ok.
now this might be difficult to grasp as I'm trying to make it work as I type it so please!! bear with me!
OK, a good brainstorm is always a good thing; that's how we learn and challenge ourselves.
I have nothing against people from other countries wanting to come to Canada and start a new life! All the Power to them!
OK, so you have no issue with immigration in principle at least. That turns out well seeing that the vast majority of Canadians are of foreign blood, at least in part.
I just seem to have noticed lately that our traditions and our way of life that many of us who are Born "Naturalized" Canadians are used to for a long time, seem to be disappearing or changing due to demands or new ideas or "politically correct" situations that have come up.
I'm born in Canada to a mother of French blood spanning over four centuries on North American soil, and a father of mixed Irish and North American Aboriginal blood, though an immigrant to Canada born in England. I myself have been exposed to new ideas through friends, education and reading. This is nothing new as books have been translated between languages for millennia. It only appears to have occurred only 'lately' owing to our not having lived centuries. But by reading about the past, we can see it's nothing new.
the biggest example I can think of is Christmas.
I am not sure exactly when the whole issue about "politically correct" Christmas issues started but I have never been so annoyed about it.
This is nothing new either. Prior to European colonization, there was no Christmas on North American soil. It appeared only after the French arrived. Such changes are also not unique to the North American continent. At one point, the Christian Faith did not even exist at all. Later, many Christians in the Middle East adopted Islam. Today, nothing has changed on that front; just as in the past there has always been many religions to choose from, so the same remains today. I myself was raised as per my mother's Catholic Faith with my Anglican father's approval, yet have never professed the Christian faith at least since I was old enough to make up my own mind, in spite of my parents' disapproval. I have my own beliefs. Again, this is nothing new, with similar occurrences throughout history. After all, how could any religion supplant another without conversion. Conversion traces its history as far back as it is recorded.
in the 1980's and early 90's.. I do not recall seeing stores forbidding the use of phrases such as "Merry Christmas!"
I totally disagree with stores forbidding the use of phrases such as "Merry Christmas". In fact, seeing that we are guaranteed freedom of religion in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, such a prohibition is would likely be in conflict with Charter rights. Honestly though, I myself am unaware of any store forbidding the use of "Merry Christmas". I this a phenomenon only in your local area (Canada is big after all)? Do you have any evidence of stores actively prohibiting its use? Again, if that is the case anyway, then I totally agree that one's freedom of religion needs to be respected.
We need to consider though that it also goes both ways. Just as a Christian ought to be free to wish someone a marry or happy Christmas, a non-Christian ought to be equally free to wish someone a good day, evening, night, etc. Are you sure that Christians are being prohibited from saying 'Merry Christmas', and that it's not just a case of non-Christians choosing not to do so? Before we throw out accusations of suppression of freedom of religion, we'd first need to look at the statistics concerning the percentage of store workers who are Christian in the first place. If the percentage should be found to be high, then certainly we could question why they feel uncomfortable saying 'Merry Christmas'. But if it turns out to be low, then there would be our answer.
Signs and advertisements using the Word Christmas in it was pretty much all over.
Then something changed and now it's mostly "Happy Holidays!" Holiday cheer.. etc etc.
Now I can certainly agree that 'Happy Holidays' and 'holiday cheer' merely shows a lack of cultural knowledge. Anyone who knows that Christmas is a Christian holiday would either not celebrate it at all or celebrate it as a Christian holiday, and not a secular holiday. On Christmas day, I can handle someone wiching me a happy Christmas just as much as I can handle someone wishing me a good day/evening/etc. in that in neither case are they revealing their ignorance of the roots of Christmas. Once they turn to some secular holiday greeting, it just reveals how culturally ignorant they are.
And not just in stores but I see it in neighborhoods too.
Houses all over, used to be decorated with lights and Christmas trees and you couldn't even see a house without something on it!
Well, nowhere in the Bible does it say "thou shalt put up Christmas lights in December". In fact, did Mary and Joseph put up Christmas lights around the manger?
Now it's like maybe 3 or 4 houses.. all broke up around the street and a lot of them with nothing, and no signs of Christmas at all.
