National identity crisis 101: Anthem vs. history

Published Monday June 29th, 2009

Controversy | Man left his job as principal because of harassment, threats

A1

OTTAWA - Canada Day quiz: Which of these two school activities is more important to fostering national identity?

(a) Piping the national anthem over a rural elementary school's intercom for two minutes every morning, or;

(b) Teaching the fundamentals of Canadian history to high school students across the country as a requirement for graduation.

Conservative MPs on the floor of the House of Commons, bloggers and media pundits provoked a raging national debate this spring over the decision by a single school in rural New Brunswick to curtail the morning ritual of O Canada.

The furor drove Erik Millett, principal of tiny Belleisle Elementary, from his job and resulted in death threats against him. New Brunswick subsequently made it mandatory to sing O Canada daily in the province's schools, starting this autumn.

No fewer than five Tory New Brunswick MPs - including two cabinet members - publicly pounced on the anthem issue. No other party's MPs in Parliament intervened.

Contrast that with a national study this month by the Dominion Institute that found the teaching of Canadian history is woefully inadequate in high schools from coast to coast.

"This is a far wider issue," Marc Chalifoux, executive director of the non-partisan, charitable institute, said in an interview.

"This isn't about one school. It's about entire provinces and nearly every high school in the country. ... It would be nice to see it raised in the House of Commons, very much so."

Alberta and Saskatchewan, home to 40 federal Conservative MPs, both received Fs from the institute for failing to require a single history course to graduate.

Yet not one Tory MP raised the issue in Parliament.

Their silence was doubly perplexing because the absence of history education dovetails with a push by Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney to improve what he calls "civic literacy" among Canadians - essentially the understanding of our national history and symbols.

"Education is a provincial responsibility and it's not for the federal government to dictate provincial curricula," Kenney, a Calgary MP, said in an interview.

"Having said that, as a Canadian I think it's ridiculous that kids can graduate in seven of our 10 provinces without ever having learned about Canadian history.

"It's almost like we're deliberately promoting a kind of historical amnesia."

Tory MPs during the Commons' final week before summer break used their speaking opportunities to raise subjects such as a 100-year-old bridge near Lethbridge, Alta., Saskatchewan's September centennial and the 50th anniversary of a disaster in New Brunswick.

There was even a friendly Conservative backbench question on education. But it had nothing to do with history shortfalls and instead highlighted government infrastructure spending at Quebec colleges.

So why did so many Tory MPs raise the anthem issue - which they repeatedly mischaracterized as a "ban" on O Canada - but not history teaching?

"In terms of political pressure, I think O Canada is an easy-to-grasp national symbol," said Kenney.

"And frankly I suspect most people aren't even aware that Canadian high school curricula are so thin on Canadian history."

The school principal at the centre of the anthem storm said the debate was always misplaced.

"As Canadians we must realize that it is not our anthem or our flag that makes this country what it is. Every country in the world has a flag and an anthem," Millett told The Canadian Press in an interview.

"It's the underlying laws and values and rules and practices and democratic institutions that guide a country that are important."

Millett, having resigned as Belleisle principal, has taken a high school posting. He'll be teaching Canadian identity for four Grade 9 classes - an irony that doesn't escape him.

Historian Michael Bliss didn't mince words when asked to choose between anthem singing and learning the country's history.

Bliss called the Belleisle brouhaha "the worst kind of token symbolism."

"The real problem is curricular content, not getting up and forcing reluctant kids to mouth some words every morning. To take that seriously - as opposed to the much greater issue of the solid education of students - is to get your priorities all wrong."

Bliss said it "substitute(s) symbolism for content, and false patriotism for a serious attempt to strengthen the country."

The real issue is provincial jurisdiction over education, which should be a national objective, according to Bliss and other historians.

"The truth - and it can't be said too strongly or too often - is that the enemy of Canadian nationalism is parochialism."

MP Charlie Angus, the heritage critic for the federal NDP, was equally scathing.

"It was a very ugly witch-hunt," Angus said of Millett's treatment.

"It represents the worst of patriotism, the ugly face of patriotism. They wrecked that man's career."

Angus accused the Conservatives of "jurisdictional blurring" when it suits their partisan political interests.

"But now where is their commitment to providing resources to school boards, to the provinces, to build a national historical narrative? You don't hear from them."

Kenney said Heritage Canada does provide education material to provinces and is developing more.

But he showed no concern for the public pillorying of Millett.

"You know, if you needle Canadians enough you're going to find somebody who's actually pretty patriotic," said the Conservative minister.

"Most Canadians are patriotic but not demonstrable about their patriotism. But if you start deliberately undermining our national symbols, people don't appreciate that. So I think that's probably what happened there."

Except there's no evidence Belleisle school was deliberately undermining the anthem. In fact, federal guidelines say the anthem should not be legislated.

"There is no law or behaviour governing the playing of the national anthem; it is left to the good citizenship of individuals," says the website of Canadian Heritage.

