Canada is a French country

COYNE: Stephen Harper has been playing up the province’s role in Canadian history

by Andrew Coyne on Monday, July 19, 2010 11:05am - 0 Comments

Mathieu Belanger/Reuters

The most striking passage in David Johnston’s speech on being named Canada’s next governor general, apart from the reference to the Queen as “our head of state” (there seemed to be some doubt on his predecessor’s part), was his lengthy encomium to Samuel de Champlain, “Canada’s first governor.” In case anyone did not catch his drift, he ended by invoking the example of his predecessors, “from Samuel de Champlain to Michaëlle Jean.”

But wait a minute. Johnston is, as he says, the representative of the Queen of Canada, Elizabeth II, great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, granddaughter of George III, the first monarch to rule over what was then called British North America. Champlain served a different king, from an altogether different royal house: Louis XIII of France.

Yet Johnston seemed to be saying the two dynasties, British and French, were one, part of the same story. Just as he is the 71st in a line of governors going back to Champlain, so Elizabeth is not the sixth monarch to reign over Canada (since Confederation), or even the ninth (since the British Conquest), but the 18th, going back to Francis I, the king in whose name Jacques Cartier first landed in Canada in 1534.

I don’t know whether Johnston wrote his own speech, or whether someone in the Prime Minister’s Office wrote it for him. But it is certainly very much in keeping with a rhetorical strategy Stephen Harper has been deploying for some time: that is of speaking of Canada as if it were, at least in part, a French country. (Which, of course, it is.) He’s reaching back to a French heritage that predates Confederation, predates the Conquest, emphasizing that our roots were first planted in the soil of New France.

Just days before, at the Canada Day celebrations on Parliament Hill, the Prime Minister had spoken glowingly of “the steadfast determination and continental ambition of our French pioneers, who were the first to call themselves ‘Canadians.’ ” At other times he has spoken of Canada as having been “born in French,” of French as “Canada’s first language,” and, most famously, of Quebec City as “Canada’s first city,” its founding in 1608 as marking “the founding of the Canadian state.”

Harper is not the first to have taken this line—the “Champlain as first governor” theme seems to have been inspired by a portrait identifying him as such in Rideau Hall—but I can’t recall any prime minister placing such heavy emphasis, deliberate and repeated, on it. While the sentiment may seen anodyne, moreover, the implications are radical.

For 50 years we have been debating whether Quebec would remain a part of Canada. Harper’s formulation turns this on its head: Canada is, in a sense, a part of Quebec. By fusing Quebec’s history with Canada’s, both emanations of the same French colonial experience, it makes pride in Quebec coterminous with pride in Canada. Quebecers could no more reject Canada, on this reading, than they could their own French heritage: the one grew out of the other.

This is not a repudiation of Quebec nationalism so much as a subversion of it. Nationalist mythology has long emphasized the Conquest as the decisive break point in Canadian history, the trauma from which French-speaking Quebecers have never fully recovered, and never will unless “liberated” by secession. The psychiatrist and Péquiste minister Camille Laurin used to talk about Quebec as if it were quite literally a patient on his couch.

The nationalists’ conquêtisme, of course, was but a mirror to that of an earlier tradition of Anglo triumphalists, who also emphasized the Conquest (“Wolfe the dauntless hero came”) as the locus generis of the British ascendancy. As, in their own way, did a later generation of Canadian nationalists, for whom the British connection was a yoke to be thrown off, together with such colonial “relics” as the Crown, not merely to mollify Quebec but for the sake of our own psychological maturation as a people. You still hear a lot of that.

But if the history of Canada is an unbroken chain of sovereignty, Francis to Elizabeth, Champlain to Johnston; if what is important about it is not the change from French to British rule but the continuity between them—if we are not a British monarchy, or even a French monarchy and then a British one, but simply a monarchy, throughout—then the Conquest is not the pivotal event in our history: it is just an event. The effect, in turn, is to deracinate the British inheritance. What is valuable is the inheritance—Crown, Parliament, the common law, the Constitution—not its Britishness.

If that sounds like a lot to load onto a few words, it certainly didn’t strike Quebec nationalists that way. When Harper first started talking about Quebec City as the birthplace of Canada, around the time of the 400th anniversary, the nationalists were fairly purple with rage, accusing him in the most acrid terms of rewriting history for political ends.

But then, they should know. The nationalist project, notably in the use of the neologism “Québécois” in place of “French-Canadian,” was a conscious attempt to shunt the history of Quebec off onto a siding, separate and apart from the history of Canada, whose logical terminus was a separate Quebec. The logic of Harper’s language is to wrench it back on to the same track as the rest of us: while Champlain could hardly have known he was founding Canada, it is certainly true that the history of present-day Canada leads inexorably back to him.

