Tuesday, December 8, 2009

10 things I love about Canada: part of the 10 years in Canada (Jan 1999-2009) blog series:

On every day spent in Canada, there has been a lot to be thankful for and a lot to feel good about – so it was tough to pull 10 things I love most. However, I have created a mixed list of top 10 Canadian icons, attitudes, assets and social/political facts that bring home the joys of being in Canada.

1. Natural beauty of the land and its deep appreciation The 2nd largest country in the world has breath-taking scenery spread across 7 time zones and nearly 10 million square kms of largely un-inhabited land. Green pastures, breath-taking mountains, red beaches and absolutely pure blue lakes (check my pictures on Facebook, Flickr or Picasa) adorn this landscape. Most Canadians truly respect this gift of Nature and spend a chunk of their time enjoying this bounty. This appreciation of Nature pervades the minds of the people, in the famous stories, the extremely popular paintings (such as those by the Group of Seven) and the marks/pictures on currency notes & coins. Even politicians routinely posture in the media on canoes, skidoos, ski gear, in Arctic gear or with fishing rods to express their love for Canada’s natural beauty.

2. The natural riches of the land It was not some brilliant economic design or the rollout of a strategic foray into a new market; rather the plentiful supply of precious & base metals, oil & gas that have save the bacon for Canada at critical points. Along with the stability of its banks, the bounty from below the earth helped Canada emerge as a top performer amongst the G8 countries through these past few tumultuous months in the world economy as Canada’s manufacturing sector got decimated, its leading new age hi-tech companies (Nortel, JDS Uniphase in my sector) went under and its legendary retail chains (Eaton, The Hudson Bay Company) floundered over the past few years. Even in the future, another natural resource (its plentiful supply of fresh water) will likely become a key source for Canadian sustenance and wealth. As the water shortage issues around the world become acute, Canada with the 2nd largest supply of fresh water in the world feels like a great place to be in.

3. The Rick Mercer show If you see my blog post on things I rail about in Canada, you will see my unhappiness about the “absence of outrage against waste and ineptitude”. Now, the only avenue where I see this addressed correctly, regularly and loudly is on the Rick Mercer show. Rick (note for non-Canadians: he is an amazing comedian on TV who has active interest in politics) in the “rant” part of his show addresses waste and ineptitude in the most humorous but direct fashion – unrivalled across any other media or forum in Canada. Besides the “rant” portion of the show, Rick does a terrific job of highlighting the numerous facets of Canada – stuff most people would be unaware of or never get exposure to – be it the working of the parliament or a small unique, festival in some remote part of Canada. Of course, in the process of Rick showing us Canada, he reconfirms that he is the most powerful and perhaps the luckiest Canadian around (he gets to fly the Canadian air force jets, play guitar with legends such as the lead guitarist of Rush, join Canadian Olympians in their practice sessions, drive police cars …) with uninhibited access to the Prime Minister, top politicians, rock legends, academic dons, sports-stars and the top civil/defence officials.

4. The CBC The unbiased coverage of Canadian Broadcast Corporation (CBC) is such a relief when I compare it to the news coverage from elsewhere (compared to the coverage in the US, Singapore and India – places I have been most exposed to). While its coverage may not be as deep as that of the BBC on Africa or Europe or Asia, the CBC truly is deep on all issues Canadian and American, strikes a great balance between Left & Right, brings forward some real honest hard-hitting programming and of late even looks very cool (great graphics, interesting angles, newer additions to the line-up of hosts). No other media even in Canada maintains as perfect a balance as the CBC (though the Globe & Mail comes close to it in the press). The objectivity was driven home especially at the start of the Iraq War when free discussions were held on CBC while the US TV had all aligned with a single point of view and was smothering any real discussion, which they later quietly regretted.

5. Almost an Enlightened Capitalist society In one of my 1st blogs ever, I talked about “Enlightened capitalism” – where there is economic freedom, results are driven by risk taking and hard work but when a person slips through the cracks, there is a helping hand. Though not yet a completely “enlightened capitalist society”, Canada comes close to it. Equidistant from the excesses of the US capitalist model (of recent years) and excessive stifled economies like France and Italy, Canada strives to strike a decent balance. A little below some of the Nordic countries on the scale of Enlightened Capitalism, Canada occupies the next berth along with Australia, Singapore and maybe the UK. And that is one of the HUGEST draws of this country for me – to see the economically disadvantaged (mostly) taken care of, absence of any ghettos, a large middle class and (mostly) equal access to public services.

