Asian Canadians
Total population | |
---|---|
6,095,235 17.7% of the Canadian population (2016)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Western Canada · Central Canada · Urban less prevalent in the Atlantic and North | |
Languages | |
Canadian English · Canadian French · Mandarin · Cantonese · Punjabi · Arabic · Tagalog · Other Asian languages | |
Religion | |
Christianity · Buddhism and other East Asian religions · Islam · Hinduism · Sikhism · Judaism · Non-religious · Other | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Asian Americans · British Asian · Asian Australians · Asian New Zealanders · Asian people Laotian Canadians |
Asian Canadians are Canadians who can trace their ancestry back to the continent of Asia or Asian people. Canadians with Asian ancestry comprise the largest and fastest growing group in Canada, after European Canadians, with roughly 17.7% of the Canadian population. Most Asian Canadians are concentrated in the urban areas of Southern Ontario, Southwestern British Columbia, Central Alberta, and other large Canadian cities.
Asian Canadians are considered visible minorities and may be classified as East Asian Canadians, South Asian Canadians, Southeast Asian Canadian, or West Asian Canadians.[2]
Terminology
In the Canadian Census, people with origins or ancestry in East Asia (e.g. Chinese Canadians, Korean Canadians, Japanese Canadians), South Asia (e.g. Bangladeshi Canadians, Indian Canadians, Pakistani Canadians, Sri Lankan Canadians, Indo-Caribbean Canadians), Southeast Asia (e.g. Laotian Canadians, Cambodian Canadians, Filipino Canadians, Vietnamese Canadians), West Asia (e.g. Iranian Canadians, Iraqi Canadians, Israeli Canadians, Lebanese Canadians, Turkish Canadians) or Central Asia (e.g. Afghan Canadians, Armenian Canadians, Kazakh Canadians) are all classified as part of the Asian race.
History
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18th Century
The first record of Asians in what is known as Canada today can be dated back to the late 18th century. In 1788, renegade British Captain John Meares hired a group of Chinese carpenters from Macau and employed them to build a ship at Nootka Sound, Vancouver Island, British Columbia. After the outpost was seized by Spanish forces, the eventual whereabouts of the carpenters was largely unknown.
19th Century
During the mid 19th century, many Chinese arrived to take part in the British Columbia gold rushes and later for the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The Chinese who came from Guangdong Province helped build the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Fraser Canyon. Many Japanese people also arrived in Canada during the mid to late 19th century and became fishermen and merchants in British Columbia.
Similarly in the late 19th century, many Indians hailing from Punjab Province settled in British Columbia and worked in the forestry industry.[3] Lebanese and Syrians also first immigrated in Canada during the late 19th century; as both countries were under Ottoman dominion at the time they were originally branded as Turks. Settling in Montreal, they became the first West Asian group to immigrate to Canada.[4]
In 1885, soon after the construction on the railway was completed, the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act, whereby the government began to charge a substantial head tax for each Chinese person trying to immigrate to Canada.[5] A decade later, the fear of the "Yellow Peril" prompted the government of Mackenzie Bowell to pass an act forbidding any East Asian Canadian from voting or holding office.[5]
Many Chinese workers settled in Canada after the railway was constructed. Most could not bring the rest of their families, including immediate relatives, due to government restrictions and enormous processing fees. They established Chinatowns and societies in undesirable sections of the cities, such as East Pender Street in Vancouver, which had been the focus of the early city's red-light district until Chinese merchants took over the area from the 1890s onwards. [6]
20th Century
Immigration restrictions stemming from anti-Asian sentiment in Canada continued during the early 20th century. Parliament voted to increase the Chinese head tax to $500 dollars in 1902; this temporarily caused Chinese immigration to Canada to stop. However, in following years, Chinese immigration to Canada recommenced as many saved up money to pay the head tax.
Due to the decrese in Chinese immigration, Steamship lines began recruiting Indians to make up for the loss of business; the Fraser River Canners' Association and the Kootchang Fruit Growers' Association asked the Canadian government to abolish immigration restrictions. Letters from persons settling in Canada gave persons still in India encouragement to move to Canada, and there was an advertising campaign to promote British Columbia as an immigration destination.[7]
Heightened anti-Asian sentiment resulted in the infamous anti-Asian pogrom in Vancouver. Spurred by similar riots in Bellingham targeting South Asian (Punjabi) settlers, The Asiatic Exclusion League organized attacks against homes and businesses owned by East Asian (Chinese and Japanese) immigrants under the slogan "White Canada Forever!"; though no one was killed, much property damage was done and numerous Asian-Canadians were beaten up.
