North Shore News: Fighting for the Lost Canadians


By Sean Kolenko - North Shore Outlook
Published: March 30, 2011 12:00 PM
Updated: March 30, 2011 12:48 PM

Weeks before the writ was dropped, both the federal Liberal and Conservative parties began drawing lines in the soon-to-come campaign sand.

Fighter jets, crime bills, coalition governments and, lying just beneath each election issue, trust have become topics of heated debate between the Grits and the Tories.

The Liberals have also been outspoken on immigration, in particular pledging help to the remaining “Lost Canadians.”

The “Lost Canadians” are an advocacy group headed by West Vancouver-born Don Chapman. Its goal is to re-instate citizenship for those who became stateless because of loopholes in the Citizenship Acts of 1947 and 1977.

Chapman is a former “Lost Canadian”. His father, suffering from arthritis in his hands, had moved the family to the U.S. in search of a warmer climate when Chapman was still a child. Chapman didn’t realize he had lost his citizenship — the United States did not grant dual citizenships at the time — until he tried to return to Canada at the age of 18. After discovering he didn’t qualify for his planned return north of the border, Chapman built a life in Phoenix, Ariz. but didn’t give up on his quest to become a Canadian, again. He began researching the intricate rules that governed how citizenship was attained.

He compiled a list of 12 ways one could lose their citizenship — those born out of wedlock, a woman who married a non-Canadian prior to 1947, or foreign-born Canadians who weren’t in Canada on their 24th birthday, for example — and began to advocate on their behalf.

On April 19, 2009, after years of pounding on the doors of both Liberal and Conservative governments, Chapman succeeded in helping a large majority of Lost Canadians when the Conservative government passed into law Bill C-37, which retroactively grated citizenship to those who lost their status after Jan. 1, 1947. For those who had issues from a time before that date, the file remains unresolved.

“It’s ridiculous that this is an issue we have to take a stance on. We are a country that values all the Charter, citizenship and the people who have paid taxes,” Justin Trudeau, Liberal immigration critic, told The Outlook.

“What remains about this issue doesn’t touch a whole lot of people, but this Conservative government won’t touch something unless there’s a swath of votes in it for them. That type of short-term strategy is not what Canada and the Liberal government stands for.”

The remaining five per cent of Lost Canadians generally fall into three groups: second-generation Canadians born abroad who were not in Canada on the day of their 28th birthday, those born before 1947 in wedlock to a Canadian mother and a non-Canadian father — children in these cases are considered the property of the father — and children born to Canadian citizen out of wedlock, who grew up outside of Canada.

Since the passing of Bill C-37, Chapman has lobbied to have all remaining cases in this file resolved but to no avail, he said. Chapman said he has repeatedly reached out to John Weston, MP for the West Vancouver-Sea-to-Sky riding, for help in this issue but has been ignored.

Weston said he has met with Chapman on a number of occasions. When Stockwell Day visited the riding, Weston said he arranged for the two to meet. He’s spoken to Chapman both in his office and in Ottawa, and has helped a family on Bowen Island, the Segals, with their children’s immigration issues.

“The changes that are being called for would abolish the second-generation limit, changes that would allow people to claim citizenship even if they haven’t paid taxes,” said Weston. “It’s not something most Canadians would support, but people in this riding will be served. Citizenship is something I take very seriously.”

Chapman, however, isn’t convinced. He cites the case of Guy Valliere, a former WWII soldier, who lived in Canada his entire life but died stateless in February. Valliere was born in Montreal in 1926 to a Canadian mother and American father, in wedlock — and considered the property of the father. The government retroactively awarded his father citizenship, but Valleire was not included. He discovered in hospital he wasn’t a Canadian and died without citizenship.

“What public good is there in denying the last remaining five per cent their citizenship?” wondered Chapman, in an interview with The Outlook.

“Why doesn’t my MP [Chapman own a house in Gibsons, B.C] return my phone calls for help?”

Prior to the fall of the last Parliament, remaining citizenship inquiries in this area were handled on a case-by-case basis by immigration minister Jason Kenney.

CJOB Winnipeg: Live on the Karen Black Show

CJOB WinnipegKaren Black Show on CJOB Winnipeg

Listen live at 5 pm Atlantic time to radio host Karen Black on CJOB Winnipeg as she interviews Ian Munroe, a Scottish born war bride child who has made a complaint of discrimination on the basis of family status to the Canadian Human Rights Commission. Also on the show is Jackie Scott, who has been denied citizenship because she was born out of wedlock during World War Two to an English War Bride and Canadian veteran.

Click on the link below and click on the "Listen Live" image at the top of the page.

http://www.cjob.com/Landing/News.aspx

War Bride Child Makes Human Rights Complaint to Federal Rights Agency-Says Department Discriminates Against Children Born out of Wedlock during WWII

Ian Munroe's parents on their wedding day June 19, 1944. The Department of Citizenship and Immigration wants to know if their son Ian, now age 65, was born before they were married or after. His citizenship depends on it.

(Chester, Nova Scotia - March 20, 2011) - A Nova Scotia man who came to Canada in June 1946 with his war bride mother has made a complaint of family status discrimination against the Department of Citizenship and Immigration (CIM).

Ian Munroe's complaint to the Canadian Human Rights Commission is the first of its kind in Canada and points to a controversial section of the Citizenship Act which allows for discrimination against war bride children who were born out of wedlock overseas during World War Two.

It also follows on the heels of an announcement by federal Liberal citizenship critic, Justin Trudeau, who called for changes to the Act on Friday.

