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  • New faces, new Halifax

    The Halifax Daily News (Nova Scotia)
    June 20, 2004 Sunday

    New faces, new Halifax;

    With the multicultural fest in full swing, The Daily News's Shaune
    MacKinlay looks at our city's changing face

    More than 40,000 people are expected to visit Dartmouth's waterfront
    before today is done to take in performances by Armenian folk dancers
    and Middle Eastern belly dancers, eat Ugandan goat stew or Jamaican
    patties or enjoy a beer with people from around the globe who now
    call Halifax home.

    On this 20th anniversary of the Nova Scotia Multicultural Festival,
    Halifax is a city whose face is changing.

    "What we are mostly now seeing is immigration from Asia, Africa, the
    Caribbean, South America, all what we call visible minorities, so we
    will be seeing more diversity by just looking at people, not even
    hearing them," said Multicultural Association of Nova Scotia
    president Barbara Campbell.

    Arabic speakers now outnumber French speakers, Campbell said.

    Yet despite the growing number of cultures represented, Halifax is
    not the international mosaic it could be.

    A look back at Halifax immigration numbers over the past 30 years
    reveals a fairly flat line, with a burst of activity in the 1990s.
    Between 1991 and 2001, 7,505 immigrants came to the city, compared
    with 4,470 between 1981 and 1990, according to Statistics Canada.

    Unlike Toronto, where 43.7 per cent of the population identified
    themselves as foreign-born in the last census, only 6.9 per cent of
    Haligonians were immigrants.

    Despite Nova Scotia's reputation for warm welcomes, people in the
    province don't always greet visible-minority immigrants with open
    arms, Campbell said.

    "People are afraid to open up; they really don't know much about
    them," she said.

    Jerald Premanath, 40, came to Nova Scotia in 1984. After a short
    return to his native Sri Lanka and a two-year stint in Toronto,
    Premanath now proudly

    "Now, a lot of people on the street you see are from different
    countries," he said Friday at the festival, sporting an I Am Canadian
    hat and a Halifax T-shirt.

    Premanath's friends thought he was "crazy" to come to Nova Scotia, he
    said.

    "We have to do some publicity about this area, and bring some people
    over here," he said. "Once they get here I know they will never go
    back."

    Tana Mutasigh, 28, from Uganda, moved with his family to Halifax more
    than a decade ago.

    "I don't think there's enough support for people coming here from
    different places, so they always end up going to Toronto," he said.
    "I've known a lot of newcomers here who can't find jobs, but they go
    to Toronto and find jobs."

    It's not easy to draw immigrants. Without a critical mass, Halifax
    can't support the kinds of ethnic communities that make Toronto such
    a draw. Indeed, our only China Town is a restaurant.

    It takes people to draw people, said Ron Heisler, a federal
    immigration director for the Atlantic region. Heisler is on loan to
    the province this year to help draft a plan to attract immigrants to
    Nova Scotia and make them want to stay.

    "There hasn't been a real concerted and co-ordinated effort on how to
    deal with immigration," Heisler said.

    "They recognized that, and they want to develop options for cabinet
    on how to do this."

    It's about more than enhancing the province's cultural life: Nova
    Scotia needs immigrants.

    By as early as 2006, Heisler said, deaths will begin to exceed births
    in the province.

    "Without in-migration from other provinces, or immigration from
    outside, our population is going to continue to decline, but it's
    also going to continue to get older," he said.

    With fewer young people and more elderly Nova Scotians, Heisler said,
    all indications are that the province will face serious labour
    shortages, which will be felt sooner in Halifax.

    Anyone who thinks new immigrants are a drain on the province needs
    only talk to Heisler.

    "Our statistics show that the Nova Scotia immigrant population has a
    lower unemployment rate, they earn more, they earn less of their
    money in government transfers or payouts, they have higher degrees of
    university education, much higher levels of entrepreneurship and have
    management skill occupations," he said.

    It will take more than one level of government to make the province a
    place where newcomers want to put down roots, he said. They need
    meaningful employment, help learning English, and welcoming schools.
    Campbell agreed.

    "It's a matter of us, the residents here, taking time to speak, to
    reach out, to talk to them, to find out who they are, what they're
    all about," Campbell said. "It's up to us to make the first step, to
    welcome them."

