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Asian Canadians

Asian Canadians are Canadians who were either born in or can trace their ancestry to the continent of Asia. Canadians with Asian ancestry comprise both the largest and fastest growing group in Canada, after European Canadians, forming approximately 20.2 percent of the Canadian population as of 2021.[1][2][a] Most Asian Canadians are concentrated in the urban areas of Southern Ontario, Southwestern British Columbia, Central Alberta, and other large Canadian cities.

Asian Canadians
Asian ancestry % in Canada (2016)
Total population
7,331,610[1][2][a]
20.2% of the Canadian population (2021)
Regions with significant populations
Western Canada · Central Canada · Urban
less prevalent in the Atlantic and North
Languages
Canadian English · Canadian French
Mandarin · Cantonese · Punjabi · Arabic · Tagalog
Other Asian languages
[3]
Religion
Christianity · Buddhism and other East Asian religions · Islam · Hinduism · Sikhism · Judaism · Non-religious · Other
Related ethnic groups
Asian Americans · Asian Australians · Asian Britons · Asian New Zealanders · Asian people

Asian Canadians are considered visible minorities and may be classified as East Asian Canadians, South Asian Canadians, Southeast Asian Canadians, and West Asian Canadians.[4]

According to the 2021 Canadian census, the pan-ethnic breakdown of major Asian-origin Canadian groups includes South Asian Canadians (2,571,400 persons or 35.1 percent),[2] East Asian Canadians (2,289,805 persons or 31.2 percent),[b] Southeast Asian Canadians (1,434,330 persons or 19.6 percent),[c] and West Asian Canadians (1,086,230 people or 14.8 percent).[1][2] In further detail, the largest self-reported Asian origin groups in Canada are Chinese Canadians, Indo-Canadians, Filipino Canadians, Vietnamese Canadians, and Lebanese Canadians.[5]

Terminology edit

In the Canadian census, people with origins or ancestry in East Asia (e.g. Chinese Canadians, Korean Canadians, Japanese Canadians, Tibetan Canadians), South Asia (e.g. Bangladeshi Canadians, Indian Canadians, Pakistani Canadians, Sri Lankan Canadians), Southeast Asia (e.g. Laotian Canadians, Cambodian Canadians, Filipino Canadians, Vietnamese Canadians), West Asia (e.g. Iranian Canadians, Kurdish Canadians, Israeli Canadians, Lebanese Canadians, Turkish Canadians), or Central Asia (e.g. Afghan Canadians, Uzbek Canadians, Kazakh Canadians) are all classified as part of the Asian race.

History edit

 
Chinese labourers working on the Canadian Pacific Railway, 1884
 
South Asians at a lumber camp in British Columbia, circa 1914
 
Damage after the September 1907 anti-Asian riot in Vancouver
 
Indians in Vancouver, 1908
 
South Asians aboard Komagata Maru in Vancouver, 1914
 
Founding members of the Canadian Japanese Association at the Japanese Canadian War Memorial in Vancouver, 1920.

18th century edit

The first record of Asians in what is known as Canada today can be dated back to the late 18th century. In 1788, renegade British Captain John Meares hired a group of Chinese carpenters from Macau and employed them to build a ship at Nootka Sound, Vancouver Island, British Columbia.[6]: 312  After the outpost was seized by Spanish forces, the eventual whereabouts of the carpenters was largely unknown.

By late 1700s, Filipinos, then-known as "Manila men"[7] were recruited in naval operations, aboard the ship San Carlos el Filipino sent to support the short-lived Spanish settlement of Santa Cruz de Nuca and Fort San Miguel, Nootka Island, off the coast of Vancouver.[8]

19th century edit

During the mid 19th century, many Chinese arrived to take part in the British Columbia gold rushes. Beginning in 1858, early settlers formed Victoria's Chinatown and other Chinese communities in New Westminster, Yale, and Lillooet. Estimates indicate that about 1/3 of the non-native population of the Fraser goldfields was Chinese.[9][10] Later, the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway prompted another wave of immigration from the East Asian country. Mainly hailing from Guangdong Province, the Chinese helped build the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Fraser Canyon.

Many Japanese people also arrived in Canada during the mid to late 19th century and became fishermen and merchants in British Columbia. Early immigrants from the East Asian island nation most notably worked in canneries such as Steveston along the pacific coast.

Similarly in the late 19th century, many Indians hailing from Punjab Province settled in British Columbia and worked in the forestry industry.[11] Most early immigrants hailing from South Asia first settled around sawmill towns along the Fraser River in southwestern British Columbia such as Kitsilano, Fraser Mills, and Queensborough.[12] Later, many Indian immigrants also settled on Vancouver Island, working on local sawmills in Victoria, Coombs, Duncan, Ocean Falls, and Paldi.[13]

Early West Asian Canadian history featured Lebanese and Syrians first immigrating in Canada during the late 19th century; as both countries were under Ottoman dominion at the time they were originally known as Turks or Syrian−Lebanese on census reports. Settling in the Montreal area of southern Quebec, they became the first West Asian group to immigrate to Canada.[14] The first Lebanese immigrant to Canada was Abraham Bounadere (Ibrahim Abu Nadir) from Zahlé in Lebanon who settled in Montreal in 1882.[15] Because of situations within Lebanon and restrictive Canadian laws these immigrants were 90% Christian. These immigrants were mostly economic migrants seeking greater prosperity in the New World.

Similar to late 19th century through early 20th century Lebanese immigration and settler patterns, while the vast majority of Syrians migrated to South America, a small percentage made their way to the United States, and an even smaller percentage settled in Canada. Once again, in a similar demographic to early Lebanese settlers to Canada, the overwhelming majority of Syrians who settled in Canada from the 1880s–1960s were of the Christian faith. The so-called shepherd of the lost flock, Saint Raphael Hawaweeny of Brooklyn, New York, came to Montreal in 1896 to help establish a Christian association called the Syrian Benevolent Society and then later on an Orthodox church in Montreal for the newly arrived Syrian faithful.[16]

West Asian settlement into Canada was also bolstered by early Armenian immigration during the late 19th century. The first Armenians migrated to Canada in the 1880s. The first recorded Armenian to settle in Canada was a man named Garabed Nergarian, who came to Port Hope, Ontario in 1887.[17][18] Some 37 Armenians settled in Canada in 1892 and 100 in 1895. Most early Armenian migrants to Canada were men who were seeking employment. After the Hamidian massacres of mid-1890s Armenian families from the Ottoman Empire began settling in Canada.

Additionally, Canada's earliest documented Filipinos coincided with North America's first wave of Asian immigration in the 1800s. At least nine male Filipino sailors, aged twenty-four to forty-two, appeared on the 1881 Census of British Columbia. Living on a vessel in New Westminster, they were recorded ethno-racially as "Malay" [a loose term to describe Austronesian people] and listed as "Mahomitan" [an archaic term for Muslim].[19] In the ensuing decades, several Filipino settlers resided along the B.C. coast, particularly on Bowen Island, in the 1880s.[20]

Early Filipino settlers along the B.C. coast engaged in both fishing and farming. It included Fernando Toreenya, a fisherman who came to Canada from the Philippines in 1886 at the age of 20 years old with his First Nations partner Mary/Marie Adams. They lived in Snug Cove and had three other Filipino boarders living with them, William Matilda, Antoni Bentorre and Ricardo Castro. Others included Ben Flores, who were "beachcombers and fishermen"[21] and were settled on a barge in Snug Cove; Basinto Pasento, who called his home Pasento Ranch and died in February 1904, John Delmond, and Jose Garcia. Several others worked as loggers, millhand, mine laborers, and longshoremen intermarrying with Indigenous peoples and other Pacific Islanders.

By 1884, Nanaimo, New Westminster, Yale, and Victoria had the largest Chinese populations in the province. Other settlements such as Quesnelle Forks were majority Chinese and many early immigrants from the East Asian country settled on Vancouver Island, most notably in Cumberland.[22] In addition to work on the railway, most Chinese in the late 19th century British Columbia lived among other Chinese and worked in market gardens, coal mines, sawmills, and salmon canneries.[23]

In 1885, soon after the construction on the railway was completed, the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act, whereby the government began to charge a substantial head tax for each Chinese person trying to immigrate to Canada. A decade later, the fear of the "Yellow Peril" prompted the government of Mackenzie Bowell to pass an act forbidding any East Asian Canadian from voting or holding office.[24]

Many Chinese workers settled in Canada after the railway was constructed, however most could not bring the rest of their families, including immediate relatives, due to government restrictions and enormous processing fees. They established Chinatowns and societies in undesirable sections of the cities, such as East Pender Street in Vancouver, which had been the focus of the early city's red-light district until Chinese merchants took over the area from the 1890s onwards.[25]

20th century edit

Immigration restrictions stemming from anti-Asian sentiment in Canada continued during the early 20th century. Parliament voted to increase the Chinese head tax to $500 in 1902; this temporarily caused Chinese immigration to Canada to stop. However, in following years, Chinese immigration to Canada recommenced as many saved up money to pay the head tax. Due to the decrease in Chinese immigration, Steamship lines began recruiting Indians to make up for the loss of business; the Fraser River Canners' Association and the Kootchang Fruit Growers' Association asked the Canadian government to abolish immigration restrictions. Letters from persons settling in Canada gave persons still in India encouragement to move to Canada, and there was an advertising campaign to promote British Columbia as an immigration destination.[26] Around that time, in 1902, a notable moment of Asian Canadian history occurred when Punjabi Sikh settlers first arrived in Golden, British Columbia to work at the Columbia River Lumber Company.[27]

In 1901, Canada had between 300 and 400 Muslim residents, equally divided between Turks and Syrian Arabs.[28] Furthermore, the turn of the 20th century featured a small wave of Syrian−Lebanese settlement into the southern prairies including Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Contemporarily in Lebanon, many families were from what was western Syria at the time in particular settled in southern Saskatchewan.[29] A majority of the Syrian−Lebanese families settling in the prairies were of the Christian faith, with a minority adhering to Islam, mirroring earlier settler demographics in Nova Scotia, Quebec and Ontario. Prominent settlement occurred in communities such as Swift Current, Saskatchewan, and Lac La Biche, Alberta.[30][31][32] Few reached the Northwest Territories, the best known being Peter Baker, author of the book An Arctic Arab, and later elected as a member of the legislative assembly of the Northwest Territories.[33]

The early Punjabi Sikh settlers in Golden built the first Gurdwara (Sikh Temple) in Canada and North America in 1905,[34][35] which would later be destroyed by fire in 1926.[36] The second Gurdwara to be built in Canada was in 1908 in Kitsilano (Vancouver), aimed at serving a growing number of Punjabi Sikh settlers who worked at nearby sawmills along False Creek at the time.[37] The Gurdwara would later close and be demolished in 1970, with the temple society relocating to the newly built Gurdwara on Ross Street, in South Vancouver. As a result, the oldest existing Gurdwara in Canada today is the Gur Sikh Temple, located in Abbotsford, British Columbia. Built in 1911, the temple was designated as a national historic site of Canada in 2002 and is the third-oldest Gurdwara in the country. Soon later, the fourth Gurdwara to be built Canada was established at the Fraser Mills (Coquitlam) settlement in 1913 followed by the fifth at the Queensborough (New Westminster) settlement in 1919,[38][39][40] and the sixth at the Paldi (Vancouver Island) settlement, also in 1919.[41][42][43][44]

Heightened anti-Asian sentiment resulted in the infamous anti-Asian pogrom in Vancouver in 1907. Spurred by similar riots in Bellingham targeting Punjabi Sikh South Asian settlers, The Asiatic Exclusion League organized attacks against homes and businesses owned by East Asian immigrants under the slogan "White Canada Forever!"; though no one was killed, much property damage was done and numerous East Asian Canadians were beaten up.

In 1908, the British Columbia government passed a law preventing South Asian Canadians from voting. Because eligibility for federal elections originated from provincial voting lists, Indians were also unable to vote in federal elections.[45] Later, the Canadian government enacted a $200 head tax and passed the continuous journey regulation which indirectly halted Indian immigration to Canada, thus restricting all immigration from South Asia.

A direct result of the continuous journey regulation was the Komagata Maru incident in Vancouver. In May 1914, hundreds of South Asians hailing from Punjab were denied entry into the country, eventually forced to depart for India. By 1916, despite a declining population due to immigration restrictions, many Indian settlers established the Paldi mill colony on Vancouver Island.[46]

During the pre-World War I period, Turks were to be found in mining and logging camps across Canada.[47] However, due to bad relations between the Ottoman Empire and Allied Powers of WWI, further migration was made difficult for the Turks and the Canadian government discouraged "Asian" immigration.[47] With the Canadian Immigration Act of 1910, Turkish immigration to Canada was banned.[48] With the onset of the first world war, Turkish Canadians were placed in "enemy alien" internment camps.[49] Five days after the first world war began, on November 10, 1914, 98 Turks were deported and settled in Kingston and then in Kapuskasing. Their number increased over time.[50] They were not the only "enemy aliens" subjected to internment. More than 8,500 people were placed in 24 camps during the war. Of them 205 were Turks.[51][52]

Before the Armenian genocide of 1915 some 1,800 Armenians already lived in Canada. They were overwhelmingly from the Armenian provinces of the Ottoman Empire and usually lived in industrial urban areas. The influx of Armenians to Canada was limited in the post-World War I era because Armenians were classified as Asians.[18] Nevertheless, some 1,500 genocide survivors—mostly women and children—came to Canada as refugees.[53] In 1923–24 some 100 Armenians orphans aged 8–12, later known as The Georgetown Boys, were brought to Canada from Corfu, Greece by the Armenian Canadian Relief Fund to Georgetown, Ontario.[17] Dubbed "The Noble Experiment", it was Canada's first humanitarian act on an international scale.[18] The Georgetown Farmhouse (now the Cedarvale Community Centre) was designated historic and protected municipal site in 2010.[54] Overall, between 1900 and 1930 some 3,100 Armenians entered Canada, with 75% settling in Ontario and 20% in Quebec.[55] Some later moved to the United States; 1,577 Armenians entered the U.S. from Canada between 1899 and 1917.[18]

In 1923, the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which banned all Chinese immigration, and led to immigration restrictions for all East Asians. In 1947, the act was repealed.

The second world war prompted the federal government used the War Measures Act to brand Japanese Canadians enemy aliens and categorized them as security threats in 1942. Tens of thousands of Japanese Canadians were placed in internment camps in British Columbia; prison of war camps in Ontario; and families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies. By 1943, all properties owned by Japanese Canadians in British Columbia were seized and sold without consent.

In 1950, 10 Filipinos were recorded in Manitoba. The first-generation Filipino-Canadians were mainly women who worked as nurses and teachers and in the health sector. These first Filipinos came from the United States to renew their visas after they had expired in the hope of returning to the US. Most of them returned, but some stayed in Canada. From 1946 to 1964, the total number of Filipinos in Canada was 770. In the 1960s, Canada recruited more professionals, mostly from the United States, with some coming directly from the Philippines. Most of the nurses, technicians, office workers and doctors arrived in Winnipeg, Manitoba. In the late 1960s, more Filipinos came to Winnipeg to work in the garment industry.