Rather, the principal tried to accommodate a parental complaint by playing O Canada only at monthly assemblies, which eventually raised the ire of other parents at the school.

 

Disabled

Commenting has been disabled for this item. Existing comments appear below but you may not add a new comment at this time.

Comments (24)

All comments are subject to the site Terms of Use. For a full commenting tutorial click here.

Our editorial team relies on filtering technology and our visitor community to identify inappropriate comments. In the event that a site user has submitted offensive content that has evaded our filter, please select the option to Flag As Inappropriate presented within the comment. Thank you for helping to keep this site clean.

The O Canada racket was politics at its best! Greg Thompson orchestrated all this as Erik Millet was the Green party candidate against him and obviously Thompson was afraid of him. Even Minister Ashfield spoke against it! And yes the Press bought another one of these character assination trips by Harper's troops! Maybe the MPs will sing O Canada everyday!
22
Thumbs Up
17
Thumbs Down
Mac Donald, Fredericton on 29/06/09 08:22:41 AM AST
What a poor article. The issue in elementary school has absolutely nothing to do with history being taght in HS. To correlate the two is just dumb.

I HATED doing history in school. And no, it wasn't required in high school, because by high school you should be focusing on core courses of a career path you intend to choose by then. If history and/or arts isn't it, then you shouldn't be wasting a course on it.
6
Thumbs Up
42
Thumbs Down
JustRight OfCenter, Fredericton area on 29/06/09 08:27:10 AM AST
It's called broadening your horizons JustRight ofCenter. Even university makes you take some arts, business, and science courses no matter what degree you are taking. This is a good thing. It shouldn't be too much, but it helps build a more well rounded person, to at least have knowledge of how other disciplines are.

For History, it's much more important than you realize, though I do understand some history teachers make people memorize dates and crap which I think is the cause for your hatred of history. If History is taught well, it's not only interesting, but gives you a much better outlook of today and tomorrow.
31
Thumbs Up
6
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:04:08 AM AST
This whole anthem thing is political, nothing else.
18
Thumbs Up
8
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:05:11 AM AST
The anthem issue was 100% pure political baloney. Another mandated waste of time. In terms of it's overall impact - I expect it will garner exactly 0% change in the attitudes of our youth towards their country. It's cr*p patriotism - the kind where you where the flag and sing the song, but espouse none of the values that ACTUALLY make our country great - freedom, openess, understanding, compassion etc.

i was shocked to discover there is no full mandated history class for high school students. This is the age where kids can begin to understand the longer connections with past events and where they are bombarded with media from the south. I wish we were a little more American in the sense of how we take pride in our own history.

An anthem or a history experience? Canadians, please.
16
Thumbs Up
11
Thumbs Down
Thereis Nogod, Saint John on 29/06/09 09:30:06 AM AST
It is very important that our children understand the development of our country if we don't do that we will start to become the 51st state. We are not the same as our neighbours to the south an we should take pride in the difference. That being said history should deal in facts of the past not the political correctness of the present. It is not anyones place to change the past to meet the "needs" of the present least of all our current politicians.
16
Thumbs Up
6
Thumbs Down
len levesque, sj on 29/06/09 09:31:46 AM AST
In the grand scheme of things, we are actually quite similar to our Southern neighbours as individuals. Canadian media tends to play on the differences, but individually, we pretty much stand for the same things. We have gun toting, war mongering people too (see Alberta) while America has universal health care supporters all over the place (just two examples, there are more). Our governments actually used to be reversed (and are starting to again, which is not good for Canada). Take an American or a Japanese person and tell me just how different Americans are from us. It's taking pride in your differences and focusing only on them and not what you have in common that starts wars!

3
Thumbs Up
11
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:39:25 AM AST
But to be honest, Maritimers aren't known for their worldliness, so it's not surprising the amount of Anti-American ignorance found here (especially due to Canadian media focusing away from the problems at home). The difference between a person from Vermont and a person from NB isn't as big as the difference between a person from Vancouver and a person from here. Every time I come back to this province from being abroad, I shudder when I hear the generalizations and blatantly racist comments of other people (not just Americans) and wonder if I used to be that ignorant and small minded too...
8
Thumbs Up
13
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:47:29 AM AST
Patriotism and religion are pretty much the sole causes for war. Thinking yourself better is also a good cause for war. Maritime boy, you will never be able to see this, but that attitude is no different than George Bush with a few ideological differences (which don't matter when it comes to extremism). Maritime Boy, you just generalized 300 million people (from many different backgrounds and creeds), insulting each and every one of them.
5
Thumbs Up
15
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:50:49 AM AST
Luckily, not all Maritimers are so small minded. Several of my friends who have immigrated here (and not from America or Britain, but Asia) have said while they have come across a lot of racism, they have also met people who are open to new ideas, differences, and more importantly, the ability to find commonalities instead of differences.
7
Thumbs Up
10
Thumbs Down
Doesn't Matter, Moncton on 29/06/09 09:54:14 AM AST
Advertisement
Advertisement

Search Articles