“To have people treated differently depending on which parent had Canadian citizenship or whether or not their parents were married is anachronistic at best, and at worst, a violation of the Charter," Mr. Trudeau said.

Ian Munroe lives in Chester Basin, Nova Scotia. His father was a Canadian World War Two veteran and his mother a war bride from Paisley, Scotland. His parents were married in Scotland on June 19, 1944 and Ian was born more than a year later in Greenock on September 15, 1945. Ian and his mother arrived at Pier 21 on the Queen Mary and he has lived in Canada his entire life - but 65 years later, he still doesn't have his citizenship.

Ian went to school in Canada, married and raised a family. He even served 18 years in the Canadian Navy - but he has been fighting to have his citizenship recognized for more than 25 years since being told he wasn't a citizen. He's written letters to the editor, appeared on television and radio and has lobbied Conservative, Liberal and NDP Members of Parliament for help, all to no avail. When his best friend died in Maine, USA, three years ago, he didn't attend the funeral because he couldn't get a passport.

In November, 2010, Mr. Munroe was advised to apply to CIM for "Proof of Citizenship". He knew that some war bride children were having problems because they were born out of wedlock so he wrote a detailed cover letter and attached more than a dozen archival documents including his parents birth certificates, their wedding certificate, and his own birth certificate.

Two weeks ago, on March 8, Ian received a call from Stella Holiday, a CIM employee, asking whether he was born before or after his parents married in Scotland in 1944.

Ian says it's ironic that Ms. Holiday chose the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day to ask him such a private question about his family status when it is so obviously a violation of the Canadian Human Rights Act.

"The fact that some bureaucrat at CIM can take away your citizenship if you were born out of wedlock 65 years ago makes me wonder what my father was fighting for during World War Two," Ian says. "Believe me, I know from experience: when you don't have citizenship, you're nothing."

Munroe doesn't know why Ms. Holiday phoned him up to ask about his family status when she had all the documentation which clearly show that he was born in wedlock. "I was born more than a year after my parents were married, but it's the principle of the matter that makes me boiling mad. I can't believe the government has the gall to ask me that question in the first place and what's worse, that they would use such a flimsy excuse to deny citizenship to any war bride child who happened to be born out of wedlock during the war!"

Munroe has an advocate in Don Chapman, the leader of the Lost Canadians. Chapman was born in Vancouver in 1954 and lost his citizenship when his father moved the family to the United States in 1961.

"There are 12 ways to lose your citizenship and being born out of wedlock to a war bride and a Canadian serviceman overseas is just one of them," says Chapman. "The Canadian government has been discriminating against war bride children since the end of World War Two and it's time that human rights activists and leaders of the women's movement demand a stop to it."

Chapman says the discrimination is larger than just the Canadian Human Rights Act: "It is in violation of Section 15 - the equality provision of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, two Supreme Court decisions and numerous international human rights covenants to which Canada is a signatory including the Convention on the Rights of the Child."

Melynda Jarratt is a war bride historian from Fredericton, New Brunswick who has written extensively on the issue of so called "War Children" of World War Two. She says CIM applies a "Victorian moral code" to war bride children who were born out of wedlock overseas during the war.

"In the 1940s, it was socially unacceptable to have pre-marital sex and the unfortunate woman who found herself pregnant and unwed was a social outcast and her baby a 'bastard'. There were few options for unwed mothers and more often than not she had to give the baby up for adoption or else face the disapproval of her family, the Church and state."

Jarratt says times have changed for women and children's rights and there are few Canadians who don't have a divorced or single parent in the family. But she calls the "silence" from women's rights groups "deafening to the extreme".

"No politician or human rights activist today would dare defend such discrimination but it is happening all the time at the Department of Citizenship and Immigration and nobody with the authority or power to do anything about is taking a stand," says Jarratt. "I hope the Munroe case will wake up Canadians to the discrimination that is happening right here on their own doorstep to war bride children who were brought here at the invitation of the Canadian government in 1946."

Vancouver Observer: Liberals take strong stand on Lost Canadian rights

Left out and left behind, the remaining Lost Canadians get a beacon of hope in a Liberal promise.

Liberals take strong stand on Lost Canadian rights

Left out and left behind, the remaining Lost Canadians get a beacon of hope in a Liberal promise.

Click here to read original story in Vancouver Observer

Liberal Citizenship critic Justin Trudeau announced today that a Liberal government would make Lost Canadian cases a priority of their administration.

“It's not right that a country that is a leader in rights and freedoms would have a law that would have your parents' gender or parents' marital status result in a person losing their citizenship,” Trudeau told the Vancouver Observer over the phone about the Liberals Friday media release.

“I am looking forward to the Conservatives being agreeable to this. The ball is in their court. We are not looking to get into a big battle over this and hopefully they will find some of our reforms agreeable…if not, we will bring it ourselves when we form a government.”

The announcement is a breath of hope for remaining Lost Canadians like Jackie Scott, who after more than five years of applications is still being denied her citizenship because she was born out of wedlock before Canada’s first citizenship act in 1947.

“This is a tremendous step forward. Finally a political party that understands the inequities in the Citizenship Act and the unfair treatment of the 5% left behind Lost Canadians,” Scott said.

Canada’s most recent citizenship legislation, 2008’s Bill C-37, re-enfranchised thousands of Canadians whose citizenship had been taken from them due to antiquated and sexist laws. It did not, however, return citizenship to all of them.

“Mr. Harper, maybe I shouldn’t be asking you this question, just as you shouldn’t be asking me, but were you born in wedlock? That question is inappropriate as is your decision to deny me citizenship because of it,” Scott said.