Pakistanis began migrating to Canada in small numbers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Immigration regulations gave preference to those with advanced education and professional skills, and the Pakistanis who came during this period, and throughout the 1960s, generally had excellent credentials. Many of them considered themselves to be sojourners, who had come to earn but not to settle or were students who intended to return home when their degree programs were completed. While some went back, others remained to become the founding members of the Pakistani-Canadian community.[56] Pakistani nationals were registered in undergraduate and graduate programs at McGill University in Montreal as early as 1949, and at the University of Toronto from 1958 on. By the mid-1950s, there were five or six Pakistani families living in Montreal in addition to the students. This was probably the then largest concentration of Pakistanis in the country. Throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s most who arrived were young men pursuing graduate or professional studies.

Unlike Korean Americans who have relatively much longer history settling in the United States, very few settled in Canada; as late as 1965, the total permanent Korean population of Canada was estimated at only 70.[57] However, with the 1966 reform of Canadian immigration laws, South Korean immigration to Canada began to grow.[57] By 1969, there were an estimated 2000 Koreans in Canada.[58]

The Iranian revolution of 1979 resulted in a spike of immigration to Canada from the West Asian country.[59] In the aftermath, many Iranian-Canadians began to categorize themselves as "Persian" rather than "Iranian", mainly to dissociate themselves from the Islamic regime of Iran and the negativity associated with it, and also to distinguish themselves as being of Persian ethnicity.[60][61]

During and after the Vietnam War, a large wave of Vietnamese refugees began arriving in Canada. Large-scale Vietnamese immigration to Canada began during the mid-1970s and early 1980s as refugees or boat people following the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, though a couple thousand were already living in Quebec before then, most of whom were students. After the fall of Saigon, there were two waves of Vietnamese immigrants to Canada. The first wave consisted mostly of middle-class immigrants. Many of these immigrants were able to speak French and or English and were welcomed into Canada for their professional skills. The second wave consisted of Southern Vietnamese refugees who were escaping the harsh regime that had taken over the former South Vietnam. Many of them (10%) were of Chinese descent and were escaping ethnic persecution resulting from the Sino-Vietnamese War. These south Vietnamese refugees were known globally as the "boat people". In the years 1979–80, Canada accepted 60,000 Vietnamese refugees.[62]

Many new Vietnamese arrivees were sponsored by groups of individuals, temples, and churches and settled in areas around Southern Ontario, Vancouver, British Columbia, and Montreal, Quebec. Between 1975 and 1985, 110,000 resettled in Canada (23,000 in Ontario; 13,000 in Quebec; 8,000 in Alberta; 7,000 British Columbia; 5,000 in Manitoba; 3,000 in Saskatchewan; and 2,000 in the Maritime provinces). This was followed by another large wave of Vietnamese immigration to Canada during the late 1980s and 1990s as both refugees and immigrant classes of post-war Vietnam entered Canada. These groups settled in urban areas, in particular Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, and Calgary. In Metro Vancouver, they have settled mainly in East Vancouver, Richmond, and Surrey. In the Montreal area, they settle in Montreal's downtown, South Shore, and the suburb of Laval. In Toronto, they have settled in the city's Chinatown area near Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street West and in the inner suburbs of North York, York, Scarborough, and Etobicoke.

The Canadian Parliament created the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada in 1985 to better address issues surrounding Asia–Canada relations, including trade, citizenship and immigration.

In the late 1990s, South Korea became the fifth-largest source of immigrants to Canada.[63] Toronto has the country's largest absolute number of Koreans, but Vancouver is experiencing the highest rate of growth in its Korean population, with a 69% increase since 1996. Montreal was the third most popular destination for Korean migrants during this period.[64] The 1990s growth in South Korean migration to Canada occurred at a time when Canadian unemployment was high and income growth was low relative to the United States.[65] One pair of researchers demonstrated that numbers of migrants were correlated with the exchange rate; the weakness of the Canadian dollar relative to the United States dollar meant that South Korean migrants bringing savings to Canada for investment would be relatively richer than those going to the United States.[66] Other factors suggested as drivers behind the growth of South Korean immigration to Canada included domestic anti-Americanism and the large presence of Canadian English teachers in local hagwon.[67]

When Hong Kong reverted to mainland Chinese rule, people emigrated and found new homes in Canada.

21st century edit

In 2016, the Canadian government issued a full apology in Parliament for the Komagata Maru Incident.

According to Statistics Canada, in 2016, 48.1% of the immigrant population in Canada was born in Asia. Furthermore, Asian countries accounted for seven of the top ten countries of birth for recent immigrants, including the Philippines, India, China, Iran, Pakistan, Syria and South Korea.[68]

In recent decades, a large number of people have come to Canada from India and other South Asian countries. As of 2016, South Asians make up nearly 17 percent of the Greater Toronto Area's population, and are projected to make up 24 percent of the region's population by 2031.[69]

In the contemporary era, Asians form a significant minority within the national population, with over 7 million Canadians being of Asian geographical descent as of 2021.

Asian Canadian students, in particular those of East Asian or South Asian background, make up the vast majority of students at several Canadian universities.

Demography edit

Canadians of Asian descent total population (1871–2021)
Canadians of Asian descent percentage of the total population (1871–2021)

Population edit

Asian Canadian Population History
1871–2021
Year Population % of total population
1871
[70][71][72]: 685 
4 0%
1881
[70][72]: 685 
4,383 0.101%
1901
[70][72]: 685 
23,731 0.442%
1911
[70][72]: 685 
43,213 0.6%
1921
[70][71][72]: 685 [73]: 353 
65,914 0.75%
1931
[70][71][72]: 685 [74]: 225 [75]: 236 [76]: 503 
84,548 0.815%
1941
[70][71][72]: 685 
74,064 0.644%
1951
[70][71][77]: 484 
72,827 0.52%
1961
[70][71][78][79]: 5 
121,753 0.668%
1971
[70][71][78][80]: 1 
285,540 1.324%
1981
[78][81]: 26 [82]: 64 
818,670 3.399%
1986
[83]: 374 [82]: 20 
1,169,205 4.673%
1991
[78][84]: 66 [85]: 11 
1,865,435 6.911%
1996
[86][87]
2,555,590 8.958%
2001
[88]
3,234,290 10.912%
2006
[89]
4,181,755 13.385%
2011
[90]
5,011,220 15.254%
2016
[5]
6,095,235 17.688%
2021
[1][2][a]
7,331,610 20.181%

National and ethnic origins edit

Asian Canadians by pan-ethnicity (2001–2021)
Panethnic group Percentage
2021[1][2] 2016[5] 2011[90] 2006[89] 2001[88]
South Asian 35.07% 32.21% 32.25% 31.49% 29.78%
East Asian 31.23%[b] 35.24% 36.27% 38.94% 40.63%
Southeast Asian 19.56%[c] 19.93% 19.89% 16.87% 16.79%
West Asian & Central Asian 14.82% 16.59% 15.53% 15.61% 14.95%

While the Asian Canadian population is diverse, many have ancestry from a few select countries in the continent. As of the 2016 Canadian census, nearly four million or 66% of Asian Canadians can trace their roots to just three countries; China, India and the Philippines.

Population of Asian Canadian Groups 2006–2016
Origins 2016[5] 2011[90] 2006[89]
Pop. % Asian Pop. % total Pop. Pop. % Asian Pop. % total Pop. Pop. % Asian Pop. % total Pop.
Chinese[d] 1,769,195 29.03% 5.13% 1,487,580 29.68% 4.53% 1,346,510 32.2% 4.31%
Indian 1,374,715 22.55% 3.99% 1,165,145 23.25% 3.55% 962,670 23.02% 3.08%
Filipino 851,410 13.97% 2.47% 662,600 13.22% 2.02% 436,195 10.43% 1.4%
Vietnamese 240,615 3.95% 0.7% 220,425 4.4% 0.67% 180,130 4.31% 0.58%
Lebanese 219,555 3.6% 0.64% 190,275 3.8% 0.58% 165,150 3.95% 0.53%
Pakistani 215,560 3.54% 0.63% 155,310 3.1% 0.47% 124,730 2.98% 0.4%
Iranian 210,405 3.45% 0.61% 163,290 3.26% 0.5% 121,505 2.91% 0.39%
Korean 198,210 3.25% 0.58% 168,890 3.37% 0.51% 146,545 3.5% 0.47%
Sri Lankan 152,595 2.5% 0.44% 139,415 2.78% 0.42% 103,625 2.48% 0.33%
Japanese 121,485 1.99% 0.35% 109,740 2.19% 0.33% 98,905 2.37% 0.32%
Punjabi 118,395 1.94% 0.34% 76,150 1.52% 0.23% 53,515 1.28% 0.17%
Arab
(n.o.s)[e]
111,405 1.83% 0.32% 94,640 1.89% 0.29% 86,135 2.06% 0.28%
Afghan 83,995 1.38% 0.24% 62,815 1.25% 0.19% 48,090 1.15% 0.15%
Syrian 77,045 1.26% 0.22% 40,840 0.81% 0.12% 31,370 0.75% 0.1%
South Asian
(n.i.e)[f]
76,400 1.25% 0.22% 53,390 1.07% 0.16% 60,895 1.46% 0.19%
Iraqi 70,920 1.16% 0.21% 49,680 0.99% 0.15% 29,950 0.72% 0.1%
Turkish 63,995 1.05% 0.19% 55,430 1.11% 0.17% 43,700 1.05% 0.14%
Armenian 63,810 1.05% 0.19% 55,740 1.11% 0.17% 50,500 1.21% 0.16%
Tamil 48,670 0.8% 0.14% 48,965 0.98% 0.15% 34,590 0.83% 0.11%
Bangladeshi 45,940 0.75% 0.13% 34,205 0.68% 0.1% 24,595 0.59% 0.08%
Palestinian 44,820 0.74% 0.13% 31,245 0.62% 0.1% 23,975 0.57% 0.08%
Cambodian 38,495 0.63% 0.11% 34,340 0.69% 0.1% 25,245 0.6% 0.08%
Taiwanese 36,515
(94,000[91]
173,000[92])
0.6%
(1.54%–
2.84%)
0.11%
(0.27%–
0.5%)
30,330 0.61% 0.09% 17,705 0.42% 0.06%
Israeli 28,735 0.47% 0.08% 15,010 0.3% 0.05% 10,755 0.26% 0.03%
West Central
Asian and
Middle Eastern
(n.i.e)[f]
25,280 0.41% 0.07% 16,540 0.33% 0.05% 12,075 0.29% 0.04%
Laotian 24,575 0.4% 0.07% 22,090 0.44% 0.07% 20,110 0.48% 0.06%
Bengali 22,900 0.38% 0.07% 17,960 0.36% 0.05% 12,130 0.29% 0.04%
Other
Asian(n.i.e)[f]
22,745 0.37% 0.07% 20,115 0.4% 0.06% 555 0.01% 0%
Indonesian 21,395 0.35% 0.06% 18,125 0.36% 0.06% 14,325 0.34% 0.05%
Thai 19,010 0.31% 0.06% 15,080 0.3% 0.05% 10,020 0.24% 0.03%
Nepali 17,140 0.28% 0.05% 9,780 0.2% 0.03% 3,780 0.09% 0.01%
Malaysian 16,920 0.28% 0.05% 14,165 0.28% 0.04% 12,165 0.29% 0.04%
Kurdish 16,315 0.27% 0.05% 11,685 0.23% 0.04% 9,205 0.22% 0.03%
Jordanian 14,250 0.23% 0.04% 9,425 0.19% 0.03% 6,905 0.17% 0.02%
Assyrian 13,830 0.23% 0.04% 10,810 0.22% 0.03% 8,650 0.21% 0.03%
Burmese 9,330 0.15% 0.03% 7,845 0.16% 0.02% 4,590 0.11% 0.01%
Gujarati 8,350 0.14% 0.02% 5,890 0.12% 0.02% 2,975 0.07% 0.01%
Tibetan 8,040 0.13% 0.02% 5,820 0.12% 0.02% 4,275 0.1% 0.01%
Mongolian 7,475 0.12% 0.02% 5,355 0.11% 0.02% 3,960 0.09% 0.01%
Sinhalese 7,285 0.12% 0.02% 7,220 0.14% 0.02% 5,825 0.14% 0.02%
Saudi
Arabian
6,810 0.11% 0.02% 7,955 0.16% 0.02% 2,730 0.07% 0.01%
Yemeni 6,645 0.11% 0.02% 3,945 0.08% 0.01% 2,300 0.06% 0.01%
East and
Southeast
Asian(n.i.e)[f]
6,505 0.11% 0.02% 9,045 0.18% 0.03% 8,990 0.21% 0.03%
Azerbaijani 6,425 0.11% 0.02% 4,580 0.09% 0.01% 3,465 0.08% 0.01%
Goan 6,070 0.1% 0.02% 5,125 0.1% 0.02% 4,815 0.12% 0.02%
Tatar 4,825 0.08% 0.01% 2,850 0.06% 0.01% 2,300 0.06% 0.01%
Pashtun 4,810 0.08% 0.01% 3,315 0.07% 0.01% 1,690 0.04% 0.01%
Georgian 4,775 0.08% 0.01% 3,155 0.06% 0.01% 2,200 0.05% 0.01%
Karen 4,515 0.07% 0.01% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Uzbek 3,920 0.06% 0.01% 2,725 0.05% 0.01% N/A N/A N/A
Bhutanese 3,600 0.06% 0.01% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Kazakh 3,330 0.05% 0.01% 2,270 0.05% 0.01% N/A N/A N/A
Kashmiri 3,115 0.05% 0.01% 2,125 0.04% 0.01% 1,685 0.04% 0.01%
Tajik 2,905 0.05% 0.01% 2,400 0.05% 0.01% N/A N/A N/A
Singaporean 2,845 0.05% 0.01% 2,050 0.04% 0.01% 1,390 0.03% 0%
Kuwaiti 2,240 0.04% 0.01% 2,240 0.04% 0.01% 1,575 0.04% 0.01%
Uighur 1,555 0.03% 0% 1,155 0.02% 0% N/A N/A N/A
Hazara 1,520 0.02% 0% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Kyrgyz 1,055 0.02% 0% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Turkmen 1,040 0.02% 0% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Hmong 805 0.01% 0% 830 0.02% 0% 815 0.02% 0%
  Total
Canada
6,095,235 100% 17.69% 5,011,220 100% 15.25% 4,181,755 100% 13.39%

Language edit

Pie chart breakdown of the spoken Asian language families of Canadians from the 2016 census.[94]

  Indo-Iranian (31.03%)
  Sino-Tibetan (26.78%)
  Semitic (Asian) (13.68%)
  Austronesian (12.28%)
  Dravidian (4.68%)
  Austro-Asiatic (4.21%)
  Koreanic (3.23%)
  Japonic (1.55%)
  Turkic (1.13%)
  Other (1.44%)

Knowledge of language edit

Many Asian Canadians speak Canadian English or Canadian French as a first language, as many multi-generational individuals do not speak Asian languages as a mother tongue, but instead may speak one or multiple[g] as a second or third language.

As of 2016, 6,044,885 or 17.5 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language. Of this, the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin (13.5%), Cantonese (11.6%), Punjabi (11.1%), Arabic (10.4%) and Tagalog (10.1%).