6. A high concentration of very decent people Canadian media points out often how lots of Americans put Canadian flags on their back-packs when travelling through Europe. When I travel through Latin America, and tell people where I live, people immediately tell me about encounters with amazing Canadians and how well they think of the country (of course most in Europe tell me that they find India more exciting or interesting to visit and most in Latin America after griping about US policies, do let out their admiration for the US economic might). The above points of Canadian decency are random examples to validate what I experience in my daily life across Canada. Though the level of grace may vary across the regions or along rural-urban lines, largely and with a few exception (7 great experiences for every 1 bad behaviour witnessed), the folks here are very decent in the way they behave themselves publically, in the community, on the road, while using public transit or in the office.

7. Attitude to the under-privileged One of the best things I have seen in both the US and Canada is the spirit of charity built into the psyche of the majority of the common population. But as a society and Government, Canadians’ attitude to the under-privileged is heart-warming for me. I am sure in quite a few countries of Western Europe (and from all account, the Nordic countries) the same attitude prevails but its something that cannot be missed in my top 10 for it continuously impresses me. I have seen charitable and kind acts play out in parts of Asia but the demarcation between “beneficiary and benefactor” is often obvious while the kind actions are being performed – something that takes some of the dignity away from the receiver of the benefits. Out here, atleast the way I have seen it play out, the acts of kindness and charity seem very dignified and genuinely kind.

8. Prevailing attitude: Humility and self-effacing You could be sitting on a flight next to a musical giant or a top Government official or a legendary academician who is Canadian, more likely than not, you will not notice any fuss, arrogance or even feel their presence. They will more likely than not underplay their status while moving about in public. At work, you will rarely see anyone boasting about their own accomplishments or achievement (though they will be happy ;) to tell about their kid’s great hockey game from the previous night). In short, be it a famous or an ordinary Canadian, they are largely humble, quite about their successes and to a large extent self-effacing unless asked very specific questions.

9. Ability to take along a diverse set of people without imposing an explicit change There are very few countries with as much racial and “country of origin” diversity as the US, the UK and Canada. The milling of people with different backgrounds, past prejudices & preferences, deep set values always creates tensions in society. Humans by nature are not inherently tolerant of diversity. In Canada too, prejudices are prevalent and discrimination plays out at individual level, but society as a whole still pulls along in the same direction with little palpable tension being evident. Communities have grouses against each other but do not necessarily act upon them (unlike what I know happens in some parts of the UK). And this restraint at the macro level helps take along the hugely diverse set of people who live in Canada. What sets the Canadian experiment in creating a nation with hugely diverse strains of humanity apart from the US is the process of “Canadianization”. There is an “Americanization” process in play in the US – an implicit set of norms immigrants go through in a generation or two. In Canada, there is no explicit change and complete absence of the “Canadianization” process of those new to the land. I do fret about this absence but also am equally mesmerized about how Canada holds together without any explicit “naturalization” process.

10. Tim Horton’s Tim Horton’s coffee and Tim Horton, the coffee chain brings it all together for me – the essence of Canada. Unpretentious, clean and serves a great cup of no-fuss Java (one choice of beans – no choices) at a very reasonable price, the brand embodies Canadian values like very few other things – good, strong, virtuous (the company does a lot on the social front), unpretentious and classless (embraced by every strata of society). Served across the country (in almost every terrain) and even on the Canadian Force’s base in Afghanistan, it is a symbol of Canada everyone can attach to without seeming jingoistic.

1 comment:

NRP said...

Interesting analysis Manish...but let me point out that :
(i) With all its grace and success, canada still does not represent a distinct culture or heritage as such like some other (albeit poor) countries;
(ii) When you have population of only 35 million, its relatively easier to be charitable, than compared to a country where poulation is much larger. Also, I dont agree with the philosophy of earning killer profits first and then spend a small chunk thereof in charity (I must concede though all other models do have problems of implementation, though theoretically they r far superior);
(iii) With all the talk of equality and love for humanity, there is a distinct bias in any western country towards Asia: Can you claim that an asian life is equivalent to a north american one? If you dont believe, just look at Kanishka bombing case and support to insurgency in Punjab from Canadian soil;
(iv) While the instituitions may be far superior in canada (or for that matter in any other developed country), I refuse to concede that at individual level, we are any inferior--in fact, I am a firm believer that the warmth in inter personal relations in our part of the world is unmatched;
(v) We must not also forget that nothing is free in this world. As such, increased efficiency has to be paid for in terms of elimination of sympathetic and humane service. Canadian service industry will, no doubt, be more efficient than Indian counter part, but they are also more mechanical and less considerate to individual needs;
(vi) Finally, if you are good, you cant remain good for a specific set of people. Either you are considerate for every one irrespective of race, creed, sex, nationality etc. or you dont have it in you. I find strange that many societies have different yardsticks to measure human rights in America (that too North only) vis-a-vis poor countries;
(vii) And finally, I resent their uninformed use of word 'Indian' to denote the natives. Its not my fault that wherever these sons of God stumbled upon, they thought they found India!
Dont you think that in any developed country, relationship between your family and my family would not have been the same, given the circumstances we came into contact to begin with?????