Celyeste Power, Press Secretary for Citizenship and Immigration Minister, Jason Kenney, told the Vancouver Observer that the Conservative government was aware of outstanding problems.

“Our government takes this issue very seriously and we sympathize with those whose citizenship had been questioned because of outdated citizenship laws.”

Power would not comment specifically on the new Liberal promise or specific Lost Canadian examples.

“This bill (Bill- C-37) resolved the majority of cases and for those unresolved we continue to work with them on a case by case basis.”

Many Lost Canadians are still finding that the case-by-case process, known as a 5.4 special grant of citizenship, counts them out.

“I think the Conservative government has always held that 5.4 covers people. But we have seen that it has not been effective in working for people who deserve to be Canadian,” Trudeau said.

One time Lost Canadian-turned advocate, Don Chapman, said he was happy about today’s Liberal media release adding that he was looking forward to more action on the issue.

“Putting out a Lost Canadian press release effectively makes equality of rights and ongoing discrimination an election issue. I now call on all the other political parties to join Mr. Ignatieff, as the rights of citizenship belong to all Canadians- not just those of one particular party.”

Read more about Lost Canadians here.

Click here to read original story in Vancouver Observer

Justin Trudeau says citizenship rules that discriminate against Lost Canadians must change

Liberals pledge further action for “lost Canadians”

OTTAWA – A Liberal government will ensure that there is an effective path for ‘lost Canadians’ to obtain citizenship, Liberal Citizenship and Immigration Critic Justin Trudeau said today.

“The rules regarding Canadian citizenship must remain consistent with the values of theCharter of Rights and Freedoms,” Mr. Trudeau said. “To have people treated differently depending on which parent had Canadian citizenship or whether or not their parents were married is anachronistic at best, and at worst, a violation of the Charter.

“Any rules regarding Canadian citizenship that result in different treatment based on gender must be changed.”

The Citizenship Acts of 1947 and 1977 contained intricate rules that determined how Canadian citizenship could be obtained and how it could be lost. As a result of these complex rules, it has been argued that hundreds of thousands of people worldwide believed with good reason that they were Canadian citizens, but in actual fact were not.

Although in 2008, Bill C-37 restored citizenship to many of these people retroactively, it left out some who consider themselves to be “lost Canadians” and still treats some individuals differently depending on which parent had Canadian citizenship and whether or not their parents were married.

“We welcome proposed changes to extend Canadian citizenship beyond the first generation limit for the children of people who were born, or adopted, abroad while their parent was working for the federal, provincial or territorial governments, but this still excludes some individuals who consider themselves to be ‘lost Canadians’,” said Mr. Trudeau.

Although some lost Canadians can get a special grant of citizenship, it only recognizes their status from the date of the grant forward, which can lead to further complications.

“Solutions must also provide 'lost Canadians' with a path to citizenship that is retroactive to birth, or when that citizenship was lost, as the case may be,” said Mr. Trudeau. “We need some common sense when it comes to this issue.”


-30-

Contact:



Office of Justin Trudeau, MP, 613-995-8872



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Pour diffusion immédiate
Le 18 mars 2011



Les libéraux demandent d’autres mesures pour les « Canadiens déchus »


OTTAWA – Un gouvernement libéral garantira qu’il y a un moyen efficace pour les « Canadiens déchus » d’obtenir leur citoyenneté, a déclaré aujourd’hui le porte-parole libéral responsable de la Citoyenneté et et immigration, Justin Trudeau.

« Les règlements de la citoyenneté canadienne doivent demeurer conformes aux valeurs de laCharte des Droits et Libertés, a affirmé M. Trudeau. Que des gens soient traités différemment selon l’état matrimonial de leurs parents et le statut de citoyenneté canadienne de ces derniers est complètement dépassé et représente même une violation de la Charte.

« Tous les règlements concernant la citoyenneté canadienne qui occasionnent un traitement différent selon le sexe doivent être modifiés. »

Les Lois sur la citoyenneté de 1947 et 1977 comportaient des règles compliquées pour déterminer comment la citoyenneté canadienne pouvait être obtenue et perdue. En raison de ces règlements complexes, certains ont soutenu que des centaines de milliers de personnes partout dans le monde pensaient, avec raison, qu’ils étaient des citoyens canadiens, alors qu’en réalité ils ne l’étaient pas.

Bien qu’en 2008 le projet de loi C-37 a redonné la citoyenneté à plusieurs de ces personnes, il a ignoré certains individus qui se considèrent comme étant des « Canadiens déchus » et traite toujours les gens différemment selon l’état matrimonial de leurs parents et le statut de citoyenneté canadienne de ces derniers.

« Nous appuyons les changements proposés pour octroyer la citoyenneté canadienne, au-delà de la première génération, aux enfants des personnes qui sont nés ou ont été adoptés à l’étranger tandis que leur parent travaillait pour le gouvernement fédéral, provincial ou territorial. Par contre, cela exclut tout de même certains individus qui se considèrent comme des « Canadiens déchus », a souligné M. Trudeau.

Bien que certains « Canadiens déchus » puissent obtenir la citoyenneté à titre spécial, il ne reconnaît leur statut qu’à partir de la date d’obtention de cette citoyenneté, ce qui peut entraîner d’autres problèmes.