  • Languages with 5,000 or more speakers listed.
Knowledge of Asian languages in Canada[g]
# Language Population
(2016)[95]
% Asian
languages
(2016)
% total
population
(2016)
1 Mandarin 814,450 13.47% 2.36%
2 Cantonese 699,125 11.57% 2.03%
3 Punjabi 668,240 11.05% 1.94%
4 Arabic 629,055 10.41% 1.83%
5 Tagalog
(Pilipino, Filipino)
612,735 10.14% 1.78%
6 Hindi 433,365 7.17% 1.26%
7 Urdu 322,220 5.33% 0.94%
8 Persian
(Farsi)
252,320 4.17% 0.73%
9 Vietnamese 198,895 3.29% 0.58%
10 Tamil 189,860 3.14% 0.55%
11 Korean 172,755 2.86% 0.5%
12 Gujarati 149,045 2.47% 0.43%
13 Bengali 91,220 1.51% 0.26%
14 Japanese 83,090 1.37% 0.24%
15 Hebrew 75,020 1.24% 0.22%
16 Turkish 50,775 0.84% 0.15%
17 Min Nan[h] 42,840 0.71% 0.12%
18 Chinese,
n.o.s.[e]
41,690 0.69% 0.12%
19 Armenian 41,295 0.68% 0.12%
20 Malayalam 37,810 0.63% 0.11%
21 Ilocano 34,530 0.57% 0.1%
22 Sinhala 27,825 0.46% 0.08%
23 Cebuano 27,045 0.45% 0.08%
24 Khmer
(Cambodian)
27,035 0.45% 0.08%
25 Pashto 23,180 0.38% 0.07%
26 Telugu 23,160 0.38% 0.07%
27 Malay 22,470 0.37% 0.07%
28 Nepali 21,380 0.35% 0.06%
29 Sindhi 20,260 0.34% 0.06%
30 Assyrian
Neo-Aramaic
19,745 0.33% 0.06%
31 Lao 17,235 0.29% 0.05%
32 Wu
(Shanghainese)
16,530 0.27% 0.05%
33 Marathi 15,570 0.26% 0.05%
34 Thai 15,390 0.25% 0.04%
35 Kurdish 15,290 0.25% 0.04%
36 Hakka 12,445 0.21% 0.04%
37 Indo-Iranian languages,
n.i.e.[f]
8,875 0.15% 0.03%
38 Kannada 8,245 0.14% 0.02%
39 Hiligaynon 7,925 0.13% 0.02%
40 Chaldean
Neo-Aramaic
7,115 0.12% 0.02%
41 Tibetan 7,050 0.12% 0.02%
42 Konkani 6,790 0.11% 0.02%
43 Austronesian languages,
n.i.e.[f]
5,585 0.09% 0.02%
44 Azerbaijani 5,450 0.09% 0.02%
45 Pampangan[i] 5,425 0.09% 0.02%
46 Other 37,530 0.62% 0.11%
Total 6,044,885 100% 17.54%

Mother Tongue edit

As of 2016, 4,217,365 or 12.2 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language as a mother tongue. Of this, the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin (14.0%), Cantonese (13.4%), Punjabi (11.9%), Tagalog (10.2%) and Arabic (10.0%).

  • Languages with 10,000 or more speakers listed.
Asian languages in Canada by number of first language speakers
# Mother Tongue Population
(2016)[96]
% Asian
languages
(2016)
1 Mandarin 592,035 14.04%
2 Cantonese 565,275 13.4%
3 Punjabi 501,680 11.9%
4 Tagalog
(Pilipino, Filipino)
431,385 10.23%
5 Arabic 419,895 9.96%
6 Persian
(Farsi)
214,200 5.08%
7 Urdu 210,820 5%
8 Vietnamese 156,430 3.71%
9 Korean 153,425 3.64%
10 Tamil 140,720 3.34%
11 Hindi 110,645 2.62%
12 Gujarati 108,775 2.58%
13 Bengali 73,125 1.73%
14 Japanese 43,640 1.03%
15 Chinese,
n.o.s.[e]
38,575 0.91%
16 Armenian 33,455 0.79%
17 Turkish 32,815 0.78%
18 Min Nan[h] 31,795 0.75%
19 Malayalam 28,570 0.68%
20 Ilocano 26,345 0.62%
21 Khmer
(Cambodian)
20,130 0.48%
22 Cebuano 19,890 0.47%
23 Hebrew 19,530 0.46%
24 Nepali 18,275 0.43%
25 Pashto 16,910 0.4%
26 Sinhala 16,335 0.39%
27 Assyrian
Neo-Aramaic
16,070 0.38%
28 Telugu 15,655 0.37%
29 Wu
(Shanghainese)
12,920 0.31%
30 Malay 12,275 0.29%
31 Sindhi 11,860 0.28%
32 Kurdish 11,705 0.28%
33 Hakka 10,910 0.26%
34 Other 101,295 2.4%
Total 4,217,365 100%

Religion edit

Geographic distribution edit

Provinces and territories edit

The Canadian population who reported full or partial Asian ethnic origin, according to the 1951 Canadian census, 1961 Canadian census, 2001 Canadian census, 2006 Canadian census, 2011 Canadian census, and 2016 Canadian census.

Asian Canadians by province and territory (1951–2016)
Province 2016[5] 2011[90] 2006[89] 2001[88] 1961[79]: 5  1951[77]: 484 
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
  Ontario 3,100,455 23.41% 2,604,590 20.59% 2,214,795 18.41% 1,682,890 14.91% 39,277 0.63% 22,138 0.48%
  British Columbia 1,312,445 28.78% 1,122,445 25.96% 975,550 23.94% 802,275 20.74% 40,299 2.47% 25,644 2.2%
  Alberta 756,335 19.01% 551,710 15.46% 398,025 12.22% 292,195 9.93% 12,303 0.92% 7,441 0.79%
  Quebec 563,150 7.07% 488,905 6.32% 426,815 5.74% 325,270 4.56% 14,801 0.28% 7,714 0.19%
  Manitoba 178,650 14.4% 126,600 10.78% 90,415 7.98% 72,040 6.53% 4,177 0.45% 2,867 0.37%
  Saskatchewan 99,125 9.26% 55,095 5.46% 28,700 3.01% 23,750 2.47% 4,925 0.53% 2,976 0.36%
  Nova Scotia 42,495 4.68% 31,875 3.52% 24,595 2.72% 20,505 2.28% 2,979 0.4% 2,266 0.37%
  New Brunswick 19,410 2.66% 14,535 1.98% 11,785 1.64% 7,885 1.1% 1,343 0.22% 903 0.18%
  Newfoundland and Labrador 10,090 1.97% 6,310 1.24% 5,660 1.13% 3,655 0.72% 933 0.2% 512 0.14%
  Prince Edward Island 6,485 4.64% 4,360 3.17% 1,775 1.32% 1,250 0.94% 295 0.28% 279 0.28%
  Northwest Territories 3,125 7.6% 2,165 5.31% 2,025 4.93% 1,465 3.95% 69[j] 0.3%[j] 23[j] 0.14%[j]
  Yukon 2,855 8.13% 2,205 6.62% 1,270 4.21% 950 3.33% 152 1.04% 64 0.7%
  Nunavut 615 1.73% 425 1.34% 280 0.95% 160 0.6% N/A[j] N/A[j] N/A[j] N/A[j]
  Canada 6,095,235 17.69% 5,011,220 15.25% 4,181,755 13.39% 3,234,290 10.91% 121,753 0.67% 72,827 0.52%
Asian Canadians by province and territory (1871–1941)
Province 1941
[72]: 685 
1931
[72]: 685 
1921
[72]: 685 
1911
[72]: 685 
1901
[72]: 685 
1881
[72]: 685 
1871
[72]: 685 
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
  British Columbia 42,472 5.19% 50,951 7.34% 39,739 7.57% 30,864 9.39% 19,624 10.98% 4,350 8.8% N/A N/A
  Ontario 12,020 0.32% 12,297 0.36% 9,171 0.31% 4,573 0.18% 1,288 0.06% 22 0% 1 0%
  Quebec 7,119 0.21% 7,034 0.24% 5,218 0.22% 2,343 0.12% 1,600 0.1% 7 0% 0 0%
  Alberta 4,204 0.53% 4,929 0.67% 4,300 0.73% 2,103 0.56% 249 0.34% N/A N/A N/A N/A
  Saskatchewan 3,420 0.38% 4,419 0.48% 3,333 0.44% 1,238 0.25% 52 0.06% N/A N/A N/A N/A
  Nova Scotia 1,927 0.33% 1,559 0.3% 1,500 0.29% 675 0.14% 363 0.08% 0 0% 3 0%
  Manitoba 1,788 0.25% 2,255 0.32% 1,715 0.28% 970 0.21% 258 0.1% 4 0.01% N/A N/A
  New Brunswick 836 0.18% 873 0.21% 807 0.21% 336 0.1% 252 0.08% 0 0% 0 0%
  Prince Edward Island 228 0.24% 166 0.19% 98 0.11% 29 0.03% 49 0.05% 0 0% N/A N/A
  Yukon 41 0.83% 54 1.28% 33 0.79% 82 0.96% 96 0.35% N/A N/A N/A N/A
  Northwest Territories 9[j] 0.07%[j] 11[j] 0.12%[j] 0[j] 0%[j] 0 [j] 0%[j] 0 [j] 0%[j] 0 [j] 0%[j] N/A N/A
  Canada 74,064 0.64% 84,548 0.81% 65,914 0.75% 43,213 0.6% 23,731 0.44% 4,383 0.1% 4 0%

Subdivisions with significant Asian Canadian populations edit

 
Chinatown, Vancouver
 
Vaisakhi Parade 2017, Punjabi Market (Little India), Vancouver
 
Turkish Canadians at the Victoria Day Parade 2005 in Downtown Victoria
 
Korean businesses and restaurants along Bloor Street in Toronto's Koreatown.
 
North York storefronts offering Iranian cuisine. North York has the largest West Asian population in Toronto.
 
Gerrard India Bazaar (Little India) in Toronto.

