Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jun 2003 Source: Daily News of Los Angeles (CA) Copyright: 2003 Daily News of Los Angeles Contact: http://www.dailynews.com/info/contact/index.asp Website: http://www.DailyNews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/246 Author: Clifford Krauss, The New York Times CANADA AHEAD OF U.S. IN TERMS OF SOCIAL CHANGE Same-Sex Marriage Latest Example TORONTO -- Canada's decision to allow marriage between same-sex couples is only one of many signs that this once tradition-bound society is undergoing social changes at an astonishing rate. Increasingly, Canada has been on a social policy course pursued by many Western European and Scandinavian countries, gradually moving more out of step with the United States over the last few decades. Even as the government announced this month that it would rewrite the definition of marriage, it was transforming its drug policies by decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana and permitting "safe-injection" clinics in Vancouver for heroin addicts in an effort to fight disease. The large population of native peoples remains impoverished, but there are growing signs that they are taking greater control of their destinies, and their leaders now govern two territories occupying more than a third of Canada's land mass. Canada has never had a revolution or a civil war, and little social turbulence aside from sporadic rebellions in the 19th century and a splash of terrorism in Quebec in the 1960s and 1970s. Regarding ease of social change, Canada is virtually in a category by itself. The transformation of the country's demographics, for example, has been breathtaking since the 1970s, when the government of Pierre Trudeau opened wide the country's doors to Africans, Asians and West Indians as part of an attempt to fill Canada's huge, underpopulated hinterland. Eighteen percent of the population is now foreign-born, compared with about 11 percent in the United States, and there is little or no public debate over whether a sea change in culture, demographics and even national identity is good or bad for the country. In only the last generation, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, where a third of the population lives, have become multicultural polyglots where the towers of Sikh temples and mosques have become mainstays of the skyline and where cuisine and fashion have become concoctions of spices and patterns that are in the global vanguard. Toronto, once a homogeneous city of staid British tradition, is now a place where more than 40 percent of the people are foreign-born, where there are nearly 2,000 ethnic restaurants and where local radio and television stations broadcast in more than 30 languages. "Everything from marriage laws to marijuana laws, we are going through a period of accelerated social change," said Neil Bissoondath, an immigrant from Trinidad who is a leading novelist here. "There is a general approach to life here that is both evolutionary and revolutionary." He said that the balance goes all the way back to the ideals of the Tory founders of Canada, who remained loyal to the British crown and who instilled a laissez-faire conservatism "that says people have a right to live their lives as they like." That philosophy was a practical necessity in a colony that was bilingual after the British conquered French Quebec, creating relative social peace by allowing greater religious freedoms than even Catholics in England had at the time. The live-and-let-live approach was codified by the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Canada's Bill of Rights. Being as young as it is, the charter occupies a vivid corner of the Canadian psyche. So when three senior provincial courts ruled recently that federal marriage law discriminated against same-sex couples under the charter, the Liberal Cabinet decided to go along and not appeal the decisions. While the new law will have to be passed by the House of Commons, little organized resistance has arisen. Few here have complained that a national policy pertaining to something as intimate as marriage would be set by courts in Quebec, British Columbia and Ontario rather than by a federal body. In part that reflects the great relative political strength that regional governments have developed in what is known as the Canadian Confederation, where Canada's federal government is weaker than most central governments in the West. But it also reflects poll results that show a majority of Canadians support expanding marriage to gay couples. Last year, the Quebec provincial assembly unanimously enacted a law giving sweeping parental rights to same-sex couples, with even the most conservative members voting in favor despite lobbying by the Roman Catholic Church. "Canada has always been in the vanguard in relation to many societies in the world," Prime Minister Jean Chretien said recently, speaking in French to reporters after he announced the Cabinet's decision. "We have met our responsibilities." Nowhere has the social change been more dramatic than in Quebec, which as recently as the 1960s was a deeply conservative place where the church dominated education and social life. Since the baby-boomer generation launched the "Quiet Revolution" in favor of separatism, big government social programs and secularism, abortion and divorce rates there rose to among the highest in Canada while church attendance plummeted. Now the pendulum is moving in the other direction, ever so slightly. "There is a centrist mentality in Canada that translates into the political system not tolerating the Pat Buchanans nor the leftist equivalent," noted Michel C. Auger, a political columnist for Le Journal de Montreal. "There is a unified fabric here that is a lot stronger on social issues than it seems to be in the United States." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart