The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 49

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 49
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 47 VIEWS OF CONFEDERATION by Richard Daignault The following is one of a series of articles on Confederation which have appeared in Canadian Scene, an organ- ization with headquarters in Toronto devoted to the task of writing short and timely articles on phases of Can- adian history with emphasis on the present scene. The editor is Ruth Gordon of Toronto. * From the Treaty of Versailles in 1763, by which Canada became a Bri- tish Colony, to the establishment of Canadian Confederation in 1867, guaranteeing Quebec a large degree of self-government in its own internal af- fairs, is a short span of 104 years. There were only 65,000 Frenchmen in America in 1763, but they had grown to close to 1,000,000 by 1867.' How did this group of French-speaking people, surrounded by a fast-growing English-speaking society, manage to salvage not only its language and its religion but also its institutions, its civil laws, its system of education, the organization of the parish, and even its professions? Above all, how did it manage to obtain an important meas- ure of political control? The hard core of French Quebec’s successful sur- vival was fierce pride in its traditions. If one considers the miracle of the survival of French-speaking Acadians in the Maritime Provinces, in spite of the cruel fate which history inflicted upon them, one might readily conclude that the unbending character of the French settler was the essential guaran- tee of his survival. But history is tricky. Quebec was to benefit from its quirks. The course of history, in 1763, was only 12 years away from the cataclysm of violent revolution in the United States, and 26 years away from a deep- er upheaval in France; the world was on the brink of an era of social revol- ution. Quebec found itself removed from this change, not in the sense that it was as a moth in a cocoon, but it was in the shelter of an English colony loyal to the institutions of monarchy. It had no real leaders other than its clergy, royalist by tradition and French by culture. They advocated a French policy that would safeguard religion, language and traditional institutions. While the clergy fought every attempt by the new government to assimilate the French, it urged Quebecers to fight in defense of the British Crown; French-Canadians helped repel the American invasion of Canada during the American revolution, and perform- ed similarly during the War of 1812 between the United States and Can- ada. Meanwhile, the English author- ities accorded Quebec the right to write a French Civil Code of its own and elect members to the legislature. But soon, in Upper and Lower Can- ada, voices were raised against excess- ive privileges of the English Crown. Greater control over spending of pub- lic funds was the demand in both Eng- lish and French Canada. This talk was repressed by the authorities and the movement for more democratic govern- ment took on the aspect of a rebellion. In Quebec, the leader of the fight for complete parliamentary control of public funds by the elected deputies was Louis-Joseph Papineau whose re- publican ideas fired the imagination
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