Source: Canada 2016 Census

National average: 17.7%

Alberta edit

British Columbia edit

Manitoba edit

Ontario edit

Québec edit

Saskatchewan edit


See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c 2021 census: Total responses of all Asian geographical origin population groups classified under "Ethnic or cultural origin" and "Visible minority" sections including:
    "South Asian" (2,571,400 persons);[2]
    "Asian, n.o.s." (226,220 persons);[1]
    "West and Central Asian and Middle Eastern" (1,086,230 persons);[1]
    "East and Southeast Asian" (3,447,030 persons);[1]
    "Asian origins, n.i.e." (730 persons).[1]
  2. ^ a b Chinese: 1,715,770 persons[2]
    Korean: 218,140 persons[2]
    Japanese: 129,425 persons[1]
    Hong Konger: 81,680 persons[1]
    Taiwanese: 64,020 persons[1]
    Tibetan: 9,350 persons[1]
    Mongolian: 9,090 persons[1]
    Hmong: 1,030 persons[1]
    Other East Asian: 61,300 persons[1]
  3. ^ a b Filipino: 957,355 persons[2]
    Bruneian: 1,040 persons[1]
    Burmese: 9,150 persons[1]
    Cambodian: 41,950 persons[1]
    Chin: 1,745 persons[1]
    Igorot: 7,535 persons[1]
    Ilocano: 25,575 persons[1]
    Indonesian: 26,330 persons[1]
    Javanese: 1,015[1]
    Karen: 6,050 persons[1]
    Laotian: 25,875 persons[1]
    Malay: 9,795 persons[1]
    Malaysian: 17,050 persons[1]
    Singaporean: 6,060 persons[1]
    Thai: 22,275 persons[1]
    Vietnamese: 275,530 persons[1]
  4. ^ Including Hongkongese
  5. ^ a b c Not otherwise specified
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Not included elsewhere
  7. ^ a b The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses.
  8. ^ a b Chaochow, Teochow, Fukien, Taiwanese
  9. ^ Including Kapampangan and Pampango
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Northwest Territories includes Nunavut, as the territory was not created until 1999.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (October 26, 2022). "Ethnic or cultural origin by gender and age: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (October 26, 2022). "Visible minority and population group by generation status: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  3. ^ "Language". Census Profile, 2016 Census. Statistics Canada. November 29, 2017. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
  4. ^ . Statistics Canada. June 15, 2009. Archived from the original on July 18, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (June 17, 2019). "Ethnic Origin (279), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3), Generation Status (4), Age (12) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2016 Census – 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved August 31, 2022.
  6. ^ Laurence J. C. Ma; Carolyn L. Cartier (2003). The Chinese Diaspora: Space, Place, Mobility, and Identity. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-1756-1.
  7. ^ Welch, Michael Patrick. . New Orleans & Me. New Orleans: WWNO. Archived from the original on January 18, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
  8. ^ Fred Cordova "Filipinos: Forgotten Asian Americans, a Pictorial Essay/1763-circa-1963"
  9. ^ Claiming the Land, Dan Marshall, UBC Ph.D Thesis, 2002 (unpubl.)
  10. ^ McGowan's War, Donald J. Hauka, New Star Books, Vancouver (2000) ISBN 1-55420-001-6
  11. ^ Walton-Roberts and Hiebert, Immigration, Entrepreneurship, and the Family 2014-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, p. 124.
  12. ^ "Sikh Heritage Month: The South Asian pioneers of Fraser Mills".
  13. ^ Das, p. 21 (Archive).
  14. ^ "History of Recent Arab Immigration to Canada".
  15. ^ "History of Recent Arab Immigration to Canada". www.canadianarabcommunity.com. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  16. ^ . www.saintgeorgemontreal.org. Archived from the original on September 3, 2018. Retrieved August 20, 2017.
  17. ^ a b Ouzounian 2003, p. 331.
  18. ^ a b c d Vartanian, Hrag (June 2000). . AGBU Magazine. Armenian General Benevolent Union. Archived from the original on August 13, 2019.
  19. ^ Marshall, Allison (2018). Bayanihan and Belonging: Filipinos and Religion in Canada. University of Toronto Press. p. 59. ISBN 9781487517526.
  20. ^ "Historiana Volume 10 Number 2" (PDF). June 9, 2001. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  21. ^ Howard, Irene (1973). "Bowen Island, 1872–1972". Bowen Island, B.C.: Bowen Island Historians. p. 36.
  22. ^ Lim, Imogene L. "Pacific Entry, Pacific Century: Chinatowns and Chinese Canadian History" (Chapter 2). In: Lee, Josephine D., Imogene L. Lim, and Yuko Matsukawa (editors). Re/collecting Early Asian America: Essays in Cultural History. Temple University Press, 2002. ISBN 1439901201, 9781439901205. Start: 15. CITED: p. 18.
  23. ^ Harris, Cole. The Resettlement of British Columbia: Essays on Colonialism and Geographical Change. University of British Columbia Press, Nov 1, 2011. ISBN 0774842563, 9780774842563. p. 145.
  24. ^ (PDF). Maclean's. July 1, 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 18, 2015. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
  25. ^ Lisa Rose Mar (2010). Brokering Belonging: Chinese in Canada's Exclusion Era, 1885–1945. Oxford University Press. p. 112. ISBN 9780199780051.
  26. ^ Singh, Hira, p. 94[permanent dead link] (Archive).
  27. ^ "FIRST SIKH TEMPLE IN NORTH AMERICA". March 10, 2021. The first Sikhs came to Golden about 1902, arriving to work in the sawmill of the Columbia River Lumber Company. When the Sikhs arrived in Golden the community was in its infancy and the sawmill had recently opened. The Columbia River Lumber Company recognized the value of these tall strong men and had no problem with the men. They hired them to work in the lumberyard, planer, and sawmill. The first documented proof that we have of South Asians of the Sikh faith being residents of Golden is a copy of a telegram sent to G.T. Bradshaw, Chief of Police, New Westminster from Colin Cameron, Chief of Police, Golden, BC on July 20, 1902. It was sent collect and reads: Geha Singh of Golden sent a telegram to Santa Singh care of Small and Bucklin for one thousand dollars.
  28. ^ Abu-Laban 1983, 76.
  29. ^ "Lebanese Community". esask.uregina.ca. Retrieved September 15, 2022. People of Lebanese/ Syrian origin began immigrating to Saskatchewan in the early 1900s (some immigrants were born in what was western Syria prior to the border between Lebanon and Syria being redrawn after WORLD WAR I—those towns are now part of Lebanon—whereas the designation "Lebanese" is typically used by current families when referring to their heritage). A number of families settled in the southeast, in or near communities such as RADVILLE, CEYLON, LAMPMAN, and North Portal. Over forty individuals and families homesteaded or started businesses in small towns in the SWIFT CURRENT district. Some only remained for a year or two before moving to larger centres, but many stayed and became part of the mosaic of life in rural Saskatchewan.
  30. ^ "Salloum's Arab Cooking a delicious look at little-known Sask. history". leaderpost.com. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  31. ^ "Old Stock Canadians: Arab Settlers in Western Canada". activehistory.ca. October 2015. Retrieved September 15, 2022. The southern Saskatchewan plains where Ganam was born, and that he dashed across, were home to many Arab settlers. Most referred to themselves and were known as Syrians, meaning that they came from an area encompassing present-day Syria and Lebanon. Arab settlers from Syria/Lebanon arrived in Western Canada starting well over one hundred years ago. They settled throughout the West but there was a significant cluster of Arabs in southern Saskatchewan on arid marginal land in the heart of Captain John Palliser's infamous triangle that he identified as an extension of the Great American Desert. Most were from eastern Lebanon and they included Muslims and Christians. They were generally single men, arriving on the Canadian prairies through the United States. Others arrived as families. Some filed on homesteads of 160 acres, and "proved up," receiving title to their land and persisted for decades. Others, like thousands of would-be homesteaders, deserted or abandoned their land. Some purchased land that they farmed. Aside from farming, Arab settlers operated general stores, bakeries and cafes in towns throughout the West and some were traveling merchants, visiting the isolated farms on foot or by horse and wagon in summer, and sleigh in winter.
  32. ^ "Regional Cultures: Lebanese". laclabichemuseum.com. March 9, 2017. Retrieved September 15, 2022. Lac La Biche is the site of one of the first permanent Lebanese settlements in Alberta and has the highest percentage of Lebanese people per capita (14%) in the province. Most of the Lebanese community today have roots in either Lala or Kherbet Rouha, both located in the Beqaa Valley. The first Lebanese immigrants in Alberta, Ali Abouchadi (Alexander Hamilton) and his uncle Sine Abouchadi, came to Canada in 1905 intending to work the gold rush. Unfortunately, they arrived too late. By 1906, they were peddling goods between Edmonton and Lac La Biche; eventually, Sine opened a general store in Lac La Biche, which his nephew took over in 1913.
  33. ^ . multiculturalcanada.ca. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved May 14, 2007.
  34. ^ "Sikhs celebrate history in Golden". April 26, 2018. The original temple in Golden sat on a corner of a lot, in the south western area of town at the end of the street looking toward where Rona is now. The largest influx of men came from South Asia around 1905, which would be the time period that the temple in Golden would have began services. In 1926, a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company, where the South Asian men worked.
  35. ^ "Golden's Sikh heritage recognized on new Stop of Interest sign". November 9, 2016. We acknowledge the Gurdwara in Golden as the first in B.C., and quite likely the first in North America," said Pyara Lotay, on behalf of the local Sikh community. "We thank the B.C. government for recognizing Golden's Sikh pioneers and their place of worship with this Stop of Interest.
  36. ^ "Golden Gurdwara is recognized for its historical significance". June 7, 2017. The original temple sat on the corner of a lot, which is now owned by Gurmit Manhas, at the end of the street past the School Board Office looking towards the Rona. Plans are being put together to erect a kiosk there that would share information about the original building, the first South Asian people to Canada, the importance of the Gurdwara to the Sikh people and the history of why they left and what brought them back. The largest influx of men came from South Asia in about 1905–06, which would be the time period that the Temple would have begun services. In 1926 a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company, where all the South Asian men worked and the men left for the coast having no work to do. When the forest started to grow back the men came back and soon it was necessary to build the present Gurdwara on 13th Street South.
  37. ^ "First Sikh Temple • Vancouver Heritage Foundation".
  38. ^ "New Westminster Sikh temple celebrates 100-year anniversary". March 3, 2019. The Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar is one of the oldest Sikh temples in the country and its members are celebrating the milestone anniversary by reflecting on its historic significance to the local Sikh community. The temple was actually founded more than 100 years ago when a pioneering Sikh named Bhai Bishan Singh bought a house next door to where the building is now. Singh paid $250 for the house, which served as a place of worship until the congregation grew too large. In 1919, Singh bought the neighbouring lot at 347 Wood Street and the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar was born.
  39. ^ "New Westminster Sikh temple welcomes community to celebrate its centennial anniversary". February 27, 2019. The Khalsa Diwan Society New Westminster is inviting community members to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar in Queensborough. Since opening in 1919, the temple has become an integral part of the Queensborough and New Westminster communities, and has provided a place for Sikhs from New Westminster and the Lower Mainland to gather and to worship. "It is starting up on Thursday and it will be four days, with the main event on Sunday. It's open to anyone within the community – in Queensborough and in New West. It's to show support, learn about each other and the heritage," said Jag Sall, a member of the committee that's organizing the celebration. "I don't think a lot of people know that the Sikh community has been in Queensborough for over 100 years, and/or the gurdwara itself has been there that long. Not just the Sikh community, but other communities in Queensborough have been living there for a century."
  40. ^ "The Gurdwara of New West Shares a Century of Stories". January 23, 2020. Every Sunday in 1919, the Sikhs of Queensborough on the Fraser River would stroll over to the house of Bhai Bishan Singh for worship. Singh, like many Punjabi immigrants, settled in the New Westminster neighbourhood because he worked upriver at a sawmill. A devout Sikh, he had the holy scripture installed in his home, the Guru Granth Sahib. Singh was a bachelor and gave much of his earnings to the local Khalsa Diwan Society, which in 1908 had built B.C.'s first gurdwara, the Sikh place of worship, in Vancouver. In March 1919, Singh helped the Sikhs of New Westminster start a gurdwara of their own. For $250, Singh bought the property next door and donated it to the society. Later, he would donate his house as well.
  41. ^ "Paldi Sikh Temple in Cowichan celebrating 100 years". June 26, 2019. The town's cultural centres were the Japanese community hall and the Sikh Temple, which officially opened July 1, 1919, to coincide with Dominion Day.
  42. ^ "Sikh temple celebrates 100 years of acceptance in Vancouver Island ghost town". June 29, 2019. Paldi's Gurdwara was built in 1919 and soon became one of the most important fixtures of the community, even surviving several town fires.
  43. ^ "THE FOUNDING OF PALDI". In 1919, Mayo built a Sikh temple, or a gurdwara.
  44. ^ "PALDI: Town soaked in Sikh History". Wherever there are five or more Sikh's there will be Sikh Temple even just a spare room in some ones house. Therefore it was only that once the natural that once the mill and bunkhouses were erected the next building should be a Temple. The first official Temple in Paldi was built in 1919. On the same spot where the present Temple is located.
  45. ^ Nayar, The Punjabis in British Columbia, page 15.
  46. ^ Nayar, The Punjabis in British Columbia, p. 29.
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Bibliography edit

  • Abu-Laban, Baha (1983), "The Canadian Muslim Community: The Need for a New Survival Strategy", in Waugh, Earle H.; Abu-Laban, Baha; Abu-Qureshi, Regula (eds.), The Muslim Community in North America, University of Alberta, ISBN 0-88864-034-X.
  • Aksan, Virginia H. (1999), "Turks", in Magocsi, Paul R. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-2938-8.
  • Han, J. D.; Ibbott, Peter (2005), "Korean Migration to North America: Some Prices That Matter" (PDF), Canadian Studies in Population, 32 (2): 155–176, doi:10.25336/P6XS4T, retrieved September 2, 2014
  • Kwak, Min-Jung (July 2004), (PDF), Research on Immigration and Integration in the Metropolis Working Paper Series, 4 (14), archived from the original (PDF) on July 23, 2011, retrieved July 11, 2007
  • Ouzounian, N. (2003). "Կանադա [Canada]". In Ayvazyan, Hovhannes (ed.). Հայ Սփյուռք հանրագիտարան [Encyclopedia of the Armenian Diaspora] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Encyclopedia Publishing. pp. 331-342. ISBN 5-89700-020-4.
  • Yoon, In-Jin (2006), (PDF), Transformation & Prospect toward Multiethnic, Multiracial & Multicultural Society: Enhancing Intercultural Communication, Asia Culture Forum, archived from the original (PDF) on September 29, 2007, retrieved July 11, 2007

Further reading edit

  • Torres, Rose Ann; Leung, Kailan; Soepriatna, Vania, eds. (2021). Outside and In-Between: Theorizing Asian-Canadian Exclusion and the Challenges of Identity Formation. Studies in Critical Social Sciences. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-46635-7. OCLC 1346503900.
  • Ty, Eleanor Rose; Verduyn, Christl, eds. (2008). Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-1-55458-023-1. OCLC 753479603.
  • Lai, Larissa (2014). Slanting I, Imagining We: Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s. Waterloo, Ontario, Canada: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-1-77112-041-8. OCLC 866930850.
  • Khoo, Tseen-Ling (2003). Banana Bending: Asian-Australian and Asian-Canadian Literatures. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0-7735-2551-3. OCLC 651001993.

External links edit

  • Asian Canadian Website
  • Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada
  • 2001 demographics from Statistics Canada
  • Information for South Asians and Indians in Canada
  • Asian Canadian Wiki