In 1908, the British Columbia government passed a law preventing South Asian Canadians from voting. Because eligibility for federal elections originated from provincial voting lists, Indians were also unable to vote in federal elections.[8] Later, the Canadian government enacted a $200 head tax and passed the continuous journey regulation which indirectly halted Indian immigration to Canada, thus restricting all immigration from South Asia.
A direct result of the continuous journey regulation was the Komagata Maru Incident in Vancouver. In May 1914, hundreds of South Asians hailing from Punjab were denied entry into the country, eventually forced to depart for India. In 2016, the Canadian government issued a full apology in parliament to mark the 102nd anniversary of the incident.
During the first world war, Turkish Canadians were placed in “enemy alien" internment camps.[9]
In 1923, the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which banned all Chinese immigration, and led to immigration restrictions for all East Asians. In 1947, the act was repealed.
The second world war prompted the federal government used the War Measures Act to brand Japanese Canadians enemy aliens and categorized them as security threats in 1942. Tens of thousands of were placed in internment and road camps camps in British Columbia; prison of war camps in Ontario; and families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies. By 1943, all properties owned by Japanese Canadians in British Coluumbia were seized and sold without consent.
The Iranian revolution of 1979 resulted in a spike of immigration to Canada from the West Asian country.[10] In the aftermath, many Iranian-Canadians began to categorize themselves as "Persian" rather than "Iranian", mainly to dissociate themselves from the Islamic regime of Iran and the negativity associated with it, and also to distinguish themselves as being of Persian ethnicity.[11][12]
During and after the Vietnam War, a large wave of Vietnamese refugees began arriving in Canada. The Canadian Parliament created the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada in 1985 to better address issues surrounding Canada-Asia relations, including trade, citizenship and immigration. When Hong Kong reverted to mainland Chinese rule, people emigrated and found new homes in Canada.
21st Century
In recent decades, a large number of people have come to Canada from India and other South Asian countries. As of 2016, South Asians make up nearly 17 percent of the Greater Toronto Area's population, and are projected to make up 24 percent of the region's population by 2031.[13]
Today, Asian Canadians form a significant minority within the population, and over 6 million ethnic Asians call Canada their home. Asian Canadians are among the educated and socioeconomically affluent groups in Canada. Asian Canadian students, in particular those of East Asian or South Asian background, make up the majority of students at several Canadian universities.
Demography
Population
The Canadian population who reported full or partial Asian ethnic origin, including West Central Asian and Middle Eastern, according to the 2016 census:[14]
Province or territory | Asian origins | % |
---|---|---|
Ontario | 3,100,455 | 23.4% |
British Columbia | 1,312,445 | 28.8% |
Alberta | 756,335 | 19.0% |
Québec | 563,150 | 7.1% |
Manitoba | 178,650 | 14.4% |
Saskatchewan | 99,125 | 9.3% |
Nova Scotia | 42,495 | 4.7% |
New Brunswick | 19,410 | 2.7% |
Newfoundland and Labrador | 10,090 | 2.0% |
Prince Edward Island | 6,485 | 4.6% |
Northwest Territories | 3,125 | 7.6% |
Yukon | 2,855 | 8.1% |
Nunavut | 615 | 1.7% |
Canada | 6,095,235 | 17.7% |
Ethnic Origins
While the Asian Canadian population is diverse, many have ancestry from a few select countries in the continent. Nearly four million or 66% of Asian Canadians can trace their roots to just three countries; China, India and the Philippines.
Language
Knowledge of language
As of 2016, 6,044,885 or 17.5 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language. Of this, the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin (13.5%), Cantonese (11.6%), Punjabi (11.1%), Arabic (10.4%) and Tagalog (10.1%).
- Languages with 5,000 or more speakers listed.