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  • Political_Outsider

    On June 24, 1497. John Cabot landed (probably) near Cape Bonavista in Newfoundland, and claimed the land for the King of England, Henry VII. So you may need to add a few more monarchs to your list.

    • ColdStanding

      OK, right, the thesis is supported. Different monarchs, yes, but ever and aways a monarchy.

    • EFL

      Ye gods, it's worse than I thought…Canada…is an ITALIAN country! Now Coyne's predilection for proportional voting and small government/big mafia (uh, I mean business) society is clear. In retrospect, the name should have given it away: "A-likea dat A-coyne-a, eh?" Probably the result of some well-meaning pier 51 immigration bigot, who anglicised "ACoyne"'s Genoan origins. The Coynas have been holding a grudge ever since, and looking for their chance to italianise the country., in revenge – who holds a grudge like and Italian eh? (a clever in-joke, keeping a name that indicates the only other origin as grudge-intensive) Has anyone ever reflected on the full meaning of the expression "The Winnipeg Mafia" taking over the country? French, Brits, Irish, Chinese, etc. I can deal with. But Italians! Mi rifiuto! Time to call in the Vandals…or Greeks. Strombo to the barricades!

  • Samoset II

    Giovanni Caboto (known in English as John Cabot; c. 1450 – c. 1499) was an Italian navigator and explorer whose 1497 discovery of North America is commonly held to be the first European voyage to the continent since Norse exploration of the Americas in the early eleventh century. The official position of the Canadian and United Kingdom governments is that he landed on the island of Newfoundland

    You are right but we probably still have to cover our eyes and ears And carry on with the fantasy for the perpetual whiners..

  • James Wolfe

    “Loyal She Began, Loyal She Remains.” Go learn our proud, real, BNA and UEL history. These were the builders of our country since 1763. Not this phony, revisionist lie, this bilingual, multicultural, 2 founding nations, linguistic duality lie, propaganda, spin that we’ve been living with since metis kebecer Trudeau forced this upon the nation. We’ve been part of the British Empire since 1763 and officially an English speaking country for over 200 years…just a fact. “Loyal She Began, Loyal She Remains.”

  • Christian Tobias

    Hey James Wolfe–Chill a bit.

    Some of us, who are just as reputable descendents of United Empire Loyalists as you are, aren't English at all.

    My many times great grandfather, Christian Tobias, who was commissioned as a Captain to raise a company in the King's American Regiment (4th Americans), was not British, but rather a member of a Dutch family resident of New Amsterdam dating from the mid 1630s.

    And we have many Acadien cousins in the Maritimes with whom we get along with very happily.

    Seems to me that we (the New Amsterdam Dutchand Les Acadiens) have a small claim to be another pair of founding races in Canada.

  • ColdStanding

    Has anybody ever told the UEL and Orangemen that the empire to which they claim loyalty is neither united nor an empire any longer? Is this news to anybody else other than them?

    I have to admit that my initial enthusiasm for the gist of Mr. Johnston's thesis, which isn't actually his, has cooled considerably. Especially because it might, inadvertently to be sure, bring the lunacy of certain ultra-nationalist protestant sects to the fore. If you haven't ever read some of their stuff, it will leave you gobsmacked.

  • Jeet

    A French contry? And here I thought it was a 'first nations' country and the rest of are along to pay for it.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Raging_Ranter Raging_Ranter

      Well, that's the version favoured by the RBC firebombers.

  • Antonio

    Andrew Coyne,

    "The effect, in turn, is to deracinate the British inheritance. What is valuable is the inheritance—Crown, Parliament, the common law, the Constitution—not its Britishness."

    You know nothing of Quebec. Parliament is a good system but here in Quebec, we don't want the Crown or the Canadian Constitution. We also don't practice common law but civil law. We have own own constitution that is different than Canada's.

    This is proof that Canada and Quebec are different regions and should go its separate ways.

  • Antonio

    Andrew Coyne,

    "while Champlain could hardly have known he was founding Canada, it is certainly true that the history of present-day Canada leads inexorably back to him."

    Please. Champlain founded a "Canada" that is different than the "Canada" of today. The Canada that Champlain founded was also called NEW FRANCE which did not exist anymore ever since 1760.

    Champlain would not approve of the Canada of today which was founded in 1867 by the British Empire and doted with British institutions that presecuted francophones across the country.

    If Champlain was alive today, he would probably approve of an independant Quebec because he would want francophones to be in full control over its affairs and open to all newcomers. Canadian propagandists attempt to pervert Champlain's dreams to suit their plans for "national building".