asian, canadians, this, article, contains, many, charts, tables, data, please, help, cleaning, them, elaborating, them, with, prose, text, november, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, canadians, were, either, born, trace, their, ancestry, cont. This article contains too many charts tables or data Please help cleaning them up or elaborating them with prose text November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Asian Canadians are Canadians who were either born in or can trace their ancestry to the continent of Asia Canadians with Asian ancestry comprise both the largest and fastest growing group in Canada after European Canadians forming approximately 20 2 percent of the Canadian population as of 2021 1 2 a Most Asian Canadians are concentrated in the urban areas of Southern Ontario Southwestern British Columbia Central Alberta and other large Canadian cities Asian CanadiansAsian ancestry in Canada 2016 Total population7 331 610 1 2 a 20 2 of the Canadian population 2021 Regions with significant populationsWestern Canada Central Canada Urbanless prevalent in the Atlantic and NorthLanguagesCanadian English Canadian FrenchMandarin Cantonese Punjabi Arabic TagalogOther Asian languages 3 ReligionChristianity Buddhism and other East Asian religions Islam Hinduism Sikhism Judaism Non religious OtherRelated ethnic groupsAsian Americans Asian Australians Asian Britons Asian New Zealanders Asian peopleAsian Canadians are considered visible minorities and may be classified as East Asian Canadians South Asian Canadians Southeast Asian Canadians and West Asian Canadians 4 According to the 2021 Canadian census the pan ethnic breakdown of major Asian origin Canadian groups includes South Asian Canadians 2 571 400 persons or 35 1 percent 2 East Asian Canadians 2 289 805 persons or 31 2 percent b Southeast Asian Canadians 1 434 330 persons or 19 6 percent c and West Asian Canadians 1 086 230 people or 14 8 percent 1 2 In further detail the largest self reported Asian origin groups in Canada are Chinese Canadians Indo Canadians Filipino Canadians Vietnamese Canadians and Lebanese Canadians 5 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 18th century 2 2 19th century 2 3 20th century 2 4 21st century 3 Demography 3 1 Population 3 2 National and ethnic origins 3 3 Language 3 3 1 Knowledge of language 3 3 2 Mother Tongue 3 4 Religion 4 Geographic distribution 4 1 Provinces and territories 4 2 Subdivisions with significant Asian Canadian populations 4 2 1 Alberta 4 2 2 British Columbia 4 2 3 Manitoba 4 2 4 Ontario 4 2 5 Quebec 4 2 6 Saskatchewan 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksTerminology editIn the Canadian census people with origins or ancestry in East Asia e g Chinese Canadians Korean Canadians Japanese Canadians Tibetan Canadians South Asia e g Bangladeshi Canadians Indian Canadians Pakistani Canadians Sri Lankan Canadians Southeast Asia e g Laotian Canadians Cambodian Canadians Filipino Canadians Vietnamese Canadians West Asia e g Iranian Canadians Kurdish Canadians Israeli Canadians Lebanese Canadians Turkish Canadians or Central Asia e g Afghan Canadians Uzbek Canadians Kazakh Canadians are all classified as part of the Asian race History edit nbsp Chinese labourers working on the Canadian Pacific Railway 1884 nbsp South Asians at a lumber camp in British Columbia circa 1914 nbsp Damage after the September 1907 anti Asian riot in Vancouver nbsp Indians in Vancouver 1908 nbsp South Asians aboard Komagata Maru in Vancouver 1914 nbsp Founding members of the Canadian Japanese Association at the Japanese Canadian War Memorial in Vancouver 1920 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2020 18th century edit The first record of Asians in what is known as Canada today can be dated back to the late 18th century In 1788 renegade British Captain John Meares hired a group of Chinese carpenters from Macau and employed them to build a ship at Nootka Sound Vancouver Island British Columbia 6 312 After the outpost was seized by Spanish forces the eventual whereabouts of the carpenters was largely unknown By late 1700s Filipinos then known as Manila men 7 were recruited in naval operations aboard the ship San Carlos el Filipino sent to support the short lived Spanish settlement of Santa Cruz de Nuca and Fort San Miguel Nootka Island off the coast of Vancouver 8 19th century edit During the mid 19th century many Chinese arrived to take part in the British Columbia gold rushes Beginning in 1858 early settlers formed Victoria s Chinatown and other Chinese communities in New Westminster Yale and Lillooet Estimates indicate that about 1 3 of the non native population of the Fraser goldfields was Chinese 9 10 Later the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway prompted another wave of immigration from the East Asian country Mainly hailing from Guangdong Province the Chinese helped build the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Fraser Canyon Many Japanese people also arrived in Canada during the mid to late 19th century and became fishermen and merchants in British Columbia Early immigrants from the East Asian island nation most notably worked in canneries such as Steveston along the pacific coast Similarly in the late 19th century many Indians hailing from Punjab Province settled in British Columbia and worked in the forestry industry 11 Most early immigrants hailing from South Asia first settled around sawmill towns along the Fraser River in southwestern British Columbia such as Kitsilano Fraser Mills and Queensborough 12 Later many Indian immigrants also settled on Vancouver Island working on local sawmills in Victoria Coombs Duncan Ocean Falls and Paldi 13 Early West Asian Canadian history featured Lebanese and Syrians first immigrating in Canada during the late 19th century as both countries were under Ottoman dominion at the time they were originally known as Turks or Syrian Lebanese on census reports Settling in the Montreal area of southern Quebec they became the first West Asian group to immigrate to Canada 14 The first Lebanese immigrant to Canada was Abraham Bounadere Ibrahim Abu Nadir from Zahle in Lebanon who settled in Montreal in 1882 15 Because of situations within Lebanon and restrictive Canadian laws these immigrants were 90 Christian These immigrants were mostly economic migrants seeking greater prosperity in the New World Similar to late 19th century through early 20th century Lebanese immigration and settler patterns while the vast majority of Syrians migrated to South America a small percentage made their way to the United States and an even smaller percentage settled in Canada Once again in a similar demographic to early Lebanese settlers to Canada the overwhelming majority of Syrians who settled in Canada from the 1880s 1960s were of the Christian faith The so called shepherd of the lost flock Saint Raphael Hawaweeny of Brooklyn New York came to Montreal in 1896 to help establish a Christian association called the Syrian Benevolent Society and then later on an Orthodox church in Montreal for the newly arrived Syrian faithful 16 West Asian settlement into Canada was also bolstered by early Armenian immigration during the late 19th century The first Armenians migrated to Canada in the 1880s The first recorded Armenian to settle in Canada was a man named Garabed Nergarian who came to Port Hope Ontario in 1887 17 18 Some 37 Armenians settled in Canada in 1892 and 100 in 1895 Most early Armenian migrants to Canada were men who were seeking employment After the Hamidian massacres of mid 1890s Armenian families from the Ottoman Empire began settling in Canada Additionally Canada s earliest documented Filipinos coincided with North America s first wave of Asian immigration in the 1800s At least nine male Filipino sailors aged twenty four to forty two appeared on the 1881 Census of British Columbia Living on a vessel in New Westminster they were recorded ethno racially as Malay a loose term to describe Austronesian people and listed as Mahomitan an archaic term for Muslim 19 In the ensuing decades several Filipino settlers resided along the B C coast particularly on Bowen Island in the 1880s 20 Early Filipino settlers along the B C coast engaged in both fishing and farming It included Fernando Toreenya a fisherman who came to Canada from the Philippines in 1886 at the age of 20 years old with his First Nations partner Mary Marie Adams They lived in Snug Cove and had three other Filipino boarders living with them William Matilda Antoni Bentorre and Ricardo Castro Others included Ben Flores who were beachcombers and fishermen 21 and were settled on a barge in Snug Cove Basinto Pasento who called his home Pasento Ranch and died in February 1904 John Delmond and Jose Garcia Several others worked as loggers millhand mine laborers and longshoremen intermarrying with Indigenous peoples and other Pacific Islanders By 1884 Nanaimo New Westminster Yale and Victoria had the largest Chinese populations in the province Other settlements such as Quesnelle Forks were majority Chinese and many early immigrants from the East Asian country settled on Vancouver Island most notably in Cumberland 22 In addition to work on the railway most Chinese in the late 19th century British Columbia lived among other Chinese and worked in market gardens coal mines sawmills and salmon canneries 23 In 1885 soon after the construction on the railway was completed the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act whereby the government began to charge a substantial head tax for each Chinese person trying to immigrate to Canada A decade later the fear of the Yellow Peril prompted the government of Mackenzie Bowell to pass an act forbidding any East Asian Canadian from voting or holding office 24 Many Chinese workers settled in Canada after the railway was constructed however most could not bring the rest of their families including immediate relatives due to government restrictions and enormous processing fees They established Chinatowns and societies in undesirable sections of the cities such as East Pender Street in Vancouver which had been the focus of the early city s red light district until Chinese merchants took over the area from the 1890s onwards 25 20th century edit Immigration restrictions stemming from anti Asian sentiment in Canada continued during the early 20th century Parliament voted to increase the Chinese head tax to 500 in 1902 this temporarily caused Chinese immigration to Canada to stop However in following years Chinese immigration to Canada recommenced as many saved up money to pay the head tax Due to the decrease in Chinese immigration Steamship lines began recruiting Indians to make up for the loss of business the Fraser River Canners Association and the Kootchang Fruit Growers Association asked the Canadian government to abolish immigration restrictions Letters from persons settling in Canada gave persons still in India encouragement to move to Canada and there was an advertising campaign to promote British Columbia as an immigration destination 26 Around that time in 1902 a notable moment of Asian Canadian history occurred when Punjabi Sikh settlers first arrived in Golden British Columbia to work at the Columbia River Lumber Company 27 In 1901 Canada had between 300 and 400 Muslim residents equally divided between Turks and Syrian Arabs 28 Furthermore the turn of the 20th century featured a small wave of Syrian Lebanese settlement into the southern prairies including Alberta Saskatchewan and Manitoba Contemporarily in Lebanon many families were from what was western Syria at the time in particular settled in southern Saskatchewan 29 A majority of the Syrian Lebanese families settling in the prairies were of the Christian faith with a minority adhering to Islam mirroring earlier settler demographics in Nova Scotia Quebec and Ontario Prominent settlement occurred in communities such as Swift Current Saskatchewan and Lac La Biche Alberta 30 31 32 Few reached the Northwest Territories the best known being Peter Baker author of the book An Arctic Arab and later elected as a member of the legislative assembly of the Northwest Territories 33 The early Punjabi Sikh settlers in Golden built the first Gurdwara Sikh Temple in Canada and North America in 1905 34 35 which would later be destroyed by fire in 1926 36 The second Gurdwara to be built in Canada was in 1908 in Kitsilano Vancouver aimed at serving a growing number of Punjabi Sikh settlers who worked at nearby sawmills along False Creek at the time 37 The Gurdwara would later close and be demolished in 1970 with the temple society relocating to the newly built Gurdwara on Ross Street in South Vancouver As a result the oldest existing Gurdwara in Canada today is the Gur Sikh Temple located in Abbotsford British Columbia Built in 1911 the temple was designated as a national historic site of Canada in 2002 and is the third oldest Gurdwara in the country Soon later the fourth Gurdwara to be built Canada was established at the Fraser Mills Coquitlam settlement in 1913 followed by the fifth at the Queensborough New Westminster settlement in 1919 38 39 40 and the sixth at the Paldi Vancouver Island settlement also in 1919 41 42 43 44 Heightened anti Asian sentiment resulted in the infamous anti Asian pogrom in Vancouver in 1907 Spurred by similar riots in Bellingham targeting Punjabi Sikh South Asian settlers The Asiatic Exclusion League organized attacks against homes and businesses owned by East Asian immigrants under the slogan White Canada Forever though no one was killed much property damage was done and numerous East Asian Canadians were beaten up In 1908 the British Columbia government passed a law preventing South Asian Canadians from voting Because eligibility for federal elections originated from provincial voting lists Indians were also unable to vote in federal elections 45 Later the Canadian government enacted a 200 head tax and passed the continuous journey regulation which indirectly halted Indian immigration to Canada thus restricting all immigration from South Asia A direct result of the continuous journey regulation was the Komagata Maru incident in Vancouver In May 1914 hundreds of South Asians hailing from Punjab were denied entry into the country eventually forced to depart for India By 1916 despite a declining population due to immigration restrictions many Indian settlers established the Paldi mill colony on Vancouver Island 46 During the pre World War I period Turks were to be found in mining and logging camps across Canada 47 However due to bad relations between the Ottoman Empire and Allied Powers of WWI further migration was made difficult for the Turks and the Canadian government discouraged Asian immigration 47 With the Canadian Immigration Act of 1910 Turkish immigration to Canada was banned 48 With the onset of the first world war Turkish Canadians were placed in enemy alien internment camps 49 Five days after the first world war began on November 10 1914 98 Turks were deported and settled in Kingston and then in Kapuskasing Their number increased over time 50 They were not the only enemy aliens subjected to internment More than 8 500 people were placed in 24 camps during the war Of them 205 were Turks 51 52 Before the Armenian genocide of 1915 some 1 800 Armenians already lived in Canada They were overwhelmingly from the Armenian provinces of the Ottoman Empire and usually lived in industrial urban areas The influx of Armenians to Canada was limited in the post World War I era because Armenians were classified as Asians 18 Nevertheless some 1 500 genocide survivors mostly women and children came to Canada as refugees 53 In 1923 24 some 100 Armenians orphans aged 8 12 later known as The Georgetown Boys were brought to Canada from Corfu Greece by the Armenian Canadian Relief Fund to Georgetown Ontario 17 Dubbed The Noble Experiment it was Canada s first humanitarian act on an international scale 18 The Georgetown Farmhouse now the Cedarvale Community Centre was designated historic and protected municipal site in 2010 54 Overall between 1900 and 1930 some 3 100 Armenians entered Canada with 75 settling in Ontario and 20 in Quebec 55 Some later moved to the United States 1 577 Armenians entered the U S from Canada between 1899 and 1917 18 In 1923 the federal government passed the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923 