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The Effect of the War on Oriental Minorities in Canada*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

H. F. Angus*
Affiliation:
The University of British Columbia
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Extract

The presence in Canada of substantial minorities of Oriental race interests us both as citizens and as social scientists. Even those who believe that the task of good citizenship has been made harder by immigration from Asia must recognize that the interest of Canada to the social scientist has been enhanced.

The racial minorities are three in number and are very unequal in importance. There are about 25,000 persons of Japanese race in Canada, of whom 23,000 live in the province of British Columbia. The Chinese are somewhat more numerous in Canada, although there are only 21,769 in British Columbia. There are very few East Indians and it is significant that the Special Committee on Orientals in British Columbia which reported in December, 1940, treated “Orientals” and “Persons of Japanese and Chinese racial origins” as interchangeable terms.

The figures cited concern race (as determined by paternal descent) and do not indicate nationality or culture. Of the 23,000 persons of Japanese race in Canada approximately 2,400 are naturalized Canadians, and 13,400 Canadians by birth. This leaves an alien group of 7,200 but it must not be overlooked that many of those who are Canadians by birth may claim Japanese nationality by descent, or may have Japanese nationality imposed upon them because their parents have registered their births at the consulates. It is probable that almost all the Canadian-born are more Canadian than Japanese in culture, and this is true of some of the immigrants from Japan who entered Canada at early ages. Not many Chinese are Canadian either by birth or naturalization. For the former the figure is 900, for the latter 200. Of the East Indians probably none are aliens.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1941

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Footnotes

*

This paper was read at the round table on Sociology at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association in Kingston, May 24, 1941.

References

1 Report of the Special Committee on Orientals in British Columbia (Ottawa, 1940), p. 8.Google Scholar

2 Ibid., p. 9.

3 Ibid., p. 9.