« Les solutions doivent également donner aux “ Canadiens déchus ” un moyen d’obtenir la citoyenneté qui est rétroactif à leur date de naissance, ou à la date où cette citoyenneté a été perdue, selon le cas, a conclu M. Trudeau. Nous devons faire preuve de bon sens dans le traitement de cet enjeu. »




-30-

Renseignements :

Bureau de Justin Trudeau, député, 613-995-8872

Toronto Sun: Canada Pension Plan debacle

Toronto SunThe appalling lengths one Canadian has had to go to, and still he can't get his retirement money

by Rob Granatstein, Editorial Page Editor, Toronto Sun

Click here to read original story in the Toronto Sun

While convicted double murderer and sex criminal Russell Williams stews in jail collecting his $60,000-a-year military pension, Keith Wallace wonders why he can’t get his pension application approved.

Wallace isn’t a bad guy, or a criminal.

He’s also not a recent immigrant to Canada.

He is about to turn 65.

Born in Great Britain, he came to Canada by boat as a baby. As the son of a Canadian soldier, he is automatically a Canadian.

But now that he’s ready to head into his golden years, he applied for entry into the Canada Pension Plan.

Instead of the expected rubber stamp, he climbed aboard the merry-go-round of government bureaucracy.

“The pension is critical to us,” said Wallace, who had to stop working after being diagnosed with prostate cancer.

“I’m running around in circles,” he said. “I think they’re trying to befuddle you, so you lose what you’re entitled to.”

Despite having a social insurance number since he turned 16, a driver’s licence, being educated in Canadian schools, being approved for a passport in 1999, having a marriage certificate from 1970, and paying taxes all his adult life, none of it is good enough for our pencil pushers in Ottawa.

The bureaucranks wanted proof of when he entered Canada, including date, port and the name of the ship.

His mom died 40 years ago. His dad is in his 90s and, understandably, can’t recall details of the family’s arrival.

The government suggested he file a request with the federal archives to find the information — cost, $110 — but also told him it’s unlikely he’d find anything there anyway.

“Who keeps stuff from 1946?” Wallace said, adding any family records are gone because a house fire when he was six destroyed all the family’s possessions.

“They agree I’m a Canadian citizen,” Wallace said. “But they say I have to prove I’ve been here in Canada the whole time.”

Wallace says his marriage certificate alone proves he’s been in Canada for more than 40 years but, “they won’t accept it.”

Wallace has found, and this won’t surprise anyone, that government doesn’t work for the people it’s supposed to help.

Information in one ministry’s computer doesn’t jibe with other departments and isn’t easily searchable.

And, based on Wallace’s experience, well-paid government employees won’t do the work to solve easily-solvable problems.

Everyone is sending him in a different direction.

“Basically, I have to pay the government for records the government has, to show the government I have lived here all my life, which the government has the records to prove,” an exasperated Wallace said.

Wallace turned to the Sun for help after being told again and again to try this or try that, even though the government official admitted at each turn it probably won’t suffice.

As he creeps closer and closer to his pension eligibility date, the newly-remarried Cambridge resident wonders if he’ll ever see his money.

The official government response from Human Resources and Skills Development Canada reads like this:

“For residence, an applicant must furnish a statement giving full particulars of all periods of residence in Canada and of all absences from Canada. Documentation must be provided for the original entry date into Canada for foreign born applicants ... Canadian citizenship and immigration documents required to support OAS applications will be issued by Citizenship and Immigration Canada directly to the applicants.”

Well, that solves nothing.

Meanwhile, Wallace has learned he’s part of a growing club who can’t get access to a pension plan they’ve contributed to for years.

So while Russell Williams sits in prison, “earning” $60,000 a year, and not paying his bills — including $8,000 in victim surcharge fees he owes — Wallace gets treated like an alien by his own country.

Nice system.

rob.granatstein@sunmedia.ca

Twitter: robedits

March 13, 2011

Vancouver Observer: Daughter of Canadian war veteran fights 18 years for citizenship


Sheila Walshe's mother and father on their wedding day in 1942.

Before his death in 2004, Lloyd Cross, couldn't believe that the country he fought for would refuse to recognize his daughter as Canadian. Missing his first Remembrance Day parade since the end of World War II that same year, his daughter, Sheila Cross, marched in his place. For Walshe, the battle her father waged in Europe all those years ago ended in 2009, but not without a cost.

Click here to read the original article in the Vancouver Observer.

Sheila Walshe, 67, holds a Canadian record that will likely never be broken. She has been a Canadian citizen, not once, not twice, not thrice, but four times. Her most recent acclimation came in 2009, when a brown letter from Ottawa arrived on her doorstep in Kelowna, BC, saying the government now recognized her birthright from the date of Canada’s first citizenship act, January 1, 1947.

“I’ve got two citizenship cards now, and they are not going to take them from me, I can guarantee you,” she said with an enthusiastic British accent in a phone interview with the Vancouver Observer.

You might think Walshe to be a decorated war veteran, a Noble Prize winning scientist, or maybe a hero who saved a busload of children from a burning school bus to warrant such special attention, but that’s not the case. To count her lucky would be a testament to resilient optimism. The only prize for Walshe’s four-times-Canadian record is relief. Her commendations cost her entire life savings to fight, and tested her faith in the country she calls home.

Walshe’s 18-year ordeal began in England in 1991 when she applied for her Canadian passport.

“In June, 1992, I got the letter saying I had a claim for Canadian Citizenship, however, I ceased to be a Canadian citizen on March 30th, 1967, because I did not reside in Canada on my 24th birthday.”

Until Amendments to the Canadian Citizenship Act were made law with Bill C-37 in 2009, if a Canadian born abroad did not reside in Canada on their 24th birthday they could be stripped of their citizenship. At twenty-four, Walshe was in England.