which banned all Chinese immigration and led to immigration restrictions for all East Asians In 1947 the act was repealed The second world war prompted the federal government used the War Measures Act to brand Japanese Canadians enemy aliens and categorized them as security threats in 1942 Tens of thousands of Japanese Canadians were placed in internment camps in British Columbia prison of war camps in Ontario and families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies By 1943 all properties owned by Japanese Canadians in British Columbia were seized and sold without consent In 1950 10 Filipinos were recorded in Manitoba The first generation Filipino Canadians were mainly women who worked as nurses and teachers and in the health sector These first Filipinos came from the United States to renew their visas after they had expired in the hope of returning to the US Most of them returned but some stayed in Canada From 1946 to 1964 the total number of Filipinos in Canada was 770 In the 1960s Canada recruited more professionals mostly from the United States with some coming directly from the Philippines Most of the nurses technicians office workers and doctors arrived in Winnipeg Manitoba In the late 1960s more Filipinos came to Winnipeg to work in the garment industry Pakistanis began migrating to Canada in small numbers in the late 1950s and early 1960s Immigration regulations gave preference to those with advanced education and professional skills and the Pakistanis who came during this period and throughout the 1960s generally had excellent credentials Many of them considered themselves to be sojourners who had come to earn but not to settle or were students who intended to return home when their degree programs were completed While some went back others remained to become the founding members of the Pakistani Canadian community 56 Pakistani nationals were registered in undergraduate and graduate programs at McGill University in Montreal as early as 1949 and at the University of Toronto from 1958 on By the mid 1950s there were five or six Pakistani families living in Montreal in addition to the students This was probably the then largest concentration of Pakistanis in the country Throughout the 1950s 1960s and 1970s most who arrived were young men pursuing graduate or professional studies Unlike Korean Americans who have relatively much longer history settling in the United States very few settled in Canada as late as 1965 the total permanent Korean population of Canada was estimated at only 70 57 However with the 1966 reform of Canadian immigration laws South Korean immigration to Canada began to grow 57 By 1969 there were an estimated 2000 Koreans in Canada 58 The Iranian revolution of 1979 resulted in a spike of immigration to Canada from the West Asian country 59 In the aftermath many Iranian Canadians began to categorize themselves as Persian rather than Iranian mainly to dissociate themselves from the Islamic regime of Iran and the negativity associated with it and also to distinguish themselves as being of Persian ethnicity 60 61 During and after the Vietnam War a large wave of Vietnamese refugees began arriving in Canada Large scale Vietnamese immigration to Canada began during the mid 1970s and early 1980s as refugees or boat people following the end of the Vietnam War in 1975 though a couple thousand were already living in Quebec before then most of whom were students After the fall of Saigon there were two waves of Vietnamese immigrants to Canada The first wave consisted mostly of middle class immigrants Many of these immigrants were able to speak French and or English and were welcomed into Canada for their professional skills The second wave consisted of Southern Vietnamese refugees who were escaping the harsh regime that had taken over the former South Vietnam Many of them 10 were of Chinese descent and were escaping ethnic persecution resulting from the Sino Vietnamese War These south Vietnamese refugees were known globally as the boat people In the years 1979 80 Canada accepted 60 000 Vietnamese refugees 62 Many new Vietnamese arrivees were sponsored by groups of individuals temples and churches and settled in areas around Southern Ontario Vancouver British Columbia and Montreal Quebec Between 1975 and 1985 110 000 resettled in Canada 23 000 in Ontario 13 000 in Quebec 8 000 in Alberta 7 000 British Columbia 5 000 in Manitoba 3 000 in Saskatchewan and 2 000 in the Maritime provinces This was followed by another large wave of Vietnamese immigration to Canada during the late 1980s and 1990s as both refugees and immigrant classes of post war Vietnam entered Canada These groups settled in urban areas in particular Toronto Vancouver Montreal and Calgary In Metro Vancouver they have settled mainly in East Vancouver Richmond and Surrey In the Montreal area they settle in Montreal s downtown South Shore and the suburb of Laval In Toronto they have settled in the city s Chinatown area near Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street West and in the inner suburbs of North York York Scarborough and Etobicoke The Canadian Parliament created the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada in 1985 to better address issues surrounding Asia Canada relations including trade citizenship and immigration In the late 1990s South Korea became the fifth largest source of immigrants to Canada 63 Toronto has the country s largest absolute number of Koreans but Vancouver is experiencing the highest rate of growth in its Korean population with a 69 increase since 1996 Montreal was the third most popular destination for Korean migrants during this period 64 The 1990s growth in South Korean migration to Canada occurred at a time when Canadian unemployment was high and income growth was low relative to the United States 65 One pair of researchers demonstrated that numbers of migrants were correlated with the exchange rate the weakness of the Canadian dollar relative to the United States dollar meant that South Korean migrants bringing savings to Canada for investment would be relatively richer than those going to the United States 66 Other factors suggested as drivers behind the growth of South Korean immigration to Canada included domestic anti Americanism and the large presence of Canadian English teachers in local hagwon 67 When Hong Kong reverted to mainland Chinese rule people emigrated and found new homes in Canada 21st century edit In 2016 the Canadian government issued a full apology in Parliament for the Komagata Maru Incident According to Statistics Canada in 2016 48 1 of the immigrant population in Canada was born in Asia Furthermore Asian countries accounted for seven of the top ten countries of birth for recent immigrants including the Philippines India China Iran Pakistan Syria and South Korea 68 In recent decades a large number of people have come to Canada from India and other South Asian countries As of 2016 South Asians make up nearly 17 percent of the Greater Toronto Area s population and are projected to make up 24 percent of the region s population by 2031 69 In the contemporary era Asians form a significant minority within the national population with over 7 million Canadians being of Asian geographical descent as of 2021 Asian Canadian students in particular those of East Asian or South Asian background make up the vast majority of students at several Canadian universities Demography editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Canadians of Asian descent total population 1871 2021 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Canadians of Asian descent percentage of the total population 1871 2021 Population edit Asian Canadian Population History1871 2021 Year Population of total population1871 70 71 72 685 4 0 1881 70 72 685 4 383 0 101 1901 70 72 685 23 731 0 442 1911 70 72 685 43 213 0 6 1921 70 71 72 685 73 353 65 914 0 75 1931 70 71 72 685 74 225 75 236 76 503 84 548 0 815 1941 70 71 72 685 74 064 0 644 1951 70 71 77 484 72 827 0 52 1961 70 71 78 79 5 121 753 0 668 1971 70 71 78 80 1 285 540 1 324 1981 78 81 26 82 64 818 670 3 399 1986 83 374 82 20 1 169 205 4 673 1991 78 84 66 85 11 1 865 435 6 911 1996 86 87 2 555 590 8 958 2001 88 3 234 290 10 912 2006 89 4 181 755 13 385 2011 90 5 011 220 15 254 2016 5 6 095 235 17 688 2021 1 2 a 7 331 610 20 181 National and ethnic origins edit Asian Canadians by pan ethnicity 2001 2021 Panethnic group Percentage2021 1 2 2016 5 2011 90 2006 89 2001 88 South Asian 35 07 32 21 32 25 31 49 29 78 East Asian 31 23 b 35 24 36 27 38 94 40 63 Southeast Asian 19 56 c 19 93 19 89 16 87 16 79 West Asian amp Central Asian 14 82 16 59 15 53 15 61 14 95 While the Asian Canadian population is diverse many have ancestry from a few select countries in the continent As of the 2016 Canadian census nearly four million or 66 of Asian Canadians can trace their roots to just three countries China India and the Philippines Population of Asian Canadian Groups 2006 2016 Origins 2016 5 2011 90 2006 89 Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Chinese d 1 769 195 29 03 5 13 1 487 580 29 68 4 53 1 346 510 32 2 4 31 Indian 1 374 715 22 55 3 99 1 165 145 23 25 3 55 962 670 23 02 3 08 Filipino 851 410 13 97 2 47 662 600 13 22 2 02 436 195 10 43 1 4 Vietnamese 240 615 3 95 0 7 220 425 4 4 0 67 180 130 4 31 0 58 Lebanese 219 555 3 6 0 64 190 275 3 8 0 58 165 150 3 95 0 53 Pakistani 215 560 3 54 0 63 155 310 3 1 0 47 124 730 2 98 0 4 Iranian 210 405 3 45 0 61 163 290 3 26 0 5 121 505 2 91 0 39 Korean 198 210 3 25 0 58 168 890 3 37 0 51 146 545 3 5 0 47 Sri Lankan 152 595 2 5 0 44 139 415 2 78 0 42 103 625 2 48 0 33 Japanese 121 485 1 99 0 35 109 740 2 19 0 33 98 905 2 37 0 32 Punjabi 118 395 1 94 0 34 76 150 1 52 0 23 53 515 1 28 0 17 Arab n o s e 111 405 1 83 0 32 94 640 1 89 0 29 86 135 2 06 0 28 Afghan 83 995 1 38 0 24 62 815 1 25 0 19 48 090 1 15 0 15 Syrian 77 045 1 26 0 22 40 840 0 81 0 12 31 370 0 75 0 1 South Asian n i e f 76 400 1 25 0 22 53 390 1 07 0 16 60 895 1 46 0 19 Iraqi 70 920 1 16 0 21 49 680 0 99 0 15 29 950 0 72 0 1 Turkish 63 995 1 05 0 19 55 430 1 11 0 17 43 700 1 05 0 14 Armenian 63 810 1 05 0 19 55 740 1 11 0 17 50 500 1 21 0 16 Tamil 48 670 0 8 0 14 48 965 0 98 0 15 34 590 0 83 0 11 Bangladeshi 45 940 0 75 0 13 34 205 0 68 0 1 24 595 0 59 0 08 Palestinian 44 820 0 74 0 13 31 245 0 62 0 1 23 975 0 57 0 08 Cambodian 38 495 0 63 0 11 34 340 0 69 0 1 25 245 0 6 0 08 Taiwanese 36 515 94 000 91 173 000 92 0 6 1 54 2 84 0 11 0 27 0 5 30 330 0 61 0 09 17 705 0 42 0 06 Israeli 28 735 0 47 0 08 15 010 0 3 0 05 10 755 0 26 0 03 West CentralAsian andMiddle Eastern n i e f 25 280 0 41 0 07 16 540 0 33 0 05 12 075 0 29 0 04 Laotian 24 575 0 4 0 07 22 090 0 44 0 07 20 110 0 48 0 06 Bengali 22 900 0 38 0 07 17 960 0 36 0 05 12 130 0 29 0 04 OtherAsian n i e f 22 745 0 37 0 07 20 115 0 4 0 06 555 0 01 0 Indonesian 21 395 0 35 0 06 18 125 0 36 0 06 14 325 0 34 0 05 Thai 19 010 0 31 0 06 15 080 0 3 0 05 10 020 0 24 0 03 Nepali 17 140 0 28 0 05 9 780 0 2 0 03 3 780 0 09 0 01 Malaysian 16 920 0 28 0 05 14 165 0 28 0 04 12 165 0 29 0 04 Kurdish 16 315 0 27 0 05 11 685 0 23 0 04 9 205 0 22 0 03 Jordanian 14 250 0 23 0 04 9 425 0 19 0 03 6 905 0 17 0 02 Assyrian 13 830 0 23 0 04 10 810 0 22 0 03 8 650 0 21 0 03 Burmese 9 330 0 15 0 03 7 845 0 16 0 02 4 590 0 11 0 01 Gujarati 8 350 0 14 0 02 5 890 0 12 0 02 2 975 0 07 0 01 Tibetan 8 040 0 13 0 02 5 820 0 12 0 02 4 275 0 1 0 01 Mongolian 7 475 0 12 0 02 5 355 0 11 0 02 3 960 0 09 0 01 Sinhalese 7 285 0 12 0 02 7 220 0 14 0 02 5 825 0 14 0 02 SaudiArabian 6 810 0 11 0 02 7 955 0 16 0 02 2 730 0 07 0 01 Yemeni 6 645 0 11 0 02 3 945 0 08 0 01 2 300 0 06 0 01 East andSoutheastAsian n i e f 6 505 0 11 0 02 9 045 0 18 0 03 8 990 0 21 0 03 Azerbaijani 6 425 0 11 0 02 4 580 0 09 0 01 3 465 0 08 0 01 Goan 6 070 0 1 0 02 5 125 0 1 0 02 4 815 0 12 0 02 Tatar 4 825 0 08 0 01 2 850 0 06 0 01 2 300 0 06 0 01 Pashtun 4 810 0 08 0 01 3 315 0 07 0 01 1 690 0 04 0 01 Georgian 4 775 0 08 0 01 3 155 0 06 0 01 2 200 0 05 0 01 Karen 4 515 0 07 0 01 N A N A N A N A N A N AUzbek 3 920 0 06 0 01 2 725 0 05 0 01 N A N A N ABhutanese 3 600 0 06 0 01 N A N A N A N A N A N AKazakh 3 330 0 05 0 01 2 270 0 05 0 01 N A N A N AKashmiri 3 115 0 05 0 01 2 125 0 04 0 01 1 685 0 04 0 01 Tajik 2 905 0 05 0 01 2 400 0 05 0 01 N A N A N ASingaporean 2 845 0 05 0 01 2 050 0 04 0 01 1 390 0 03 0 Kuwaiti 2 240 0 04 0 01 2 240 0 04 0 01 1 575 0 04 0 01 Uighur 1 555 0 03 0 1 155 0 02 0 N A N A N AHazara 1 520 0 02 0 N A N A N A N A N A N AKyrgyz 1 055 0 02 0 N A N A N A N A N A N ATurkmen 1 040 0 02 0 N A N A N A N A N A N AHmong 805 0 01 0 830 0 02 0 815 0 02 0 nbsp TotalCanada 6 095 235 100 17 69 5 011 220 100 15 25 4 181 755 100 13 39 Population of Asian Canadian Groups 1981 1996 Origins 1996 86 1991 84 66 85 11 1986 83 374 82 20 1981 81 26 82 64 Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Chinese 921 585 36 06 3 23 652 645 34 99 2 42 414 045 35 41 1 65 299 915 36 63 1 25 Indian 548 080 21 45 1 92 379 280 20 33 1 41 261 435 22 36 1 04 165 410 20 2 0 69 Filipino 242 880 9 5 0 85 174 975 9 38 0 65 107 060 9 16 0 43 75 485 9 22 0 31 Vietnamese 136 810 5 35 0 48 94 255 5 05 0 35 62 995 5 39 0 25 31 685 3 87 0 13 Lebanese 131 385 5 14 0 46 101 690 5 45 0 38 45 035 3 85 0 18 32 005 3 91 0 13 Japanese 77 130 3 02 0 27 65 680 3 52 0 24 54 505 4 66 0 22 46 060 5 63 0 19 Korean 66 655 2 61 0 23 45 890 2 46 0 17 29 705 2 54 0 12 22 570 2 76 0 09 Iranian 64 405 2 52 0 23 43 210 2 32 0 16 15 745 1 35 0 06 5 500 0 67 0 02 Pakistani 38 655 1 51 0 14 43 150 2 31 0 16 31 650 2 71 0 13 13 400 1 64 0 06 Arab n i e f 48 930 1 91 0 17 38 910 2 09 0 14 37 500 3 21 0 15 28 365 3 46 0 12 Armenian 37 500 1 47 0 13 33 285 1 78 0 12 27 385 2 34 0 11 21 155 2 58 0 09 Sri Lankan 46 585 1 82 0 16 31 435 1 69 0 12 7 285 0 62 0 03 2 400 0 29 0 01 Punjabi 49 840 1 95 0 17 27 300 1 46 0 1 15 545 1 33 0 06 11 005 1 34 0 05 Cambodian 21 435 0 84 0 08 18 615 1 0 07 11 790 1 01 0 05 4 310 0 53 0 02 SouthAsian n i e f 31 335 1 23 0 11 17 145 0 92 0 06 270 0 02 0 26 845 3 28 0 11 Tamil 30 065 1 18 0 11 15 695 0 84 0 06 2 200 0 19 0 01 630 0 08 0 Laotian 17 320 0 68 0 06 14 840 0 8 0 05 11 090 0 95 0 04 7 145 0 87 0 03 Syrian 19 390 0 76 0 07 13 035 0 7 0 05 7 180 0 61 0 03 3 455 0 42 0 01 Turkish 18 130 0 71 0 06 12 050 0 65 0 04 7 555 0 65 0 03 4 155 0 51 0 02 Afghan 13 240 0 52 0 05 6 330 0 34 0 02 N A N A N A N A N A N AEastAsian n i e f 3 975 0 16 0 01 5 930 0 32 0 02 3 075 0 26 0 01 9 170 1 12 0 04 Palestinian 11 445 0 45 0 04 5 730 0 31 0 02 1 605 0 14 0 01 1 005 0 12 0 Indonesian 8 705 0 34 0 03 5 510 0 3 0 02 3 530 0 3 0 01 1 555 0 19 0 01 Bangladeshi 6 955 0 27 0 02 5 170 0 28 0 02 1 670 0 14 0 01 425 0 05 0 Iraqi 10 795 0 42 0 04 4 790 0 26 0 02 N A N A N A N A N A N AMalay 8 165 0 32 0 03 3 720 0 2 0 01 2 375 0 2 0 01 1 860 0 23 0 01 Taiwanese 7 770 0 3 0 03 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N AThai 5 015 0 2 0 02 2 770 0 15 0 01 2 930 0 25 0 01 505 0 06 0 Israeli 4 105 0 16 0 01 1 850 0 1 0 01 1 125 0 1 0 305 0 04 0 Bengali 3 790 0 15 0 01 1 520 0 08 0 01 590 0 05 0 795 0 1 0 Jordanian 2 935 0 11 0 01 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N AGujarati 2 155 0 08 0 01 N A N A N A 1 240 0 11 0 1 530 0 19 0 01 Sinhalese 3 085 0 12 0 01 1 455 0 08 0 01 1 085 0 09 0 795 0 1 0 Goan 4 415 0 17 0 02 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N AKurdish 4 225 0 17 0 01 1 430 0 08 0 01 N A N A N A N A N A N AWestAsian n i e f 2 540 0 1 0 01 765 0 04 0 N A N A N A N A N A N ABurmese 2 100 0 08 0 01 1 220 0 07 0 1 405 0 12 0 01 400 0 05 0 Mongolian 1 200 0 05 0 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N ATibetan 780 0 03 0 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A nbsp TotalCanada 2 555 590 100 8 96 1 865 435 100 6 91 1 169 205 100 4 67 818 670 100 3 4 Population of Asian Canadian Groups 1941 1971 70 Origins 1971 80 2 1961 79 5 1951 77 484 1941 93 2 Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Chinese 118 815 41 61 0 55 58 197 47 8 0 32 32 528 44 66 0 23 34 627 46 75 0 3 Indian Pakistani 52 100 18 25 0 24 6 774 5 56 0 04 2 148 2 95 0 02 1 465 1 98 0 01 Japanese 37 260 13 05 0 17 29 157 23 95 0 16 21 663 29 75 0 15 23 149 31 26 0 2 Syrian Lebanese 26 665 9 34 0 12 19 374 15 91 0 11 12 301 16 89 0 09 11 857 16 01 0 1 SouthAsian n i e f 15 830 5 54 0 07 N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N ATurkish N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A 