# | Knowledge of language | Population (2016)[19] | % of Asian languages (2016) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mandarin | 814,450 | 13.47% |
2 | Cantonese | 699,125 | 11.57% |
3 | Punjabi | 668,240 | 11.05% |
4 | Arabic | 629,055 | 10.41% |
5 | Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) | 612,735 | 10.14% |
6 | Hindi | 433,365 | 7.17% |
7 | Urdu | 322,220 | 5.33% |
8 | Persian (Farsi) | 252,320 | 4.17% |
9 | Vietnamese | 198,895 | 3.29% |
10 | Tamil | 189,860 | 3.14% |
11 | Korean | 172,755 | 2.86% |
12 | Gujarati | 149,045 | 2.47% |
13 | Bengali | 91,220 | 1.51% |
14 | Japanese | 83,090 | 1.37% |
15 | Hebrew | 75,020 | 1.24% |
16 | Turkish | 50,775 | 0.84% |
17 | Min Nan (Chaochow, Teochow, Fukien, Taiwanese) |
42,840 | 0.71% |
18 | Chinese, n.o.s. | 41,690 | 0.69% |
19 | Armenian | 41,295 | 0.68% |
20 | Malayalam | 37,810 | 0.63% |
21 | Ilocano | 34,530 | 0.57% |
22 | Sinhala | 27,825 | 0.46% |
23 | Cebuano | 27,045 | 0.45% |
24 | Khmer (Cambodian) | 27,035 | 0.45% |
25 | Pashto | 23,180 | 0.38% |
26 | Telugu | 23,160 | 0.38% |
27 | Malay | 22,470 | 0.37% |
28 | Nepali | 21,380 | 0.35% |
29 | Sindhi | 20,260 | 0.34% |
30 | Assyrian Neo-Aramaic | 19,745 | 0.33% |
31 | Lao | 17,235 | 0.29% |
32 | Wu (Shanghainese) | 16,530 | 0.27% |
33 | Marathi | 15,570 | 0.26% |
34 | Thai | 15,390 | 0.25% |
35 | Kurdish | 15,290 | 0.25% |
36 | Hakka | 12,445 | 0.21% |
37 | Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e. | 8,875 | 0.15% |
38 | Kannada | 8,245 | 0.14% |
39 | Hiligaynon | 7,925 | 0.13% |
40 | Chaldean Neo-Aramaic | 7,115 | 0.12% |
41 | Tibetan | 7,050 | 0.12% |
42 | Konkani | 6,790 | 0.11% |
43 | Austronesian languages, n.i.e. | 5,585 | 0.09% |
44 | Azerbaijani | 5,450 | 0.09% |
45 | Pampangan (Kapampangan, Pampango) | 5,425 | 0.09% |
46 | Other | 37,530 | 0.62% |
Total | 6,044,885 | 100% |
Mother Tongue
As of 2016, 4,217,365 or 12.2 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language as a mother tongue. Of this, the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin (14.0%), Cantonese (13.4%), Punjabi (11.9%), Tagalog (10.2%) and Arabic (10.0%).
- Languages with 10,000 or more speakers listed.
# | Mother Tongue | Population (2016)[20] | % of Asian languages (2016) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mandarin | 592,035 | 14.04% |
2 | Cantonese | 565,275 | 13.4% |
3 | Punjabi | 501,680 | 11.9% |
4 | Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) | 431,385 | 10.23% |
5 | Arabic | 419,895 | 9.96% |
6 | Persian (Farsi) | 214,200 | 5.08% |
7 | Urdu | 210,820 | 5% |
8 | Vietnamese | 156,430 | 3.71% |
9 | Korean | 153,425 | 3.64% |
10 | Tamil | 140,720 | 3.34% |
11 | Hindi | 110,645 | 2.62% |
12 | Gujarati | 108,775 | 2.58% |
13 | Bengali | 73,125 | 1.73% |
14 | Japanese | 43,640 | 1.03% |
15 | Chinese, n.o.s. | 38,575 | 0.91% |
16 | Armenian | 33,455 | 0.79% |
17 | Turkish | 32,815 | 0.78% |
18 | Min Nan (Teochow, Hokkien) |
31,795 | 0.75% |
19 | Malayalam | 28,570 | 0.68% |
20 | Ilocano | 26,345 | 0.62% |
21 | Khmer (Cambodian) | 20,130 | 0.48% |
22 | Cebuano | 19,890 | 0.47% |
23 | Hebrew | 19,530 | 0.46% |
24 | Nepali | 18,275 | 0.43% |
25 | Pashto | 16,910 | 0.4% |
26 | Sinhala | 16,335 | 0.39% |
27 | Assyrian Neo-Aramaic | 16,070 | 0.38% |
28 | Telugu | 15,655 | 0.37% |
29 | Wu (Shanghainese) | 12,920 | 0.31% |
30 | Malay | 12,275 | 0.29% |
31 | Sindhi | 11,860 | 0.28% |
32 | Kurdish | 11,705 | 0.28% |
33 | Hakka | 10,910 | 0.26% |
34 | Other | 101,295 | 2.4% |
Total | 4,217,365 | 100% |
Religion
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (April 2020) |
Subdivisions with notable Asian Canadians
Source: Canada 2016 Census
National average: 17.7%
Alberta
- Chestermere (31.8%)
- Calgary (30.0%)
- Edmonton (29.3%)
- Banff (22.4%)
- Wood Buffalo (19.4%)
British Columbia
- Richmond (74.8%)
- Greater Vancouver Electoral District A (65.7%)
- Burnaby (60.1%)
- Surrey (54.3%)
- Vancouver (49.6%)
- Coquitlam (48.2%)
- West Vancouver (38.0%)
- New Westminster (35.0%)
- Delta (34.4%)
- Abbotsford (31.8%)
- North Vancouver (31.0%)