"I was totally unaware of the necessity. I had always accepted it as a fact that I was one [Canadian]," she said.

And as if this outdated law wasn’t enough to put the nail in the coffin of Walshe’s Canadian identity, the letter also said that because she hadn’t taken steps as a youth to reaffirm her Canadian status, she was twice-over not entitled.

Walshe’s citizenship woes originated during the turbulent years before she was born. In 1941, her Canadian father, Lloyd Cross, a veteran of Canada’s tank divisions in World War Two, fell in love with her British mother whom he married in 1942.

“My father was in the Three Rivers Tank Regiment, based in Worthing, Sussex, England. He requested permission from his C.O. to marry, and this is recorded in his Army records, of which I have a certified copy, Dad got it for me. He was granted permission to marry and the following year I was born.”

Her father was fortunate to survive some of the hardest fought battlefields in Italy and Germany, and at wars end moved his wife and three-year-old daughter to Canada. Fate, however, would not be as kind to her parents as it was to him during the war (he survived two tank wrecks). For reasons Walshe doesn’t know to this day, her mother whisked her and her two Canadian born siblings back to England in 1952, telling the kids their father had died. Walshe was nine years old.

“This was without my fathers knowledge, so I was, in fact, abducted, with absolutely no choice in the matter,” Walshe said, spending her youth and adult life in England under that assumption.

On a whim in 1990, she sent a postcard to distant relatives in Canada. With great shock, came a very strange reply. It was from her father. Forty years of separation flashed through her eyes as she realized her life had been based on a lie. She visited Canada as soon as possible where she was welcomed with open arms by her new found Canadian half siblings and her father.

“Always I was yearning for the land in which I had known such happiness as a child.”

After being rejoined with the kin she’d been robbed of, Walshe sold her home in England and made the steps for a permanent move. That is when she found out that despite having a Canadian father, would be citizenship allocation number one, and having been a landed immigrant in 1946 pre-dating the first Canadian Citizenship Act, would be citizenship allocation number two, that she had no right to be here.

“‘I could have died in that war,’” Walshe recollects her father saying about her scenario.

“He was a Canadian British soldier… and I am his Canadian daughter. That’s what made him so angry."

He passed away before seeing her citizenship recognized.

Before receiving a special 5.4 grant of citizenship in 2007, and her official recognition back to 1947 in 2009, Walshe was a Lost Canadian – would be citizens who through no fault of their own have been stripped of their nationality rights because of antiquated provisions in the Canadian Citizenship Act.

While most of these laws have been struck from the book, like the one that said Walshe had to live in Canada on her 24th birthday, there are still laws that effect an untold number who are still finding out that they too are not Canadian. One of those laws pertains to Jackie Scott, 65, who is being denied citizenship because she was born out of wedlock to Canadian soldier and British mother in World War II.

“There’s no clear and informative guidelines. Its like someone picks a name out of a hat and says that one’s got the thumbs up and that one’s got the thumbs down – they’re playing Caeser,” Walshe said of Scott’s case, whose plight the Vancouver Observer has been following since July, 2010.

No sense is right. Walshe has dozens of letters bearing the signatures of countless officials from numerous Ministry’s spanning three Canadian Prime Ministers – letters that say the problem belongs to another department.

Some acclaimed Lost Canadian’s have been fast tracked through the bureaucracy over the years, like Liberal Senator Romeo Dallaire, who was born abroad and not in Canada on his 24th birthday, to save government embarrassment. Others have not been so lucky in the citizenship raffle. Canada’s last surviving World War I veteran, Jack Babcock, almost died disenfranchised and would have were it not for a last minute ministerial intervention.

Like Sheila Walshe, Jackie Scott’s father was also a Canadian soldier stationed in Britain during World War II. And like Walshe once faced bureaucratic stonewalling, Scott is waiting on another set of applications and getting no answers.

“I got letters from all of them [Ministry heads] over the years and they passed me like a parcel. Nobody opened the parcel. They just passed it,” Walshe said of her ordeal.

Reports from the Vancouver Observer have shown the same. In February 2011, the Observer reached out to the Ministry for the Status of Women but was told Scott’s case was an immigration issue – this despite the fact that Scott’s charter rights are being violated by sexist laws pertaining to her mother’s chastity. In March 2011, after eight months of stonewalling, the office of the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration replied to the Vancouver Observer's numerous requests in an email about outstanding Lost Canadian cases.

“This government takes the issue of people’s citizenship very seriously, and we sympathize with all those whose citizenship has been questioned due to outdated citizenship laws that have been on the books for many years. We have taken measures to give citizenship to those who are not Canadian because of outdated provisions in former legislation.

Your support for Ms. Scott has been noted. Although I cannot discuss the details of her case, I can inform you that her circumstances have been fully considered by Citizenship and Immigration Canada officials.”

The correspondence was signed “S. Charbonneau, Ministerial Enquiries Division. Attached was the adage: This electronic address is not available for reply.”

Click here to read the original article in the Vancouver Observer.

National Post: War bride children deserve better

Tuesday, Mar. 8, 2011

On the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day, one group of women that comes to mind is war brides. Their immigrant story of love, courage and adaptation to a new life in Canada is an indelible part of our national identity.

Click here to read original article in the National Post.

But immigration is one thing, citizenship another. Sixty-five years after arriving in Canada, war brides and their children are being put through the wringer at Citizenship and Immigration because of an obscure rule that changed their citizenship status after Jan. 1, 1947: Those most affected are children who came with their mothers on war bride ships.