388 0 52 0 Armenian N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A N A 2 062 2 78 0 02 OtherAsian 34 870 12 21 0 16 8 251 6 78 0 05 4 187 5 75 0 03 526 0 71 0 nbsp TotalCanada 285 540 100 1 32 121 753 100 0 67 72 827 100 0 52 74 064 100 0 64 Population of Asian Canadian Groups 1901 1931 70 74 225 Origins 1931 75 236 76 503 1921 73 353 75 236 1911 73 353 1901 73 353 Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Pop Asian Pop total Pop Chinese 46 519 55 02 0 45 39 587 60 06 0 45 27 831 64 4 0 39 17 312 72 95 0 32 Japanese 23 342 27 61 0 22 15 868 24 07 0 18 9 067 20 98 0 13 4 738 19 97 0 09 Syrian Lebanese 10 753 12 72 0 1 8 282 12 56 0 09 N A N A N A 1 437 6 06 0 03 Indian 1 400 1 66 0 01 1 016 1 54 0 01 2 342 5 42 0 03 N A N A N ATurkish N A N A N A 313 0 47 0 N A N A N A N A N A N AArmenian N A N A N A 665 1 01 0 01 N A N A N A N A N A N AOtherAsian 2 534 3 0 02 183 0 28 0 3 973 9 19 0 06 244 1 03 0 nbsp TotalCanada 84 548 100 0 81 65 914 100 0 75 43 213 100 0 6 23 731 100 0 44 Language edit Pie chart breakdown of the spoken Asian language families of Canadians from the 2016 census 94 Indo Iranian 31 03 Sino Tibetan 26 78 Semitic Asian 13 68 Austronesian 12 28 Dravidian 4 68 Austro Asiatic 4 21 Koreanic 3 23 Japonic 1 55 Turkic 1 13 Other 1 44 Knowledge of language edit Many Asian Canadians speak Canadian English or Canadian French as a first language as many multi generational individuals do not speak Asian languages as a mother tongue but instead may speak one or multiple g as a second or third language As of 2016 6 044 885 or 17 5 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language Of this the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin 13 5 Cantonese 11 6 Punjabi 11 1 Arabic 10 4 and Tagalog 10 1 Languages with 5 000 or more speakers listed Knowledge of Asian languages in Canada g Language Population 2016 95 Asianlanguages 2016 totalpopulation 2016 1 Mandarin 814 450 13 47 2 36 2 Cantonese 699 125 11 57 2 03 3 Punjabi 668 240 11 05 1 94 4 Arabic 629 055 10 41 1 83 5 Tagalog Pilipino Filipino 612 735 10 14 1 78 6 Hindi 433 365 7 17 1 26 7 Urdu 322 220 5 33 0 94 8 Persian Farsi 252 320 4 17 0 73 9 Vietnamese 198 895 3 29 0 58 10 Tamil 189 860 3 14 0 55 11 Korean 172 755 2 86 0 5 12 Gujarati 149 045 2 47 0 43 13 Bengali 91 220 1 51 0 26 14 Japanese 83 090 1 37 0 24 15 Hebrew 75 020 1 24 0 22 16 Turkish 50 775 0 84 0 15 17 Min Nan h 42 840 0 71 0 12 18 Chinese n o s e 41 690 0 69 0 12 19 Armenian 41 295 0 68 0 12 20 Malayalam 37 810 0 63 0 11 21 Ilocano 34 530 0 57 0 1 22 Sinhala 27 825 0 46 0 08 23 Cebuano 27 045 0 45 0 08 24 Khmer Cambodian 27 035 0 45 0 08 25 Pashto 23 180 0 38 0 07 26 Telugu 23 160 0 38 0 07 27 Malay 22 470 0 37 0 07 28 Nepali 21 380 0 35 0 06 29 Sindhi 20 260 0 34 0 06 30 AssyrianNeo Aramaic 19 745 0 33 0 06 31 Lao 17 235 0 29 0 05 32 Wu Shanghainese 16 530 0 27 0 05 33 Marathi 15 570 0 26 0 05 34 Thai 15 390 0 25 0 04 35 Kurdish 15 290 0 25 0 04 36 Hakka 12 445 0 21 0 04 37 Indo Iranian languages n i e f 8 875 0 15 0 03 38 Kannada 8 245 0 14 0 02 39 Hiligaynon 7 925 0 13 0 02 40 ChaldeanNeo Aramaic 7 115 0 12 0 02 41 Tibetan 7 050 0 12 0 02 42 Konkani 6 790 0 11 0 02 43 Austronesian languages n i e f 5 585 0 09 0 02 44 Azerbaijani 5 450 0 09 0 02 45 Pampangan i 5 425 0 09 0 02 46 Other 37 530 0 62 0 11 Total 6 044 885 100 17 54 Mother Tongue edit As of 2016 4 217 365 or 12 2 percent of Canadians speak an Asian language as a mother tongue Of this the top five Asian tongues spoken include Mandarin 14 0 Cantonese 13 4 Punjabi 11 9 Tagalog 10 2 and Arabic 10 0 Languages with 10 000 or more speakers listed Asian languages in Canada by number of first language speakers Mother Tongue Population 2016 96 Asianlanguages 2016 1 Mandarin 592 035 14 04 2 Cantonese 565 275 13 4 3 Punjabi 501 680 11 9 4 Tagalog Pilipino Filipino 431 385 10 23 5 Arabic 419 895 9 96 6 Persian Farsi 214 200 5 08 7 Urdu 210 820 5 8 Vietnamese 156 430 3 71 9 Korean 153 425 3 64 10 Tamil 140 720 3 34 11 Hindi 110 645 2 62 12 Gujarati 108 775 2 58 13 Bengali 73 125 1 73 14 Japanese 43 640 1 03 15 Chinese n o s e 38 575 0 91 16 Armenian 33 455 0 79 17 Turkish 32 815 0 78 18 Min Nan h 31 795 0 75 19 Malayalam 28 570 0 68 20 Ilocano 26 345 0 62 21 Khmer Cambodian 20 130 0 48 22 Cebuano 19 890 0 47 23 Hebrew 19 530 0 46 24 Nepali 18 275 0 43 25 Pashto 16 910 0 4 26 Sinhala 16 335 0 39 27 AssyrianNeo Aramaic 16 070 0 38 28 Telugu 15 655 0 37 29 Wu Shanghainese 12 920 0 31 30 Malay 12 275 0 29 31 Sindhi 11 860 0 28 32 Kurdish 11 705 0 28 33 Hakka 10 910 0 26 34 Other 101 295 2 4 Total 4 217 365 100 Religion edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it April 2020 Geographic distribution editProvinces and territories edit The Canadian population who reported full or partial Asian ethnic origin according to the 1951 Canadian census 1961 Canadian census 2001 Canadian census 2006 Canadian census 2011 Canadian census and 2016 Canadian census Asian Canadians by province and territory 1951 2016 Province 2016 5 2011 90 2006 89 2001 88 1961 79 5 1951 77 484 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop nbsp Ontario 3 100 455 23 41 2 604 590 20 59 2 214 795 18 41 1 682 890 14 91 39 277 0 63 22 138 0 48 nbsp British Columbia 1 312 445 28 78 1 122 445 25 96 975 550 23 94 802 275 20 74 40 299 2 47 25 644 2 2 nbsp Alberta 756 335 19 01 551 710 15 46 398 025 12 22 292 195 9 93 12 303 0 92 7 441 0 79 nbsp Quebec 563 150 7 07 488 905 6 32 426 815 5 74 325 270 4 56 14 801 0 28 7 714 0 19 nbsp Manitoba 178 650 14 4 126 600 10 78 90 415 7 98 72 040 6 53 4 177 0 45 2 867 0 37 nbsp Saskatchewan 99 125 9 26 55 095 5 46 28 700 3 01 23 750 2 47 4 925 0 53 2 976 0 36 nbsp Nova Scotia 42 495 4 68 31 875 3 52 24 595 2 72 20 505 2 28 2 979 0 4 2 266 0 37 nbsp New Brunswick 19 410 2 66 14 535 1 98 11 785 1 64 7 885 1 1 1 343 0 22 903 0 18 nbsp Newfoundland and Labrador 10 090 1 97 6 310 1 24 5 660 1 13 3 655 0 72 933 0 2 512 0 14 nbsp Prince Edward Island 6 485 4 64 4 360 3 17 1 775 1 32 1 250 0 94 295 0 28 279 0 28 nbsp Northwest Territories 3 125 7 6 2 165 5 31 2 025 4 93 1 465 3 95 69 j 0 3 j 23 j 0 14 j nbsp Yukon 2 855 8 13 2 205 6 62 1 270 4 21 950 3 33 152 1 04 64 0 7 nbsp Nunavut 615 1 73 425 1 34 280 0 95 160 0 6 N A j N A j N A j N A j nbsp Canada 6 095 235 17 69 5 011 220 15 25 4 181 755 13 39 3 234 290 10 91 121 753 0 67 72 827 0 52 Asian Canadians by province and territory 1871 1941 Province 1941 72 685 1931 72 685 1921 72 685 1911 72 685 1901 72 685 1881 72 685 1871 72 685 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop nbsp British Columbia 42 472 5 19 50 951 7 34 39 739 7 57 30 864 9 39 19 624 10 98 4 350 8 8 N A N A nbsp Ontario 12 020 0 32 12 297 0 36 9 171 0 31 4 573 0 18 1 288 0 06 22 0 1 0 nbsp Quebec 7 119 0 21 7 034 0 24 5 218 0 22 2 343 0 12 1 600 0 1 7 0 0 0 nbsp Alberta 4 204 0 53 4 929 0 67 4 300 0 73 2 103 0 56 249 0 34 N A N A N A N A nbsp Saskatchewan 3 420 0 38 4 419 0 48 3 333 0 44 1 238 0 25 52 0 06 N A N A N A N A nbsp Nova Scotia 1 927 0 33 1 559 0 3 1 500 0 29 675 0 14 363 0 08 0 0 3 0 nbsp Manitoba 1 788 0 25 2 255 0 32 1 715 0 28 970 0 21 258 0 1 4 0 01 N A N A nbsp New Brunswick 836 0 18 873 0 21 807 0 21 336 0 1 252 0 08 0 0 0 0 nbsp Prince Edward Island 228 0 24 166 0 19 98 0 11 29 0 03 49 0 05 0 0 N A N A nbsp Yukon 41 0 83 54 1 28 33 0 79 82 0 96 96 0 35 N A N A N A N A nbsp Northwest Territories 9 j 0 07 j 11 j 0 12 j 0 j 0 j 0 j 0 j 0 j 0 j 0 j 0 j N A N A nbsp Canada 74 064 0 64 84 548 0 81 65 914 0 75 43 213 0 6 23 731 0 44 4 383 0 1 4 0 Subdivisions with significant Asian Canadian populations edit nbsp Chinatown Vancouver nbsp Vaisakhi Parade 2017 Punjabi Market Little India Vancouver nbsp Turkish Canadians at the Victoria Day Parade 2005 in Downtown Victoria nbsp Korean businesses and restaurants along Bloor Street in Toronto s Koreatown nbsp North York storefronts offering Iranian cuisine North York has the largest West Asian population in Toronto nbsp Gerrard India Bazaar Little India in Toronto Source Canada 2016 CensusNational average 17 7 Alberta edit Chestermere 31 8 Calgary 30 0 Edmonton 29 3 Banff 22 4 Wood Buffalo 19 4 British Columbia edit Richmond 74 8 Greater Vancouver Electoral District A 65 7 Burnaby 60 1 Surrey 54 3 Vancouver 49 6 Coquitlam 48 2 West Vancouver 38 0 New Westminster 35 0 Delta 34 4 Abbotsford 31 8 North Vancouver 31 0 Port Coquitlam 29 9 Port Moody 28 7 North Vancouver district 25 8 Saanich 21 0 Manitoba edit Winnipeg 23 2 Ontario edit Markham 73 9 Richmond Hill 59 3 Brampton 54 7 Mississauga 47 0 Toronto 40 1 Ajax 36 9 Milton 34 6 Whitchurch Stouffville 33 7 Vaughan 33 5 Pickering 29 5 Oakville 26 5 Aurora 24 5 Waterloo 23 6 Windsor 22 6 Newmarket 22 5 Ottawa 19 6 Quebec edit Dollard des Ormeaux 35 4 Brossard 32 3 Mont Royal 30 5 Kirkland 24 1 Cote Saint Luc 21 8 Westmount 20 1 Pointe Claire 19 8 Montreal 18 1 Saskatchewan edit Lloydminster 20 4 See also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Asia portalList of Asian Canadian writers List of Asian Canadian first ministers Cultural assimilation of Asian immigrants in Canada Demographics of Canada Immigration to Canada Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada East Asian Canadians South Asian Canadians West Asian Canadians Asian peopleNotes edit a b c 2021 census Total responses of all Asian geographical origin population groups classified under Ethnic or cultural origin and Visible minority sections including South Asian 2 571 400 persons 2 Asian n o s 226 220 persons 1 West and Central Asian and Middle Eastern 1 086 230 persons 1 East and Southeast Asian 3 447 030 persons 1 Asian origins n i e 730 persons 1 a b Chinese 1 715 770 persons 2 Korean 218 140 persons 2 Japanese 129 425 persons 1 Hong Konger 81 680 persons 1 Taiwanese 64 020 persons 1 Tibetan 9 350 persons 1 Mongolian 9 090 persons 1 Hmong 1 030 persons 1 Other East Asian 61 300 persons 1 a b Filipino 957 355 persons 2 Bruneian 1 040 persons 1 Burmese 9 150 persons 1 Cambodian 41 950 persons 1 Chin 1 745 persons 1 Igorot 7 535 persons 1 Ilocano 25 575 persons 1 Indonesian 26 330 persons 1 Javanese 1 015 1 Karen 6 050 persons 1 Laotian 25 875 persons 1 Malay 9 795 persons 1 Malaysian 17 050 persons 1 Singaporean 6 060 persons 1 Thai 22 275 persons 1 Vietnamese 275 530 persons 1 Including Hongkongese a b c Not otherwise specified a b c d e f g h i j k Not included elsewhere a b The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses a b Chaochow Teochow Fukien Taiwanese Including Kapampangan and Pampango a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Northwest Territories includes Nunavut as the territory was not created until 1999 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Government of Canada Statistics Canada October 26 2022 Ethnic or cultural origin by gender and age Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved October 26 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Government of Canada Statistics Canada October 26 2022 Visible minority and population group by generation status Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved January 11 2023 Language Census Profile 2016 Census Statistics Canada November 29 2017 Retrieved May 8 2021 Classification of visible minority Statistics Canada June 15 2009 Archived from the original on July 18 2016 Retrieved August 25 2016 a b c d e Government of Canada Statistics Canada June 17 2019 Ethnic Origin 279 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 Generation Status 4 Age 12 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 Laurence J C Ma Carolyn L Cartier 2003 The Chinese Diaspora Space Place Mobility and Identity Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 1756 1 Welch Michael Patrick NOLA Filipino History Stretches for Centuries New Orleans amp Me New Orleans WWNO Archived from the original on January 18 2021 Retrieved July 4 2019 Fred Cordova Filipinos Forgotten Asian Americans a Pictorial Essay 1763 circa 1963 Claiming the Land Dan Marshall UBC Ph D Thesis 2002 unpubl McGowan s War Donald J Hauka New Star Books Vancouver 2000 ISBN 1 55420 001 6 Walton Roberts and Hiebert Immigration Entrepreneurship and the Family Archived 2014 10 18 at the Wayback Machine p 124 Sikh Heritage Month The South Asian pioneers of Fraser Mills Das p 21 Archive History of Recent Arab Immigration to Canada History of Recent Arab Immigration to Canada www canadianarabcommunity com Retrieved May 18 2021 About us www saintgeorgemontreal org Archived from the original on September 3 2018 Retrieved August 20 2017 a b Ouzounian 2003 p 331 a b c d Vartanian Hrag June 2000 Armenians in Ontario and Quebec The Long Road to Canada AGBU Magazine Armenian General Benevolent Union Archived from the original on August 13 2019 Marshall Allison 2018 Bayanihan and Belonging Filipinos and Religion in Canada University of Toronto Press p 59 ISBN 9781487517526 Historiana Volume 10 Number 2 PDF June 9 2001 Retrieved June 17 2020 Howard Irene 1973 Bowen Island 1872 1972 Bowen Island B C Bowen Island Historians p 36 Lim Imogene L Pacific Entry Pacific Century Chinatowns and Chinese Canadian History Chapter 2 In Lee Josephine D Imogene L Lim and Yuko Matsukawa editors Re collecting Early Asian America Essays in Cultural History Temple University Press 2002 ISBN 1439901201 9781439901205 Start 15 CITED p 18 Harris Cole The Resettlement of British Columbia Essays on Colonialism and Geographical Change University of British Columbia Press Nov 1 2011 ISBN 0774842563 9780774842563 p 145 How Canada tried to bar the yellow peril PDF Maclean s July 1 1999 Archived from the original PDF on October 18 2015 Retrieved January 4 2015 Lisa Rose Mar 2010 Brokering Belonging Chinese in Canada s Exclusion Era 1885 1945 Oxford University Press p 112 ISBN 9780199780051 Singh Hira p 94 permanent dead link Archive FIRST SIKH TEMPLE IN NORTH AMERICA March 10 2021 The first Sikhs came to Golden about 1902 arriving to work in the sawmill of the Columbia River Lumber Company When the Sikhs arrived in Golden the community was in its infancy and the sawmill had recently opened The Columbia River Lumber Company recognized the value of these tall strong men and had no problem with the men They hired them to work in the lumberyard planer and sawmill The first documented proof that we have of South Asians of the Sikh faith being residents of Golden is a copy of a telegram sent to G T Bradshaw Chief of Police New Westminster from Colin Cameron Chief of Police Golden BC on July 20 1902 It was sent collect and reads Geha Singh of Golden sent a telegram to Santa Singh care of Small and Bucklin for one thousand dollars Abu Laban 1983 76 Lebanese Community esask uregina ca Retrieved September 15 2022 People of Lebanese Syrian origin began immigrating to Saskatchewan in the early 1900s some immigrants were born in what was western Syria prior to the border between Lebanon and Syria being redrawn after WORLD WAR I those towns are now part of Lebanon whereas the designation Lebanese is typically used by current families when referring to their heritage A number of families settled in the southeast in or near communities such as RADVILLE CEYLON LAMPMAN and North Portal Over forty individuals and families homesteaded or started businesses in small towns in the SWIFT CURRENT district Some only remained for a year or two before moving to larger centres but many stayed and became part of the mosaic of life in rural Saskatchewan Salloum s Arab Cooking a delicious look at little known Sask history leaderpost com Retrieved September 15 2022 Old Stock Canadians Arab Settlers in Western Canada activehistory ca October 2015 Retrieved September 15 2022 The southern Saskatchewan plains where Ganam was born and that he dashed across were home to many Arab settlers Most referred to themselves and were known as Syrians meaning that they came from an area encompassing present day Syria and Lebanon Arab settlers from Syria Lebanon arrived in Western Canada starting well over one hundred years ago They settled throughout the West but there was a significant cluster of Arabs in southern Saskatchewan on arid marginal land in the heart of Captain John Palliser s infamous triangle that he identified as an extension of the Great American Desert Most were from eastern Lebanon and they included Muslims and Christians They were generally single men arriving on the Canadian prairies through the United States Others arrived as