The sign of Christmas is everywhere. It's found in the heart of Christians who would not be Christian had it not been for the birth of Christ. If you're looking for Christmas in Christmas lights and in the greetings of non-Christians in shops, then you're looking in the wrong place.
Christmas isn't the only area we see it in.
There's so much grief being made over almost everything!
Now careful people as I'm about to make a statement.. Not trying to single out anyone.
I am beginning to believe that people who are coming to this country and wanting to have our freedoms and live our world as we know it then turn around and want to change everything to be more like their own Homeland.
Remember though that the Christian communion does not comprise Canadians only, just as not all Canadians, including myself, belong to the Christian communion. So this does not concern immigrants only. In fact, I've met many Canadian Aboriginals who professed the Baha'i Faith, and at least one who professed Islam, just as I've met immigrants who did profess the Christian faith. So really immigration is a totally separate and unrelated topic.
And perhaps most importantly, seeing that the One whose birth Christians commemorate at Christmas taught one universal Faith, the whole concept of nationalism stands in opposition to it. Looking at it that way, opposing immigration so as to preserve the Christian traditions means that the Christian spirit has died and that only the outer forms such as Christmas lights remain. If the goal is in fact to revive the spirit of the Christian Faith, then we must break down the barriers between the children of God just as the One whose birth Christians celebrate on Christmas day had taught, and must abandon placing such importance on mere outer forms of recent Christmas traditions.
they get offended with everything that doesn't seem right to them! yet us Naturalized Canadians have been doing this for our entire lives and don't see the reason for the offense??
Strange that. I was born and raised in Canada and have never witnessed anyone getting offended at being wished a merry Christmas. Unless it's a local thing?
I almost wish that our country was like the USA.
How so?
where their motto seemed to be, "ya you can come to our Country, but then you become a Italian-American, or a German-American, or a South African-American.." millions of their immigrants who came over 100 years ago or earlier came to US and thy adopted their ways of life! they learned to become Americans instead of just living here and being themselves in every way.
yes, and they were even more violent towards the Aboriginals than we were in Canada, as if we weren't bad enough. Again, is it the outer forms of the Christian Faith you're trying to revive, or the spirit of the Faith? If it's the spirit, then certainly all the children of God are one family, in which case the very notion of immigration laws is anathema to Christian concepts.
it appears that in Canada, when an Immigrant comes to live in Canada, they bring their entire country with them and then it seems like they expect others to allow and respect their traditions while they don't want to respect ours.
Of course. And that's why English and French are so dominant and the Christian faith is still the predominant Faith in Canada. Had it not been for immigrants bringing their country with them, there would be no Christian Faith in Canada. Had we respected the local traditions, here in Ottawa we'd all speak Ojibwa, Algonquin or some other indigenous local language. You seem to be talking double standards here.
After all, why should an Algonquin Muslim be required to practice Christmas? And no, I'm not making this up. I actually met an Algonquin Muslim. What you are suggesting is that unless she's Christian, she's not a real native North American even if she traces her family roots on this soil for millennia. How Christian a sentiment is that?
At the end of the day while I do believe in the the Gospel, I have to say that one reason I do not profess the Christian faith is precisely owing to too many so called Christians being so caught up in the outer traditions of the Christian faith that its inner spirit appears to be dead in their hearts. it really is a shame because the Christian Faith in its pristine form truly is a beautiful religion in spirit. With the spirit dead, the outer forms mean nothing to me. Why would one want to keep the corpse of a religion alive and consider that corpse as more important that the spirit that animates the corpse? A true Christian would commemorate Christmas by putting the spiritual teachings of the Gospel into practice, not by worrying about outer forms like Christmas lights.
And I do mean all this with the utmost sincerity, and to end this, I wish you a merry Christmas.
you don't come into our country as an immigrant, start to live here and then start to complain that what we have for traditions and so on are offensive to you.
if we come to visit or stay at your country for a while, we can't do anything that would offend your customs and laws or else we'd face serious threats and problems!
yet you can come to our country and speak your mind and say "this offends me, that isn't right, you can't do that" ??
Again, I've never in my life come across an immigrant who was offended at a sincere Christmas greeting. Are you sure this is not a local thing where you live?