Although my Canadian readership will recognize the above title as a play on our national anthem, I am having second thoughts about moving back to Canada. Not too long ago, Mark Steyn – a fellow Canuck – penned an excellent editorial in the Telegraph. It concerned the Islamification of Europe. As Mr. Steyn wrote, “To those of us watching from afar the ructions over the European constitution - a 1970s solution to a 1940s problem - it seems amazing that no Continental politician is willing to get to grips with the real crisis facing Europe in the 21st century: the lack of Europeans.”
As many other commentators within the culture war have noted, the low reproduction rate among native Europeans coupled with increased Muslim immigration are quickly transforming Europe into another Islamic continent. Yet the European secularists refuse to face this problem. Having spent the past thirty years suppressing the consequences of biological coupling, the modern European remains clueless as to the consequences of demographic coupling.
Unfortunately, recent Canadian statistics and demographics demonstrate a similar trend. Thus Mr. Steyn’s observations could easily included our native land. A recent statistic quoted by the Canadian Society of Muslims on its website estimates Canada’s Islamic population at around 650,000. Over the past decade alone, this represents a growth from under one percent of Canada’s total population to well over two percent.
At first two-to-three percent of the population seems statistically negligible. Granted, the Muslim population more than doubled over the past ten years, but it still represents a small minority of Canadians. Yet factor Canada's declining reproduction rate as well as its liberal immigration policy into the equation. As an aside concerning the latter, in the aftermath of its 9-11 coverage, even Canada’s putatively conservative Globe & Mail questioned our government’s liberal immigration policy. The Canadian Security Intelligence Service, which is Canada’s closest equivalent to the CIA, had reportedly warned Canadian politicians that our loose immigration policy made us an attractive staging ground from which terrorists could easily attack American targets.
But returning to the subject at hand, Canada's Muslim population is much younger than our general population. Additionally, they enjoy a stronger reproduction rate. Has Pierre Trudeau removed the state from the nation's bedroom – likely located somewhere in the Burnaby-Douglas riding – only to see it replaced by the Sharia?
Speaking of which, one of my Envoy Encore recently emailed me a story published by Aljazeera. It detailed Muslim efforts to establish an Islamic tribunal in Canada. "Since arbitrators' rulings can be enforced by the courts," we read, "the development has raised eyebrows that Sharia will in effect be endorsed by Canada's secular courts." The story dismisses any negative reaction to this development as overblown . It then equivocates the proposed Islamic tribunal with various Rabbinical courts already enjoying limited legal recognition under Canadian law.
Setting aside the Sharia's peculiarities for a moment – and like Kathy Shaidle, a fellow Canadian Catholic author, I find myself among the some of us [who] think stoning rape victims is a bit peculiar – there are other reasons to remain skeptical about this comparison between Islamic tribunals and Rabbinical courts. Does modern Judaism regularly attack civilian targets among the Gentiles? Does Isreal sponsor terrorist activities on western soil? Islam is alone among the five major world religions in employing forced conversion as a legitimate means of evangelization.
Actually, I take that back. Secularism, which is Canada's new state religion, also imposes forced conversion. Just look at poor Mark Harding. Mr. Harding is a Christian who recently ran afoul of Canada's hate police for drawing attention to certain peculiarities within the Islamic world. As Doug Coup reports in the Christian Times:
“[Harding's] offending pamphlets discussed Islamic societies around the world where ‘Muslims are torturing, maiming, starving and killing Christians’ simply because of their faith. Harding argues that Islam ‘is full of hate and violence,’ and that its holy books teach that it ‘will always be at war’ with other religions. ‘Once a state becomes an Islamic state, no other religion is tolerated,’ he says.
“His outspokenness last June landed Harding in trouble with the Muslim community, and he is going to trial next month to face criminal charges on three counts of ‘incitement to hatred.’ Complaints were also lodged with the Canadian Human Rights Commission. He was arrested and spent a few days in jail before a hearing last summer.”
Canadians political and religious commentators need not find Mr. Harding’s situation surprising. After all, the Canadian Human Rights Commission is the same quasi-judicial body that silenced as hate literature certain biblical passages pertaining to homosexuality. It is not too much of a stretch to silence international headlines as well. And thus I am reminded of Mark Steyn’s response to a similar flap over Johnny Hart’s recent allegedly anti-Islamic cartoon:
“Although I agreed of course that Islamophobic cartooning was the most pressing issue of the week, in my usual shallow way I'd become distracted by some of the day's more trivial stories - the 11 Hindus burnt alive by a Muslim gang in Bangladesh, the 13 Christian churches torched by Muslim rioters in the Nigerian town of Kazaure, and the 27 Turks and Britons murdered by Muslim terrorists in Istanbul. No dead Jews in that particular day's headlines, but otherwise a good haul of Hindus, Christians and, of course, Muslims...”