families Some filed on homesteads of 160 acres and proved up receiving title to their land and persisted for decades Others like thousands of would be homesteaders deserted or abandoned their land Some purchased land that they farmed Aside from farming Arab settlers operated general stores bakeries and cafes in towns throughout the West and some were traveling merchants visiting the isolated farms on foot or by horse and wagon in summer and sleigh in winter Regional Cultures Lebanese laclabichemuseum com March 9 2017 Retrieved September 15 2022 Lac La Biche is the site of one of the first permanent Lebanese settlements in Alberta and has the highest percentage of Lebanese people per capita 14 in the province Most of the Lebanese community today have roots in either Lala or Kherbet Rouha both located in the Beqaa Valley The first Lebanese immigrants in Alberta Ali Abouchadi Alexander Hamilton and his uncle Sine Abouchadi came to Canada in 1905 intending to work the gold rush Unfortunately they arrived too late By 1906 they were peddling goods between Edmonton and Lac La Biche eventually Sine opened a general store in Lac La Biche which his nephew took over in 1913 Multicultural Canada multiculturalcanada ca Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved May 14 2007 Sikhs celebrate history in Golden April 26 2018 The original temple in Golden sat on a corner of a lot in the south western area of town at the end of the street looking toward where Rona is now The largest influx of men came from South Asia around 1905 which would be the time period that the temple in Golden would have began services In 1926 a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company where the South Asian men worked Golden s Sikh heritage recognized on new Stop of Interest sign November 9 2016 We acknowledge the Gurdwara in Golden as the first in B C and quite likely the first in North America said Pyara Lotay on behalf of the local Sikh community We thank the B C government for recognizing Golden s Sikh pioneers and their place of worship with this Stop of Interest Golden Gurdwara is recognized for its historical significance June 7 2017 The original temple sat on the corner of a lot which is now owned by Gurmit Manhas at the end of the street past the School Board Office looking towards the Rona Plans are being put together to erect a kiosk there that would share information about the original building the first South Asian people to Canada the importance of the Gurdwara to the Sikh people and the history of why they left and what brought them back The largest influx of men came from South Asia in about 1905 06 which would be the time period that the Temple would have begun services In 1926 a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company where all the South Asian men worked and the men left for the coast having no work to do When the forest started to grow back the men came back and soon it was necessary to build the present Gurdwara on 13th Street South First Sikh Temple Vancouver Heritage Foundation New Westminster Sikh temple celebrates 100 year anniversary March 3 2019 The Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar is one of the oldest Sikh temples in the country and its members are celebrating the milestone anniversary by reflecting on its historic significance to the local Sikh community The temple was actually founded more than 100 years ago when a pioneering Sikh named Bhai Bishan Singh bought a house next door to where the building is now Singh paid 250 for the house which served as a place of worship until the congregation grew too large In 1919 Singh bought the neighbouring lot at 347 Wood Street and the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar was born New Westminster Sikh temple welcomes community to celebrate its centennial anniversary February 27 2019 The Khalsa Diwan Society New Westminster is inviting community members to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar in Queensborough Since opening in 1919 the temple has become an integral part of the Queensborough and New Westminster communities and has provided a place for Sikhs from New Westminster and the Lower Mainland to gather and to worship It is starting up on Thursday and it will be four days with the main event on Sunday It s open to anyone within the community in Queensborough and in New West It s to show support learn about each other and the heritage said Jag Sall a member of the committee that s organizing the celebration I don t think a lot of people know that the Sikh community has been in Queensborough for over 100 years and or the gurdwara itself has been there that long Not just the Sikh community but other communities in Queensborough have been living there for a century The Gurdwara of New West Shares a Century of Stories January 23 2020 Every Sunday in 1919 the Sikhs of Queensborough on the Fraser River would stroll over to the house of Bhai Bishan Singh for worship Singh like many Punjabi immigrants settled in the New Westminster neighbourhood because he worked upriver at a sawmill A devout Sikh he had the holy scripture installed in his home the Guru Granth Sahib Singh was a bachelor and gave much of his earnings to the local Khalsa Diwan Society which in 1908 had built B C s first gurdwara the Sikh place of worship in Vancouver In March 1919 Singh helped the Sikhs of New Westminster start a gurdwara of their own For 250 Singh bought the property next door and donated it to the society Later he would donate his house as well Paldi Sikh Temple in Cowichan celebrating 100 years June 26 2019 The town s cultural centres were the Japanese community hall and the Sikh Temple which officially opened July 1 1919 to coincide with Dominion Day Sikh temple celebrates 100 years of acceptance in Vancouver Island ghost town June 29 2019 Paldi s Gurdwara was built in 1919 and soon became one of the most important fixtures of the community even surviving several town fires THE FOUNDING OF PALDI In 1919 Mayo built a Sikh temple or a gurdwara PALDI Town soaked in Sikh History Wherever there are five or more Sikh s there will be Sikh Temple even just a spare room in some ones house Therefore it was only that once the natural that once the mill and bunkhouses were erected the next building should be a Temple The first official Temple in Paldi was built in 1919 On the same spot where the present Temple is located Nayar The Punjabis in British Columbia page 15 Nayar The Punjabis in British Columbia p 29 a b Aksan 1999 1276 Matas David 1985 Racism in Canadian Immigration Policy Refuge Canada s Journal on Refugees 5 2 8 9 doi 10 25071 1920 7336 21485 First World War Timeline The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved May 3 2020 Haber7 Esir kamplarina goturulen 205 Turk un sirri Haber7 in Turkish Retrieved February 5 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Canadian Homefront Queen s University Archives archives queensu ca Retrieved February 5 2022 Armenian diaspora and the memory of 205 Ottoman Turks in Canada Hurriyet Daily News February 4 2014 Retrieved February 5 2022 Kaprielian Churchill Isabel December 14 2008 Armenian Canadians The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on August 29 2019 Weekly Staff July 8 2010 Georgetown Boys Farmhouse Designated Historic Site Armenian Weekly Archived from the original on August 29 2019 Ouzounian 2003 p 332 Loss of security alarms Pakistani Canadian Archived from the original on July 2 2021 Retrieved January 22 2011 Alt URL Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b Yoon 2006 p 17 Kim Jung G Spring Summer 1982 Korean language press in Ontario Polyphony The Bulletin of the Multicultural History Society of Ontario 4 1 82 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved September 17 2022 Iranians The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved May 28 2020 Daha Maryam September 2011 Contextual Factors Contributing to Ethnic Identity Development of Second Generation Iranian American Adolescents Journal of Adolescent Research 26 5 543 569 doi 10 1177 0743558411402335 S2CID 146592244 the majority of the participants self identified themselves as Persian instead of Iranian due to the stereotypes and negative portrayals of Iranians in the media and politics Adolescents from Jewish and Baha i faiths asserted their religious identity more than their ethnic identity The fact Iranians use Persian interchangeably is nothing to do with current Iranian government because the name Iran was used before this period as well Linguistically modern Persian is a branch of Old Persian in the family of Indo European languages and that includes all the minorities as well more inclusively Bozorgmehr Mehdi 2009 Iran In Mary C Waters Reed Ueda Helen B Marrow eds The New Americans A Guide to Immigration since 1965 Harvard University Press p 469 ISBN 978 0 674 04493 7 Joy Amanda Vietnamese Canadians The Canadian Encyclopedia March 5 2018 Historica Canada https thecanadianencyclopedia ca en article vietnamese Accessed November 17 2020 Kwak 2004 p 8 Kwak 2004 p 3 Han amp Ibbott 2005 p 157 Han amp Ibbott 2005 p 155 Han amp Ibbott 2005 p 160 Asian Heritage Month by the numbers Statistics Canada Retrieved October 6 2021 Gee Marcus July 4 2011 South Asian immigrants are transforming Toronto The Globe and Mail a b c d e f g h i j k l Ethnic origins Census of Canada Page 17 PDF Retrieved January 31 2021 a b c d e f g Table 1 Population by Ethnic Origin Canada 1921 1971 P 2 PDF justice gc ca Retrieved January 31 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Eighth census of Canada 1941 Huitieme recensement du Canada Vol 1 General review and summary tables www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 a b c d Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Sixth census of Canada 1921 v 1 Population number sex and distribution racial origins religions www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Racial origins and nativity of the Canadian people a study based on the Census of 1931 and supplementary data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Seventh census of Canada 1931 Vol 1 Summary www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Seventh census of Canada 1931 Vol 2 Population by areas www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Ninth census of Canada 1951 Neuvieme recensement du Canada Vol 1 Population general characteristics www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 a b c d Cultural Diversity in Canada The Social Construction of Racial Difference justice gc ca February 24 2003 Retrieved January 31 2021 a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1961 Census of Canada population vol I part 2 1961 Recensement du Canada population vol I partie 2 Ethnic Groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1971 Census of Canada population vol I part 3 Recensement du Canada 1971 population vol I partie 3 Ethnic Groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 14 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1981 Census of Canada volume 1 national series population Recensement du Canada de 1981 volume 1 serie nationale population Ethnic origin www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 25 2022 a b c d Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Working paper comparison of 1981 and 1986 census counts on visible minorities in Canada www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 5 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Census Canada 1986 Profile of ethnic groups www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 14 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1991 Census The nation Ethnic origin www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 12 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 1991 employment equity data highlights www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 5 2022 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada June 4 2019 Data tables 1996 Census Population by Ethnic Origin 188 and Sex 3 Showing Single and Multiple Responses 3 for Canada Provinces Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas 1996 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 18 2022 Census of Canada A population and dwelling counts PDF Statistics Canada 1997 Retrieved January 31 2021 a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada December 23 2013 Ethnic Origin 232 Sex 3 and Single and Multiple Responses 3 for Population for Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2001 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 a b c d Government of Canada Statistics Canada May 1 2020 Ethnic Origin 247 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 and Sex 3 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 a b c d Government of Canada Statistics Canada January 23 2019 Ethnic Origin 264 Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses 3 Generation Status 4 Age Groups 10 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2011 National Household Survey www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved August 31 2022 Overseas Chinese Affairs Council Taiwan ROC Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved January 31 2019 Overseas Chinese Affairs Council Taiwan ROC PDF OCA Council Government of Canada Statistics Canada April 3 2013 Eighth census of Canada 1941 Huitieme recensement du Canada Vol 4 Cross classifications interprovincial migration blind and deaf mutes www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved September 10 2022 Census Profile 2016 Census Canada Country and Canada Country Ethnic origin population February 8 2017 Census Profile 2016 Census Canada Country and Canada Country Language Knowledge of languages February 8 2017 Census Profile 2016 Census Canada Country and Canada Country Language Mother Tongue February 8 2017 Bibliography edit Abu Laban Baha 1983 The Canadian Muslim Community The Need for a New Survival Strategy in Waugh Earle H Abu Laban Baha Abu Qureshi Regula eds The Muslim Community in North America University of Alberta ISBN 0 88864 034 X Aksan Virginia H 1999 Turks in Magocsi Paul R ed Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 2938 8 Han J D Ibbott Peter 2005 Korean Migration to North America Some Prices That Matter PDF Canadian Studies in Population 32 2 155 176 doi 10 25336 P6XS4T retrieved September 2 2014 Kwak Min Jung July 2004 An Exploration of the Korean Canadian Community in Vancouver PDF Research on Immigration and Integration in the Metropolis Working Paper Series 4 14 archived from the original PDF on July 23 2011 retrieved July 11 2007 Ouzounian N 2003 Կանադա Canada In Ayvazyan Hovhannes ed Հայ Սփյուռք հանրագիտարան Encyclopedia of the Armenian Diaspora in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Encyclopedia Publishing pp 331 342 ISBN 5 89700 020 4 Yoon In Jin 2006 Understanding the Korean Diaspora from Comparative Perspectives PDF Transformation amp Prospect toward Multiethnic Multiracial amp Multicultural Society Enhancing Intercultural Communication Asia Culture Forum archived from the original PDF on September 29 2007 retrieved July 11 2007Further reading editTorres Rose Ann Leung Kailan Soepriatna Vania eds 2021 Outside and In Between Theorizing Asian Canadian Exclusion and the Challenges of Identity Formation Studies in Critical Social Sciences Brill ISBN 978 90 04 46635 7 OCLC 1346503900 Ty Eleanor Rose Verduyn Christl eds 2008 Asian Canadian Writing Beyond Autoethnography Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 1 55458 023 1 OCLC 753479603 Lai Larissa 2014 Slanting I Imagining We Asian Canadian Literary Production in the 1980s and 1990s Waterloo Ontario Canada Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 1 77112 041 8 OCLC 866930850 Khoo Tseen Ling 2003 Banana Bending Asian Australian and Asian Canadian Literatures McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0 7735 2551 3 OCLC 651001993 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Asian diaspora in Canada Asian Canadian Website Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada 2001 demographics from Statistics Canada Information for South Asians and Indians in Canada Asian Canadian Wiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asian Canadians amp oldid 1197979364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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