  • nick

    Lets see, The Aboriginals taught us how to make love in a canoe, The French,gave us useful distance measures like the arpent, sadly fallen on hard times with the decline in clay pipe smoking. and the Brits ?the box wallah bureaucrat

  • Samoset II

    If Champlain was alive today, he would probably approve of an independant Quebec because he would want francophones to be in full control over its affairs and open to all newcomers. Canadian propagandists attempt to pervert Champlain's dreams to suit their plans for "national building". LOL

    Once slavery was outlawed, the French faded. Add to this, the exile of protestant french, the Huguenots, their only fighters, and their propensity to spread disease around the world, (Capt. Cooks observations) plus the Natives attempts to get them to bathe, I think we had not much to ever worry about a french empire.

  • bla bla

    andrew coyne has his head in the clouds. coyne's idea of canada is not shared by most quebecers and english canadians and i don't think it ever will. read the clash of civilizations. i think quebecers identify themselves as their own civilization. they don't identify themselves in that way, to the extreme they have before, because we are breaking the bank, and sometimes the law, trying to keep them happy. i think that if they separated and stayed economically tied in nafta we'd all be much happier. then again, if they separated they'd have to pay there own way for the language difference and their huge gov't, for example, but they wouldn't have huge infusions of fed money to support. i know my words will bring criticism but i think we'd be better on our own with strong economic ties. i think it would really work. i mean, they're pretty much their own country now, all we'd be doing is taking back our equalization payments. economically, they cost more being in canada than out.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/chrimartel chrimartel

    I am proud of my French heritage and I am grateful of having cultural references in three of the most influencal traditions in the Western world (French, British and American). I although do found shameful that more and more Canadians think only French language and culture isn't "worth" learning. Sometimes these are the same people very keen to know tiny cultures in the middle of Asia or Africa.

    I subscribe to GG Jean motto : Brisons les solitudes…

  • Lyne

    Compte tenu que le Canada est un «French Country»…je vais donc écrire mon commentaire en français!!
    Bien qu'il faille connaître notre passé pour avoir une vision de notre avenir…..ne peut-on pas s'affranchir de ces monarchies et se donner une vision du Pays..une vision moderne….une vision de diversité,…de découverte de l'autre…de complémentarité…
    C'est avec grand plaisir que je lirai des réactions à mon commentaire….j'espère bien en recevoir en français….

  • arcticmelt

    The only negative I have on this extremely well written article is the use of "French Canadian". There in my opinion is no such thing as English French Irish or other Canadian. We are all "Canadians" we may be French speaking, English speaking or Irish or whatever Canadians – no hyphenated Canadians

    • Gilles

      Why is that so hard to understand?

  • http://www.trcf.ca Hank Gigandet

    Andrew Coyne's Opinion on National Unity (July 26) declares that Canada is a French country and brings up our rich French heritage. Rightly so, our country is now officially bilingual which positions us favourably among the global leaders. Finally, in 2004 we displayed 5 French Monarchs in the halls of Parliament, next to the British Monarchs, to reflect our past heritage. Yet with all this symbolism, there is one very important missing link, that of our National Colours which reflect solely our British heritage. England's former red and white colours were bestowed on us by King George V in 1921, since Great Britain had enhanced their Jack with the blue of the Scots, to symbolize their 'Union'.

    continued…

  • http://www.trcf.ca Hank Gigandet

    …..

    Our Maple Leaf flag could be even more beautiful and more inclusive by adding a 'touch of blue' as a sign of mutual respect for the French fact in Canada, reflecting our official languages and our linguistic duality, under which all of our diversity falls. It's the missing link. Along with the red and the blue symbolizing English and French Canada, the Maple Leaf should be redefined to symbolize our great country and notably the aboriginal people. Identity instills pride and pride builds nations.

    With reference to the July 3rd. photo of the 400th. anniversary of Quebec City, do you know why everyone was smiling? It's because 60 ft. directly in front of them flew the Canadian Duality Flag to everyone's surprise, while Samuel de Champlain looked on proudly. "Svp Canada, du bleu"!

    Hank Gigandet
    trcf.ca

  • CheeMiss

    This is all about EGO! Everyone wants this or that. They are better than us, we are better than them. EGO! Then comes the other sin of man…….GREED.
    For all the technological advancement we have achieved on this planet, man's EGO & GREED are still at the heart of humans problems. Enough already. Enough! It's time that we all get along. Look at all the political parties. Each candidate, so full of EGO pulls us this way and that way, rather than pulling together, so not much gets done. Why, bcos of each man's EGO! It's really sickening.
    Quebec could not survive on it's own. They would starve in a short time. USA would gobble them up in a heart beat. And you can bet your last dollar that USA would NOT entertain their separatism. They would have to conform to the American Only language & policies. And that is a reality. If I were in charge, I would just enlighten them on that reality check. I would not pander to them at all. They would not go. They know they have it great with us.

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