    [email protected]

    WHERE HALIGONIANS HAVE COME FROM CALLS HALIFAX HOME. This city is
    home to 26,335 immigrants and non-permanent residents from more than
    130 countries. Here's where they come from:

    United Kingdom - 5,875
    United States - 3,655
    Lebanon - 1,165
    Germany - 1,010
    China - 990
    India - 920
    Kuwait - 785
    Netherlands - 590
    Poland - 590
    Greece - 585
    Viet Nam - 475
    Hong Kong - 445
    Italy - 410
    Philippines - 405
    South Korea - 335
    France - 305
    Saudi Arabia - 290
    Egypt - 260
    Yugoslavia - 260
    Ireland, Republic of - 240
    Iran - 225
    Russian Federation - 220
    United Arab Emirates - 215
    Pakistan - 200
    Iraq - 190
    Sri Lanka - 185
    Portugal - 180
    Palestine/West Bank/Gaza Strip - 170
    Trinidad and Tobago - 155
    Syria - 150
    Taiwan - 150
    Australia - 145
    Guyana - 140
    Japan - 140
    Bosnia and Herzegovina - 130
    Nigeria - 125
    Czech Republic - 120
    New Zealand - 120
    Croatia - 115
    Turkey - 115
    Denmark - 110
    Jordan - 110
    South Africa - 110
    Belgium - 105
    Hungary - 105
    Sierra Leone - 105
    Jamaica - 100
    Ethiopia - 95
    Kenya - 95
    Brazil - 90
    Cuba - 90
    Malaysia - 90
    Mexico - 90
    Romania - 90
    Barbados - 85
    Honduras - 85
    Austria - 80
    Bermuda - 75
    Sudan - 75
    Sweden - 70
    Afghanistan - 65
    Thailand - 60
    Zimbabwe - 60
    Ukraine - 55
    Antigua and Barbuda - 50
    Congo - 50
    Colombia - 45
    Ghana - 45
    Norway - 45
    Saint Lucia - 45
    Spain - 45
    Saint Pierre and Miquelon - 40
    Slovakia - 40
    Qatar - 40
    Czechoslovakia (former) - 35
    Singapore - 35
    Switzerland - 35
    Chile - 30
    Dominican Republic - 30
    Estonia - 30
    Israel - 30
    Oman - 30
    Peru - 30
    Uganda - 30
    Bulgaria - 25
    El Salvador - 25
    Guatemala - 25
    Haiti - 25
    Latvia - 25
    Liberia - 25
    Zambia - 25
    Argentina - 20
    Bahamas - 20
    Bahrain - 20
    Myanmar - 20
    Slovenia - 20
    Somalia - 20
    Tanzania - 20
    Venezuela - 20
    Yemen - 20
    Algeria - 15
    Cambodia - 15
    Finland - 15
    Indonesia - 15
    Libya - 15
    Nicaragua - 15
    Albania - 10
    Angola - 10
    Anguilla - 10
    Bangladesh - 10
    Bolivia - 10
    Botswana - 10
    Burundi - 10
    Chad - 10
    Cyprus - 10
    Dominica - 10
    Eritrea - 10
    Grenada - 10
    Kazakhstan - 10
    Lithuania - 10
    Madagascar - 10
    Mauritius - 10
    Moldova - 10
    Montserrat - 10
    Morocco - 10
    Namibia - 10
    Netherlands Antilles - 10
    North Korea - 10
    Saint Vincent, Grenadines - 10
    Togo - 10
    Tunisia - 10
    Uruguay - 10
    U.S.S.R. (former) - 10
    *source: 2001 census data
    GRAPHIC: TASTING NEW CULTURES: English-language students (from left)
    yo Yeon Park from Korea, Hae Ryen Lee, from Korea, Elsa Pacheco Luis
    from Mexico, and Kwang Hee Lee, from Korea, enjoy Korean food at the
    multicultural festival in Dartmouth. The group members study English
    together at a language school just across from Alderney Landing in
    Dartmouth.; STEWS UP! Tana Mutasigh serves up Uganda style goat stew
    at the multicultural festival in Dartmouth.
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