- Port Coquitlam (29.9%)
- Port Moody (28.7%)
- North Vancouver (district) (25.8%)
- Saanich (21.0%)
Manitoba
- Winnipeg (23.2%)
Ontario
- Markham (73.9%)
- Richmond Hill (59.3%)
- Brampton (54.7%)
- Mississauga (47.0%)
- Toronto (40.1%)
- Ajax (36.9%)
- Milton (34.6%)
- Whitchurch-Stouffville (33.7%)
- Vaughan (33.5%)
- Pickering (29.5%)
- Oakville (26.5%)
- Aurora (24.5%)
- Waterloo (23.6%)
- Windsor (22.6%)
- Newmarket (22.5%)
- Ottawa (19.6%)
Québec
- Dollard-des-Ormeaux (35.4%)
- Brossard (32.3%)
- Mont Royal (30.5%)
- Kirkland (24.1%)
- Cote-Saint-Luc (21.8%)
- Westmount (20.1%)
- Pointe-Claire (19.8%)
- Montreal (18.1%)
Saskatchewan
- Lloydminster (20.4%)
See also
- Cultural assimilation of Asian immigrants in Canada
- Demographics of Canada
- Immigration to Canada
- Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada
- List of Canadians of Asian ancestry
- East Asian Canadians
- South Asian Canadians
- West Asian Canadians
- Asian Americans
- Asian Argentines
- Asian Australians
- Asian Brazilians
- Asian New Zealanders
- Asian people
References
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census Canada [Country]". Retrieved February 27, 2019.
- ^ "Classification of visible minority". Statistics Canada. June 15, 2009. Archived from the original on July 18, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
- ^ Walton-Roberts and Hiebert, Immigration, Entrepreneurship, and the Family Archived 2014-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, p. 124.
- ^ "History of Recent Arab Immigration to Canada".
- ^ a b "How Canada tried to bar the "yellow peril"" (PDF). Maclean's. July 1, 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 18, 2015. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
- ^ Lisa Rose Mar (2010). Brokering Belonging: Chinese in Canada's Exclusion Era, 1885-1945. Oxford University Press. p. 112. ISBN 9780199780051.
- ^ Singh, Hira, p. 94 (Archive).
- ^ Nayar, The Punjabis in British Columbia, page 15.
- ^ "First World War Timeline". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
- ^ "Iranians". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
- ^ Daha, Maryam (September 2011). "Contextual Factors Contributing to Ethnic Identity Development of Second-Generation Iranian American Adolescents". Journal of Adolescent Research. 26 (5): 543–569. doi:10.1177/0743558411402335.
... the majority of the participants self-identified themselves as Persian instead of Iranian, due to the stereotypes and negative portrayals of Iranians in the media and politics. Adolescents from Jewish and Baha'i faiths asserted their religious identity more than their ethnic identity. The fact Iranians use Persian interchangeably is nothing to do with current Iranian government because the name Iran was used before this period as well. Linguistically modern Persian is a branch of Old Persian in the family of Indo-European languages and that includes all the minorities as well more inclusively.
- ^ Bozorgmehr, Mehdi (2009). "Iran". In Mary C. Waters; Reed Ueda; Helen B. Marrow (eds.). The New Americans: A Guide to Immigration since 1965. Harvard University Press. p. 469. ISBN 978-0-674-04493-7.
- ^ Gee, Marcus (July 4, 2011). "South Asian immigrants are transforming Toronto". The Globe and Mail.
- ^ a b "Data Tables, 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. February 14, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Canada [Country] and Canada [Country] Ethnic origin population".
- ^ "Overseas Chinese Affairs Council - Taiwan (ROC)". Archived from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved January 31, 2019.
- ^ Overseas Chinese Affairs Council - Taiwan (ROC) (PDF), OCA Council
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Canada [Country] and Canada [Country] Ethnic origin population".
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Canada [Country] and Canada [Country] Language Knowledge of languages".
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Canada [Country] and Canada [Country] Language Mother Tongue".