They are the "lost" Canadian war bride children, now age 65-plus, who discover they are not citizens because they didn't apply so many years ago. Problem is, nobody told them they had to -imagine the anxiety when federal entitlements such as old age pension, medicare and passports are threatened or revoked.

And it gets worse. If the war bride child was born out of wedlock, they are denied citizenship because of a discriminatory section of the 1947 Act. They can get a special grant, but it only recognizes their status from the date of the grant forward.

As a historian and human rights activist, I am ashamed at the silence from women's groups on this issue. After 65 years, I don't think I'm asking too much for feminists to make a principled stand, especially for those children whose only crime was to be born out of wedlock during the Second World War.

Melynda Jarratt, Fredericton.

Click here to read original article in the National Post.

Halifax Chronicle Herald: Time for women’s groups to stand up for war bride children

By MELYNDA JARRATT
Tue, Mar 8 - 4:54 AM

This is the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day and all across the country, people are celebrating women who have made a significant impact on Canadian history.

Click to read original article in the Halifax Chronicle Herald

If there is one group of women that Canadians love to talk about, it’s war brides. Their immigrant story of love, courage and adaptation to a new life in Canada is an indelible part of our national and cultural identity.

But when it comes to war brides, immigration is one thing — citizenship is another. It’s high time politicians bowed their heads in shame at the dark side of the Canadian war bride story that everyone, especially Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney would like us to forget.

Canadians should know the real story of how war brides and their children were lied to about their citizenship status when they came to Canada in 1946, and how that lie has come back to haunt them more than 65 years since the end of the war.

When war brides were brought to Canada, they were told they and their children became citizens by virtue of marriage to Canadian servicemen.

The war brides had no reason to question their status. Didn’t Prime Minister Mackenzie King himself call them "a splendid addition" to Canada’s citizenship?

They didn’t know that with the introduction of Canada’s first Citizenship Act on Jan. 1, 1947, the rules changed. After that date, war brides and their children had to apply for citizenship: The problem was, nobody told them.

Over the years, many wives learned about the new rules after being hauled out of line at customs and warned about their Canadian status. But not every war bride travelled back home to Britain or Europe and, whether through ignorance or procrastination, not every one applied for her Canadian citizenship.

From time to time, we’ll hear about women like 87-year-old Priscilla Corrie of British Columbia, who found out in 2008 that she was not a citizen. Once her story hit the national media in 2010, the department moved quickly to solve her problem, but it was only because her story went public.

Those who are most affected by the citizenship issue are war bride children who were born overseas during the war. They, too, never knew about the change in rules but unlike with their mothers, the department doesn’t seem to mind picking a fight with the younger generation.

They are the "lost Canadian" war bride children, stripped of their citizenship because they didn’t fill out a piece of paper so many years ago.

Now aged 65 and older, these children are discovering they are not Canadian citizens. What ensues is a bureaucratic nightmare that can take years and thousands of dollars to fix. Imagine the anxiety when federal entitlements such as Old Age Pension, medicare and passports are denied until the paperwork is in order.

And it gets worse. If the war bride children were born out of wedlock, they are denied citizenship status because of a discriminatory section of the 1947 act. They can get a special grant of citizenship, but it only recognizes their status from the date of the grant forward. Jackie Scott is fighting to be recognized as a Canadian citizen, but her birth status is being used against her by the government.

Which brings me back to International Women’s Day. No politician or feminist would dare defend a bumbling bureaucracy that targets war brides and their children, nor the anachronistic and discriminatory legislation that bans children born out of wedlock from citizenship. But Jason Kenney does it all the time.

As a historian and women’s rights activist, I find it hard to believe that women’s organizations have not taken up the cause of war brides and their children who are being treated so badly by the Department of Citizenship and Immigration.

And after 65 years, I don’t think I’m asking too much for women’s groups across Canada to make a principled stand on behalf of those children whose only crime was to be born out of wedlock during the Second World War.

Melynda Jarratt is a historian of Canadian war brides and an advocate of the Lost Canadians. She lives in Fredericton, N.B.

Click to read original article in the Halifax Chronicle Herald

Vancouver Observer: Lost Canadian Velma Demerson's tragic story of love and loss


By Darren Fleet, The Vancouver Observer

Her ‘crime’ was different, having a relationship with and then marrying a Chinese man, but the result the same. Thrown in jail, stripped of citizenship and child, and forced abroad, Demerson offers a historical perspective on sexist laws that still deny Canadians their right to nationality. Another segment in the Vancouver Observer's Lost Canadian series shines light on a tragedy that has yet to be apologized for by the government.


Lost Canadian Velma Demerson’s days of looking over her shoulder ended in 2004 when she was returned her Canadian citizenship after more than six decades of being a pariah. More than six years on, Demerson continues to be a voice for Canadian women who remain victims of discriminatory laws still on the books. Laws like the 1947 Canadian Citizenship Act, which denies women like Jackie Scott Canadian citizenship because she was born out of wedlock.

Read the original story in the Vancouver Observer.

“I don’t know why the Canadian government is so adamant about things like that. For what reason? They are still under that old fashioned law where women are treated as children. There are women in this country who are stateless. The only time they find out is when they go to apply for a passport and then they find out the way that I did.”

As a young woman, Demerson was arrested under the 1897 Ontario Female Refuges act for being “incorrigible.” Until it was repealed in the 1960’s the law stated that a women, 16 to 35, could be arrested and institutionalized if they were found pregnant, out of wedlock, or drunk in public. Eighteen years old in 1939, Demerson was caught at the home of her Chinese lover, Harry Yip, and taken into custody.

