Tag Archives: Canada

10 Different Ways to Celebrate Canada Day 2020 in Vaughan

Photo of a Canadian flag

July 1 marks Canada’s 153rd birthday (or at least, 153 years since Confederation in 1867). This year’s Canada Day celebrations will look a lot different due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but there are still plenty of things to do at home and online. Here are ten ideas to celebrate Canada Day 2020:

 

1. Check out the City of Vaughan Virtual Canada Day Celebration

City of Vaughan Canada Day celebration bannerThe City of Vaughan will host a free virtual Canada Day celebration from 5:00 – 8:00 pm on July 1 to allow Vaughan residents the opportunity to celebrate safely and comfortably from home. The featured performers will be beloved Canadian band the Barenaked Ladies! Additional entertainment will include musical performances by the pop group Mini Pop Kids and pop/R&B band The Free Label, a cirque-style LED performance with Spin Starlets and electric violinist Dr. Draw, a comedy performance by Susan Stewart, and a dance lesson from Kreative in Dance Styles (K.I.D.S.). There will be an official welcome from Mayor Maurizio Bevilacqua and members of Council, as well as videos from community members sharing what Canada Day means to them. The event will be hosted by Ashley Greco from 104.5 CHUM FM and is presented by Greenpark Group. Check the City of Vaughan’s website for up-to-date information.

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Adult Summer Reads: CanLit

The world needs more Canada. Support our homegrown authors by checking out these remarkable Canadian reads.

Instagram: vaughanpubliclibraries

We’re nearing the end of summer….which means it’s time to do quintessentially Canadian things like drive up to the cottage, take a boat out on a lake and curl up by a campfire. And why not grab some great Canadian reads for your last lazy hazy days of August? We’re keeping the Canada 150 celebrations going by reading a selection of CanLit! I’ll be discussing Rupi Kaur, an Indian-Canadian woman from Toronto, and Will Ferguson, an Alberta-bred Scot, for a broad scope of modern Canadian writing.

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The Valour and the Horror

2017 is an important year for Canada.  It’s the 150th anniversary year of Confederation and the 100th anniversary year of the Battle of Vimy Ridge.  All but forgotten is the 25th anniversary of the production of a National Film Board three-part documentary on Canada’s effort in the Second World War: The Valour and the Horror, produced in 1992.  It is not a comprehensive history, neither is it glorious in any sense.  It is a highly critical examination of three important events in Canada’s military history: the doomed defense of Hong Kong against the Japanese in 1941; Canada’s role in British Bomber Command; and Canada’s role in the Battle of Normandy.  In each of these parts, the producers show great admiration, even reverence, for the Canadian junior officers and ordinary men, while being highly critical, even contemptuous, of political leaders and senior Canadian and British officers.

Perhaps the most famous, or infamous part of this documentary was Part II: Death By Moonlight: Bomber Command.  In it the producers are highly critical of Air Marshal Arthur “Bomber” Harris for his enthusiastic targeting, through area bombing, of German civilians in a failed effort to demoralize the population.  They use as their chief example the fire-bombing of Hamburg in 1943 that killed over 32,000 civilians including more than 9,000 children.  While absolving the pilots and crews under his command, they all but accuse Harris of war crimes.  This set off a firestorm (pardon the pun), of protest from politicians who were greatly affronted by the implication of Canadians participating in war crimes.  They even hauled the producers before a Senate committee.  The CBC was so cowed by this (self) righteous indignation that they cravenly decided to pull the broadcast of the documentary.

I invite you to watch this three-part documentary and to read up on the attack on free speech it spawned, an attack that was not so vigorously defended by our less than intrepid public broadcaster.