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Are we still that compassionate Canada?

posted on October 6, 2014

By Lorna Dueck, Globe and Mail | Link to Article

Lorna Dueck is host of Context TV, seen Sundays on Global and Vision TV.

Do the math: Canada has a compassion problem.

By Lorna Dueck, Globe and Mail | Link to Article

Lorna Dueck is host of Context TV, seen Sundays on Global and Vision TV.

Do the math: Canada has a compassion problem.

The Syrian-Iraqi refugee crisis is one of the worst of our lifetimes, and the numbers and practice of how Canada is responding are so confusing that it’s drawing no public engagement. What we do know is that 1,100 Syrian refugees have been allocated to be sponsored by the end of this year in Canada through 85 “sponsorship agreement holders.” Immigration Canada has yet to respond to an appeal by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees for 100,000 Syrians to be resettled, and there is no numerical plan yet in place for how Canada intends to respond to this crisis in 2015.

In Parliament, no one seems to notice that while we posture over military action, our moral leadership is muted. Gone are the days when MPs of all stripes jockeyed to address human suffering. In 1979 and 1980, the plight of many hundreds of thousands of Southeast Asian “boat people” refugees was near the top of the agenda, and Canadians responded by sponsoring almost 70,000, winning the UN refugee agency’s Nansen medal for our efforts. But today, while more than three million Syrians languish in refugee camps in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan, nobody is debating in Parliament how many we’ll sponsor.

Martin Mark, of the Catholic Office for Refugees in the Archdiocese of Toronto, is one of the persistent ones with his numbers lined up, at least for now. For the entire archdiocese, the federal government allotted 130 refugees to be rescued from the genocide devastating Iraqi and Syrian Christians. After making a vociferous public attack on the red tape and delays in Ottawa, Mr. Mark told me last week that “A strange and wonderful thing happened – we got expedited, we got, like, miracle-fast processing for Syrians and Iraqis.”

Don’t expect the Catholics to be quiet for long. They would like to sponsor more, but have zero capacity left because the government isn’t giving them any new cases. “You can imagine, we are one of the biggest sponsors in Canada and we can’t even get a spot. Definitely we would like to take more,” Mr. Mark said. He knows the media attention surrounding the Islamic State is a marketing moment, but concedes that compassion is not like a tap to be opened and closed – momentum has to be allowed to build through public messaging by government, communities and sponsoring groups.

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