“There has been a certain dilution of the use of the Portuguese mother tongue. Only approximately 53.7 percent (240,680) of the Portuguese in Canada declare Portuguese as their mother tongue”, stated José Carlos Teixeira.
Data from the 2021 census reveal that around 448,000 respondents declared to be of Portuguese ethnic origin.
The professor of geography at the University of British Columbia lamented that almost “half of the community does not speak Portuguese” (about 207,625), as a result of the “assimilation of the new generations”.
“The remaining 46.3 percent do not speak Portuguese, they no longer use this language. This is the result of integration, some would say that it is the result of the assimilation of the new generations”, he underlined.
That is why it is necessary "in the long term" for Portuguese immigration to Canada to increase. "The new Portuguese who will arrive here will be important for the maintenance of the Portuguese language, the Portuguese neighbourhoods themselves, the use of services, trade".
More than just football
José Carlos Teixeira, who has lived in Canada since 1978, justified that "this is a country of immigration", as he believes in the integration of all, having adopted a "policy of multiculturalism".
On the other hand, the teacher admitted to being confident in the younger generations who are “rediscovering Portugal”.
“It's not just football that connects and attracts more and more young people. It's football, it's music, it's the visits that many parents make to Portugal. Even at university, the students I have show an immense interest in Portugal. Even if it is to visit where their father or mother were born, but also to do tourism and get to know the land of their ancestors”, he highlighted.
At a time when official Portuguese immigration to Canada is marking its 70th anniversary, the second and third generations “are integrating well, not only in the labour market, but from a social and cultural point of view, they do an integral part of this complex but rich cultural mosaic that characterizes Canada”.
In 1952 Portugal and Canada, after signing a bilateral agreement, officially started diplomatic relations, which allowed the following year (May 13, 1953), the Pioneers to dock aboard the ship Saturnia, in the port of Halifax, on the east coast of Canada.
However, since the 15th century there has been a record of the Portuguese presence in the country, from the navigators João Fernandes Lavrador to Gaspar Corte Real.
There is absolutely no reason for any Portuguese Citizen to immigrate to Canada. Canada does not offer the opportunities it once did. Grass is definitely not greener over here. Poor wages, high taxes, poor government, overwhelmed health care system and the lists goes on.
By A Fernandes from Other on 13 May 2023, 01:15
What noncence. !!!!!
By J from Lisbon on 13 May 2023, 07:24
Maybe Trudeau needs more well behaved citizens who believe everything the government tells them to fall for his porky pies and keep him in power!
By Anna from Madeira on 13 May 2023, 20:53
I have to strongly agree with A. Fernandes' opinion! Canada is becoming just an illusion, a mirage in a desert of growing basic needs! This incredible rich country has been poorly managed over the last decades or, I would rather say, increasingly managed just for the benefit of an everyday smaller and richer minority!
Basic social services, public education, human health care, critical infrastructure, senior services and the future of the country and society have been neglected and jeopardized by an increasing wave of privatizing American-like policies managed by a class of opportunistic, self centered and politically correct people who control power, politics, the economy and the society of what appears to become a dangerous future of this increasingly Americanized country!
By Tony Fernandes from Other on 14 May 2023, 14:52
As a Portuguese Canadian living in Canada for over 40 years where I received full education in Canada, I still find it hard to establish a career in Canada. I feel that most people view me as a Portuguese immigrant who should be doing lesser work. Today, most people who leave Portugal do so with degrees in their luggage, so I ask a question: why would Portuguese people want to immigrate to Canada when Canadians don’t value them?
By Leo Lourenco from Other on 05 Jul 2023, 17:01