She writes in her book about the first months of her internment:

“I don’t think about my fiancée anymore. My loyalties have dissolved in a sea of turmoil. I am still in shock. I will never think of sexuality…No one ever told me that I’m carrying a human being inside of me and I don’t acknowledge its existence. There’s a silent conspiracy to undermine that reality since I have antagonized the state by my monstrous behavior.”

Demerson was sentenced to ten months at Ontario's infamous Mercer Reformatory for Women. There, she said attending physicians performed eugenics testing on her and her unborn child, tests Demerson believes cost the health of her son and sent her down a path of despair and tragedy.

“I never quite recovered from what happened,” she said on the phone to the Vancouver Observer.

After her release from the Mercer Reformatory, Demerson was further punished, this time by the Federal government, for marrying the man she loved. Under yet another antiquated law, Demerson assumed the nationality of her Chinese husband, a legality she discovered when she applied for her first passport in 1948.

“I was told I was Chinese. And that I should apply for Chinese citizenship.”

Demerson then visited the Chinese embassy, only to be denied by them as well.

“Their attitude was of surprise. Perhaps no other Canadian women had gone there before. And they just treated me politely but then they eased me out the door and that was the end of it.”

She was officially stateless until 2004.

“I lost my son over this citizenship business,” Demerson says about the series of decisions she made in the wake of her treatment at the hands of the Canadian government.

After her denial in 1949, Demerson left Ontario to BC, where she applied for a passport under her maiden name, and was granted the document (records were not readily shared between offices until recently).

“I was subject to five years in jail if the government found out about it...you know, a false application. So I was scared every time that I left the country that I would get caught.”

She used her maiden passport to take her young son to Hong Kong, where she hoped he could have a better life away from the discrimination of Canadian society.

“If you were half Chinese and didn’t speak Chinese, you’d be called siwash and that was a derogatory term. I didn’t want him to belong nowhere, and he certainly didn’t belong in Canadian society. If he couldn’t fit into the Chinese, he would be a real a outcast.”

That decision turned out to be a tragic one.

Demerson’s marriage fell apart under the strain of her pariah status, and unable to make ends meet in Hong Kong, she sent her son home to his father in Canada without her. Upon return a year after, she discovered her son had been placed into state care. She was never allowed to raise him. The two never reconciled. He drowned at the age of 26.

Demerson’s story is an affront to the idea of what Canada is. But states, like people, are often never as good as they think they were. While the government today continues to correct past wrongs, many women are still subject to outdated laws like those once applied to Velma Demerson. Read more of their stories here.

Canada's first citizenship act came into effect on January 1, 1947, and was a product of its time. Discrimination was legal, particularly against women and children. Today Canadian citizenship is based on 1977 legislation, which means that citizenship in Canada is not necessarily Charter compliant.

Huge inequalities still exist where women can have fewer rights than men,where people born prior to 1947 may not actually be Canadian citizens, where the government can still deny citizenship because a person was born in or out-of wedlock, as well as several other archaic reasons.

"Thousands of unsuspecting Canadians remain at risk," said Don Chapman, an activist who fights tirelessly for the restoration of rights."

"Not just loss of citizenship but also pensions and other benefits. There's even a way that a Canadian citizen can give birth to a stateless child. Welcome to the world of Canada's Lost Canadians," Chapman said.

Find more information on this issue here on Champman's website http://www.LostCanadian.com and here for Vancouver Observer's Lost Canadian series.

Velma Demerson's book Incorrigible can be purchased through Wilfred Laurier University Press

Incorrigible: The book by Velma Demerson

On a May morning in 1939, eighteen-year-old Velma Demerson and her lover were having breakfast when two police officers arrived to take her away. Her crime was loving a Chinese man, a “crime” that was compounded by her pregnancy and subsequent mixed-race child. Sentenced to a home for wayward girls, Demerson was then transferred (along with forty-six other girls) to Torontos Mercer Reformatory for Females. The girls were locked in their cells for twelve hours a day and required to work in the on-site laundry and factory. They also endured suspect medical examinations. When Demerson was finally released after ten months’ incarceration weeks of solitary confinement, abusive medical treatments, and the state’s apprehension of her child, her marriage to her lover resulted in the loss of her citizenship status.

This book description and critical reviews are from Wilfred Laurier University Press website.

This is the story of how Demerson, and so many other girls, were treated as criminals or mentally defective individuals, even though their worst crime might have been only their choice of lover. Incorrigible is a survivor’s narrative. In a period that saw the rise of psychiatry, legislation against interracial marriage, and a populist movement that believed in eradicating disease and sin by improving the purity of Anglo-Saxon stock, Velma Demerson, like many young women, found herself confronted by powerful social forces. This is a history of some of those who fell through the cracks of the criminal code, told in a powerful first-person voice.

About Velma Demerson
Velma Demerson is a widow, and mother of three children—the first child, the son of her interracial marriage, died at age twenty-six. She has worked throughout her life in a variety of positions, mostly as a secretary for governments (provincial and federal) and lawyers. She is self-educated. This is her first book.

Reviews
“Demerson’s spare, unadorned account of the injustice done her is moving and courageous.”

— Brian Bethune, Maclean’s

“There are few chapters in Canadian legal history as shameful as the Female Refuges Act. Targeting young women—often already marginalized by class and “race”—for supposed “immoral” behaviour, the act ignored many basic principles of evidence and fair trial, leaving women at the mercy of a law profoundly shaped by sexist and racist assumptions. Women were incarcerated in correctional institutions, where they experienced a daily regime of shame and punishment. Velma Demerson’s courageous battle to expose this blatant injustice should be commended. By offering her own story, she has done an immeasureable service that will hopefully sharpen public awareness of current injustices.”

