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- Karsh & King,
first citizenship ceremony
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- Karsh, King and Canada's first citizenship
ceremony
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- By Lian Goodall
- On July 1, citizenship ceremonies will be taking place all
over the province. But did you know our first citizenship ceremony
took place in January 1947? This article looks at this historic
event and two of its well-known participants: immigrant photographer
Yousuf Karsh, and Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie
King.
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- The First Event
It was a cold, snowy evening January 3, 1947, when the dignitaries
and other participants arrived at the Supreme Court building
in Ottawa. The music and red coats of the RCMP band soon set
a cheery mood as the candidates from Romania, Italy, Estonia
and others took their seats on the benches at the front of the
room of the Great Chamber.
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- The Immigrant Participants: Yousuf Karsh, Canadian Citizen
Number 10
Ten people of various ethnic backgrounds had been invited to
participate. One of these was Yousuf Karsh, a British subject
of Armenian birth who had been born in 1908 in Turkey. Karsh
and his family had survived the genocide of Christian Armenians
and immigrated safely to Syria in the 1920s. Karsh had come to
Canada as a teenager, later setting up his successful portrait
photography studio in the country's capital. With his stunning
'Roaring Lion' photograph of a scowling Winston Churchill in
1941, Karsh of Ottawa became the most famous portraitist in the
world.
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- Karsh and his wife, Solange, were thrilled to attend the
January ceremony. Karsh sat with his fellow immigrants, his large
brown eyes fixed intently on the speaker, his fingers nervously
held together as he listened. In fact, the entire country listened
over a nationally broadcast radio program and the movie cameras
whirred in the otherwise quiet hall.
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- Wearing his scarlet robes, Chief Justice Rinfret spoke in
English and French about how different groups made Canada strong.
Canada had "accepted the gifts" from each "and
made them into an enduring heritage." Then, one by one,
the candidates promised to serve the King and to "faithfully
obey the laws of Canada and fulfill my duties as a Canadian citizen."
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- Karsh received the 10th Canadian citizenship certificate.
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- The Political Participants: William Lyon Mackenzie King,
Citizen Number One
Prime Minister King (b 1874) was committed throughout much of
his 20-plus year career in politics to having the people of Canada
become officially Canadians. With the Statute of Westminster
in 1931, colonialism shifted to a commonwealth of equal nations.
World Wars 1 and 2 were events that helped further alter the
concept of British nationals domiciled in Canada, to Canadian
nationals, to full Canadian citizens. Front and centre behind
this change, and rightfully proud of the Canadian Citizenship
Act passed in 1946, was William Lyon Mackenzie King.
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- However, King had some regrets about the ceremony, expressed
in his diary on January 3, 1947, that "negroes and Indians
(were not) among our citizens. It would have made clear that
colour was no ban to citizenship; would have recognized those
who are descendants of a slave race." Blacks in Canada had
been voting citizens for some time; perhaps King wished that
some black immigrants had been granted citizenship. However,
the rights of Status Indians and Inuit were less clear, and they
did not gain fuller citizenship rights until 1956 and 1960.
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- Despite these short comings, King found the overall ceremony
impressive, and was pleased about the "instantaneous applause"
he received when he began his speech with "I speak as a
citizen of Canada." The prime minister was, in fact, the
first citizen of Canada. Ten politicians received the first 10
certificates, and perhaps unsurprisingly, King was Canadian Citizen
0001.
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- After the ceremony, King's diary notes that he spoke "with
Karsh," whom he had known formally and socially since the
prime minister became the photographer's unofficial patron in
the early 1940s (Karsh's official patron since 1936 was governor-general,
the head of state, not the prime minister, the head of government).
King noted that on January 3, Karsh "was evidently deeply
moved by the whole citizenship ceremony."
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- Indeed, Karsh was moved, but he did not lose his sense of
humour. His version of speaking to the prime minister about the
ceremony is quite witty. The photographer recounted that he told
Citizen 0001 that if he, Karsh, put his thumb over the '0' in
'10' on his certificate, that he was Number One. But then it
was part of Karsh's profession to coax smiles from his clients,
especially ones that had such practised official reserve as Prime
Minister King.
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- After the Ceremony: Karsh
The bells of the Peace Tower rang out as the guests left the
ceremony. Yousuf's uncle, photographer George Nakash, and his
wife, Florence, had travelled from Montreal to watch their nephew
take part in the historic proceedings. Solange Karsh wrote to
friends that they all celebrated into "the wee small hours."
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- In Syria, Yousuf's parents were extremely proud of their
son. For Yousuf, being part of the first citizenship ceremony
in Canada was a great honour that he would cherish throughout
his life.
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- After the Ceremony: King
King commented in his diary that as he left the Supreme Court
Building he was "perfectly enchanted with the view of the
square in front and with the quiet of the moon-lit night."
He felt he wanted someone to talk to after such a moving event,
especially as it related, for him, to his rebel grandfather William
Lyon Mackenzie's 1837 "fight for Canadian citizenship."
So he dropped in to visit his friends Godfroy and Joan Patteson
and partook in some "sherry and biscuits." Then he
went home, and before turning out the lights downstairs, he "placed
the little certificate in front of my grandfather's portrait."
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- Its Place In History
King wrote a little more in his diary that night. He felt that
not all of his colleagues appreciated the significance of the
day's events. However, to King it meant something not only for
the present generations of Canadians, but also for those who
had gone on before:
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- It gave me a feeling of close fellowship with a number of
folk all through the land - the people that one meets on the
thoroughfare of life and I had a strong feeling of the presence
of others who have participated in our public life being about
and rejoicing with me at what the day signified. It will have
its place in the history of our country.
- This senior statesman closed his consideration by remarking:
It is interesting, too, that my speech should have related to
the place of my birth and to the speech I made on citizenship
there over 21 years ago. It is interesting to see these expanding
circles and in the story of one's life the circles completing
themselves.
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- Today
"The place of my birth" that King referred to, where
he had spoken about Canadian citizenship, is today's city of
Kitchener. In Kitchener, Woodside National Historic Site of Canada,
the Parks Canada administered-site that celebrates King's boyhood,
still considers the Canadian citizenship ceremony to be a special
occasion. They have been hosting these ceremonies since 1995
and on July 1, the 14th Canadian citizenship ceremony will be
held at Woodside and will see another crop of smiling new Canadians
proudly holding fresh certificates.
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- If you want to find out more about visiting, contact Woodside
National Historic Site of Canada at 528 Wellington St., north
of Kitchener, 519-571-5684 or 1-888-773-888. Electronically,
it's on-woodside@pc.gc.ca
or visit pc.gc.ca/lhn-nhs/on/woodside/contact_e.asp/
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- Photo credit: Arthur L. Joliffe and Yousuf
Karsh at the first citizenship ceremony. Chris Lund
photo
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- Lian Goodall is the author of William Lyon Mackenzie King:
Dreams and Shadows (XYZ) and Photographing Greatness: the Story
of Karsh (Napoleon, ages 10 to 14).
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