Like Mr. Steyn, I too cannot help but these headlines distracting. They may be as trivial as the First Amendment that protects my expression of concern over their content from the Canadian Human Rights Commission, but nevertheless I find them distracting.
Of a similar trivial nature is my concern over Canada’s apparent elimination of free speech from our public discourse. Criticism of another culture can be branded “hate speech” unless the critiqued culture is distinctly Christian or American. Yet if civil liberties in the Middle East are an example of what we can expect in Canada’s tolerant and multi-cultural society, the culture of death propagated by our secularists will eventually give way to the Islamosphere’s culture of fear.
Excellent post Eric - and something which isnt much of a problem now, but most definitely will be in the future.
Having said that, the same things were said about 'the Catholics' when they first came to Australia because of their large families. Today, Catholicism is the largest religion in Australia. Here, as well as in Canada, the birth rate is collapsing, whilst Islamic families have multiple chidlren. What then, is the solution? I cant see the birth rate turning around any time soon...
Pete:
Yes yes, I'm aware of the situation too and while frustrated I refuse to despair. Remember it's a sin and you gotta have more faith in the ordinary Canadians' resilence.
Furthermore ya know some of us have to stay or else the multi-cult elites win eh? However, you also need to take Mark with a grain of salt. Mark is one of those Anglospherist who looks at Europe with a jaundiced eye. Frankly I wish commentators like Mark would have the courage to live on the continent; London sometimes distorts what's going on the continent. I do tire of the catastrophisme that the Anglopsherist pudicorcy on both sides of the Atlantic like to indulge in.
Nor should Americans become too complacent. If it weren't for illegal immigration from Latin America, the U.S. would face a similar demographic situation. It probably will as Americans crack down on the Latin Americans
xavier
On the continent? I thought he lived in New Hampshire.
Pete, move from sunny Florida back to freezy Canada? Come on, you've got to be kidding us. If you do want to escape the land of hanging chads, though, better to come over here to Texas. We have almost as much sun and a little (as little as we can manage) Winter, too.
All the best,
Woody
I live in Denver, Colorado - the fourth most popular place for Mexicans to immigrate to the U.S. Our city is home to about 25% demographic of Latinos, mostly of Mexican dissent.
I am not Mexican or of Latino dissent [Irish-Catholic]. I can tell you as a fluent Spanish speaker and student of Latino culture, that sometimes people use hyperbole to describe immigration problems. One unfortunate result is that people use such stories as a rationale for their ill behavior.
Let me give an example. My wife and I were blessed with our first child this June. We are overwhelmed with housework and decided to hire a maid.
Our maid, Rouxy is Mexican. She is a naturalized U.S. Citizen. We love her work, pay her well, and treat her with respect. I trust her completely. For Christmas (and Thanksgiving), we gave her cash bonuses - small tokens of our appreciation.
The week of Christmas, she cried when we gave her a bonus. She explained that another client of hers offered her 3 bagels as a Christmas bonus. Are you kidding? My wife and I were outraged. She declined to accept the bagels.
She also gave some other examples of how badly she is treated by people that employ her for cleaning. Apparently, they assume that because she immigrated from Mexico, she is a) lazy b) stupid and c) a thief. All of this because 'ella es morena y tiene un accteno Mexicano ' (she is dark and has a Mexican accent). Sad.
So, to my fellow Catholics and friendly neighbors to the North in Canada, remember the wisdom of Matt 7:1, and try not to worry too much about immigration and Islamics taking over your beautiful country. Just like Catholics, most Muslims are true to the peaceful nature of their religion and are not swept away by radicalism -- despite how the media trys to portray them.
Peace and Happy New Year!
Woody, I quite like Texas and have found Arizona even more tempting. The reason we're heading back to Canada, God willing, is for my double doctorate in canon law. Here in North America, since my Spanish is minimal, the options are Washington, DC or Ottawa, Canada. Since I did my licentiate and Master's in Ottawa, it is much easier to go there.
Jeff, I find what you said about your maid quite sad. Being myself a guest of the US, I have no problem with immigration or immigrants. But I do have a problem with Islamo-fascists who would take advantage of America's generosity with regards to immigration in order to undermine what makes her generous.