life
in its various spheres: education, entertainment, and even language.
For instance, the word Hymie, which Canadian former talk
show host Dini Petty used on the air to describe cheapskate husbands,
derives from a derogatory term for Jews. Though Petty claimed to have
no knowledge of the word's origin and issued a public apology, the
Jewish community was understandably upset. The stereotype of the greedy
Jew has after all figured behind everything from pogroms to the Holocaust
to the exclusion of Jews from institutions of higher learning (in
Canada among other countries). At other times the racism of seemingly
innocent words is more doubtful. One of Cannon's interviewees, a Guyanese
woman of mixed African and East Indian descent, says she can call
a White woman girl but coming from the other end it would
be racist because it makes me the maid. Here even the
ultra-progressive Cannon admits this may seem like linguistic
hair-splitting to some.
Towards the end of the book Margaret Cannon delves into the twin political
issues of immigration and multiculturalism. Unlike in earlier years,
most immigrants coming to Canada today are not White, a fact with
which not everybody is comfortable. Canadians' views on immigration
are nuanced, however: polls show that while a majority of respondents
want to reduce the number of immigrants, they also believe newcomers
make Canada a more interesting place. Quebec holds an interesting
position as a French-speaking province. Cannon notes that minorities
report experiencing less prejudice in Quebec than in other provinces.
Nonetheless, many Quebec Francophone leaders insist that those who
settle in the province must learn French.
Multiculturalism is another political hot potato. Often
described disparagingly as an orgy of singing and dancing and spaghetti-eating,
the policy has been criticized by Whites and non-Whites alike. Trinidadian-born
writer Neil Bissoondath believes it prevents immigrants and their
children from fully integrating into their adopted nation. Black writer
Marlene Nourbese Philip sees it as a way to appease non-Whites while
continuing to exclude them from positions of power in this country's
institutions.
The Invisible Empire: Racism in Canada is all in all a well-written
and informative book. Nonetheless, I feel compelled to point out a
few of its potential shortcomings. Beyond a short mention of past
prejudice against the heathen Irish, Cannon says virtually
nothing about White-on-White (white here in the sense
of White Christian) discrimination. She is silent for example on the
internment of Ukrainian Canadians during World War I. Perhaps her
silence stems from her view of racism as the conviction that
the white (or White Christian) race is superior to all others [and
that] all others are inferior.
______________________________
Non-White communities don't
necessarily love each other or bond together to oppose the great White
oppressor.
______________________________
The notion of racism as a Whites versus Others question
also clashes with her own finding that different non-White communities
don't necessarily love each other or bond together to oppose the great
White oppressor. In one neighbourhood Cannon visits not only the White
but the South Asian residents as well are convinced that Blacks
are committing crimes at record rates. Even members of the same
broad racial group don't always engage in a gigantic love fest. Some
Somali children speak of being assaulted by Jamaican gangs at Toronto
schools.
Though Cannon's dedication to eradicating racism is heartening in
many ways, in her zeal she at times appears to see discrimination
where it may not truly exist. For example, she states that Blacks,
Natives and Orientals [I have to admit being a bit surprised at her
use of a 'politically incorrect' term for East Asians] report that
they are regularly stopped by the police. However, a couple
of surveys show that while Blacks and Natives are indeed more likely
than Whites to be stopped by the police, East Asians are actually
less likely to be so targeted. One wonders whether if Cannon interviewed
a group of young White men they too would tell her of being pulled
over by the cops.
I read The Invisible Empire twice: the first time when it originally
came out and the second just recently. I have tentatively come to
the conclusion that racism in Canada may not be as pervasive as Cannon
seems to believe it is but that she does provide a good description
of race relations in this country. However, anybody wanting to challenge
or confirm this conclusion should read the book for him- or herself.
|

|
Emily
Helgersen is a secretary, translator and musician based in Toronto,
Canada. In her spare time, she likes to write about music, religion
or anything else that strikes her fancy. In this picture she's
enjoying her spare time by holding her nephew Tommy
|
Go
to Urban Mozaik Magazine
This
website: Copyright © 2009 Dream World Media, LLC. / Urban Mozaik
Magazine. All rights reserved. The opinions expressed in Urban Mozaik
Magazine are not necessarily those of Urban Mozaik Magazine and
the publisher cannot be held responsible for them. This website/publication,
in whole or in part, may not be reproduced without written permission
from the publisher.