— Joan Sangster, teaches at Trent University, Peterborough, and is the author of Regulating Girls and Women: Sexuality, Family, and the Law in Ontario, 1920-1960 and Girl Trouble: Female Delinquency in English Canada

“Any thinking person should be outraged by the issue raised by Ms. Demerson.”

— David Suzuki

“Stories of rebels and outlaws have always been popular subjects for scholarly and popular histories. Those who have had their stories dramatized in plays, television shows, and on film, and even more so those who have published their memoirs, are overwhelmingly men. Here we see the memoir of a defiant woman in a moving account that could only have been a woman’s life story. Historians interested in recovering the experiences of people without access to formal avenues of power typically search in vain for the sort of material presented in this book — an insider’s look at the regulation and punishment of working-class women who strayed from the moral scripts of gender and race.”

— Carolyn Strange, author of Toronto’s Girl Problem: The Perils and Pleasures of the City, 1880-1930 and co-author (with Tina Loo) of True Crime, True North: The Golden Age of Canadian Pulp Magazines (2004).

“On the morning of May 3, 1939, a young Toronto couple, he in robe, she in pyjamas, had their morning meal stopped cold. “Police. Open up.”...

[In] the courthouse, the judge makes haste: “You are charged with being ’incorrigible’ and I sentence you to one year in the Belmont House.” The off-hand sentence cost Demerson dearly. Under the Female Refuges Act, the province of Ontario from 1896-1964 arrested and jailed, without trial or appeal, females from 16 to 35 whom magistrates suspected of undesirable social behaviour....

Demerson had two strikes against her. Her fiance was Harry Yip. At the time, the Chinese Exclusion Act forbade white women even to work in Chinese establishments, never mind have intimate relationships and subsequent mixed-race babies. The authorities were not alone in this judgement, nor were they alone the morning of the arrest. At their side was Demerson’s father....

[In the book] I’ve underscored text for socio-historic weight, poignant emotional recall and graphic detail....It’s intense and I take breaks. Rarely does a book make me cry; this one makes me sob. Angry? I’m irate....

The young mother deemed “unfit” decades earlier came back, in her 70s and 80s, ready to fight. And won. In 2002, Attorney-General David Young apologized on behalf of the government for “unfortunate and unjustified consequences for you and other women who were unjustifiably incarcerated.”...Author, advocate, whistle-blower and role-model, at a sprightly 84, Demerson can not only still kick parliamentary ass but has written a provocative, informative work to resonate for generations to come.”

— Maggie Mortimer, The Globe and Mail

“Velma Demerson’s new memoir, Incorrigible, recounts in horrifying detail being imprisoned in 1939 under the Female Refuges Act...It’s a straightforward and at times brutally graphic account of her travails.”

— Andrea Baillie, The Star Phoenix (Saskatoon, SK)

“Canada’s political leaders like to tout our country’s ‘well-deserved reputation for tolerance.’ They are less eager to discuss whether that reputation is wholly deserved....Based on the cruel and degrading experiences of Velma Demerson and other women imprisoned for ‘vagrancy’ or for simply being ‘incorrigible,’ Canada in the 1930s and 1940s was far less idyllic than what is portrayed in the history books....By bringing this disgraceful chapter of our history to light, Velma Demerson has demonstrated tremendous courage.”

— Scott Piatkowski, THIS Magazine

“Velma Demerson’s story remains an inspiration to tackle obstacles, and a reminder that we’re not alwasy as tolerant as we think we are.”

— Ricepaper

“The book, which made our reviewer weep, is a searing indictment of a time and attitude we would do well not to forget.”

— The Globe 100, Globe and Mail

“Others have written about the origins of legislation like the Female Refuges Act, about criminal court process at the lower levels of the system, and about the ideologies and routines of prisons and reformatories. But it is rare indeed to find material about any of these things written from unofficial sources and so unremittingly fromt the point of view of those subjected to the law. If [Demerson’s] account of the court hearings (if they can be called that0 is at all accurate, they represent a complete railroading of the defendant....In a series of chapters Demerson also gives us an excellent, and harrowing, description of life at the Mercer....The subject which looms largest...and which unquestionably is most disturbing to the reader, is her account of the medical ‘treatments’ to which she was subjected.”

— Jim Phillips, University of Toronto Quarterly, Letters in Canada

“A great read for those interested in legal history, and a reminder that those who do not know their history are doomed to repeat it.”

— The Barrister (Alberta Civil Trial Lawyers Association)

“Incorrigible describes in heart-rending detail the events leading up to the author’s incarceration, her harrowing experiences while confined, her eventual release, and her relationship with her beloved son, Harry Yip. Demerson’s powerful first-person account documents a shameful period in Canadian history, a time when outrageous abuses of power were committed in the name of social progress.”

— Beryl Hamilton, Canadian Book Review Annual

“There is only one reaction to this sad story - a mixture of outrage, fury and shame.... Incorrigible, I believe, should be mandatory reading in every Women’s Studies course in the land.”

— Clara Thomas, Canadian Woman Studies

Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 75 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON, Canada, N2L 3C5
Phone: 519-884-0710 x6124 — Fax: 519-725-1399 — Email: press@wlu.ca

This book description and critical reviews are from Wilfred Laurier University Press website.