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Celebrating 150 Years of Being Mostly Nice

Two Duke professors explain Canada's low-key celebration and why the US should care

Canada 150 logo

Canada has issued 10 attractive maple-leaf-shaped stamps to commemorate its 150th anniversary, which falls on Canada Day, July 1.

National anniversaries offer opportunities to reimagine national identity. The eye-catching stamps incorporate the themes that Justin Trudeau鈥檚 Liberal government defined for 鈥淐anada 150,鈥 the official label for the year-long sesquicentennial festivities: diversity and inclusiveness, reconciliation with indigenous peoples, stewardship of the environment, and the engagement of youth into the country鈥檚 public life.

The stamps that reflect these themes are entirely fitting for our level-headed neighbors to the north, whom The Economist recently held up as an example to the world for their tolerance of minorities, receptiveness to refugees and rejection of protectionism in a time of 鈥渨all-builders, door-slammers and drawbridge-raisers.鈥

Duke Professor Stephen Kelly shares insight on 150th anniversary of the formation of the Dominion of Canada. From 2000-2004, Kelly was Deputy Chief of Mission of the U.S. Mission to Canada. He also served as Consul General in Quebec City from 1995-1998, where he was the chief U.S. reporting officer on the Quebec Sovereignty Referendum of October 1995.

The stamps have been introduced in an appealing 30-page bilingual (of course) booklet entitled 鈥淐anada 150: Celebrating Canadian Milestones / C茅l茅brons Notre Histoire鈥 that is available free onlineTogether they constitute perhaps the most low-key and least bellicose representation of national identity ever crafted.

Predictable nationalist tropes like battlefield heroism are entirely absent, despite the Canadian armed forces鈥 distinguished service in the Gulf War, Bosnia and Afghanistan. Not a single Royal Canadian Mountie appears.

The booklet accompanies each stamp with text that charms by its innocence. The 鈥淓xpo 鈥67鈥 stamp celebrates the Montreal World鈥檚 Fair, 鈥渨hen Canada wowed the world by attracting 50 million visitors, the most notable figures of the day: Princess Grace of Monaco and Bing Crosby among them.鈥

Understandable in a sports-mad country, three stamps feature athletic competition. One was inevitable, the 鈥溾橲ummit Series鈥欌 pitting Canada鈥檚 top (ice hockey) stars against the Soviet Union鈥檚.鈥 (Spoiler alert: Canada won.) The other two sport stamps feature the Olympics and Paralympics hosted in Canada that 鈥渂oosted our sense of national pride and showcased Canada to the world.鈥

Joining Paralympians to reflect the theme of inclusiveness is the stamp honoring the 2005 Marriage Equality Act that 鈥渕ade Canada the fourth country to grant same-sex couples the right to marry the one they love.鈥

The 4,860-mile Trans-Canada Highway features on two stamps, first as 鈥渢he nation-building road needed for Canadians to explore their vast country,鈥 and later as the stage for 鈥淭he Marathon of Hope,鈥 a dramatic attempt by cancer survivor Terry Fox to run across the country on his artificial leg to raise money for cancer research. Fox reached only the half-way point before his cancer recurred, but his effort amassed more than $700 million. The 鈥淐anada 150鈥 message is that heroes need not win to be heroic.

The 鈥淐anadarm鈥 stamp uses a Canadian-designed robotic arm deployed on NASA鈥檚 space shuttle to vaunt Canada as a 鈥渘ation of innovators.鈥 The accompanying text鈥檚 legerdemain is more nimble than the Canadarm; it manages to connect Canada to the 1969 moon landing without directly mentioning the United States!

The least successful objective of 鈥淐anada 150鈥 has been reconciliation with aboriginal peoples. A self-congratulatory stamp lauds the creation of the northern territory of Nunavut 鈥 鈥渙ur land鈥 in the Inuktitut language 鈥 as 鈥渢he largest Aboriginal land claims agreement in Canadian history.鈥 But this superlative papers over how many claims have not been resolved, and obscures how little Canada has done to atone for its dishonorable treatment of First Nations.

Only one stamp deals with high politics. 鈥淭he Constitution鈥 accurately explains that the Constitution Act of 1982 was 鈥渁 critical step to full sovereignty鈥 because 鈥渦ntil that day only the British Parliament could amend our constitution.鈥

This final step to Canadian independence will be celebrated in Ottawa at the pinnacle of the sesquicentennial festivities on Canada Day, July 1st. Now past her 90th birthday, Queen Elizabeth has sent her sincere regrets. Prince Charles, Canada鈥檚 future king, will instead join Prime Minister Trudeau and pop star Carly Rae Jepson on Parliament Hill.

Simultaneous satellite celebrations have been scheduled across the country, including an appearance in Toronto harbor by a six-story tall yellow rubber duck. No one seems exactly certain how a giant duck connects to Canada鈥檚 national identity, and the opposition Conservative party has demanded to know 鈥渨ho pays this duck鈥檚 bill.鈥

But a national columnist for the Globe & Mail vigorously supports 鈥渢eam duck.鈥 Her rationale reflects the new unbuttoned Canada revealed by the sesquicentennial: 鈥淚t presents us as such goofballs on the increasingly dark international stage. We are fighting about an overfed bath toy. 鈥 This says something hopeful about our country.鈥

Who in America could disagree?

 

John Herd Thompson is professor emeritus of history at 老牛影视