Portuguese Canadians
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Portuguese Canadian |
---|
Notable Portuguese Canadians: Nelly Furtado • Mario Silva |
Total population |
Portuguese |
Regions with significant populations |
Toronto, Ontario: 171,545
|
Languages |
Predominantly English and Portuguese and/or its dialects. |
Religion |
Predominantly Roman Catholic |
Portuguese Canadians (Portuguese: luso-canadianos) are Canadians of Portuguese descent. According to StatCan, in 2001, there were 357,690 persons of Portuguese descent living in Canada, or 1.2% of the nation's total population. Most Portuguese Canadians live in Ontario 248,265 (69%), followed by Québec 48,765 (14%) and British Columbia 30,085 (8%)[2]
Contents |
[edit] History of Portuguese in Canada
The Portuguese Canadian community chose 2003 as the year to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their officially-sponsored immigration to Canada. The Honourable David Collenette, Minister of Transport and Minister Responsible for Canada Post, said that "the Portuguese Canadian community is a vibrant group that enriches the Canadian mosaic with its history, language, culture and work ethic." He added that Canada Post was proud to be issuing a stamp honouring Portuguese Canadians during the month of June when cultural celebrations honouring the life of 16th century poet Luís de Camões, considered to be Portugal's greatest poet, are taking place in many communities across the country.
Portugal played a pioneering role in the explorations of the New World in the 15th and 16th centuries. In the 15th century, Prince Henry of Portugal, better known as Henry the Navigator, established a school of navigation in Sagres, in the Algarve region of Portugal. From this school emerged explorers who found their way to the Indies, South America, North America and Africa, including Gaspar Corte Real who was one of the earliest discoverers of Canada. Corte Real explored the northeast coast of "Terra Nova", naming Conception Bay, Portugal Cove and Labrador -- which means "labourer" in Portuguese.
During the 1950s, a large number of immigrants from the Azores, fleeing political conflict with the regime of António de Oliveira Salazar, moved into the downtown core of Canada’s major cities such as the area of Portugal Village in Toronto, Ontario and further west along Dundas Street to Brockton Village. The stretch of Dundas St. passing through Brockton Village is also known as "Rua Açores". From the 1970s, increasing numbers of Brazilians moved into the same area.
Hamilton, Ontario also has a solid Portuguese community concentrated in the downtown core around Barton and James Streets and nearby the St. Mary's Roman Catholic church. This area in Hamilton is known as "Jamesville" and is shared with a neighbouring Italian population.
Many second generation Portuguese-Canadians have moved out of Toronto to suburbs such as Brampton, Mississauga, Oakville, Kitchener, Cambridge and Hamilton and Laval outside of Montreal. This spatial and social move, aided by Portuguese-Canadian real estate agents who settle them into suburban communities with large concentrations of other Portuguese, indicates the gradual economic security and comfort with which Portuguese-Canadians address their every day lives in Canada. With this move to the suburbs, there has also emerged an increase in Portuguese students pursuing university training for employment beyond the construction site or the factory floor to professions and small businesses.
[edit] Notable Portuguese Canadians
[edit] Historical
- Pedro da Silva, (1647 - ?), the first post courier in New France, in what was to become part of Canada (17th-18th century). [3]
[edit] Business
- Alain J. P. Belda - has been the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Alcoa since January 2001.[4]
[edit] Education
- Aida Baptista - Lecturer, Instituto Camoes, University of Toronto.[4]
- Jose Baptista - Ph. D. Professor & Researcher at the University of Toronto and University of the Azores[5]
- Irene Maria Ferreira Blayer - Ph. D. Professor, Brock University (Azorean Ancestry).[4]
- John Elias - Professor and GE Coordinator Humber College, Ontario.[4]
- Ilda Januario - Secretary, OISE, M. Sc. Anthropology, U of T, McGill (Montreal & Toronto).[4]
- Manuela Marujo - Ph. D. Senior Lectuter at the University of Toronto, Department of Spanish & Portuguese.[4]
- Fernando Nunes - Ph. D. Assist. Professor Mount St. Vincent University Halifax, Nova Scotia.[4]
- Victor Pinheiro - Professor U. Montreal, Architecture and Design.[4]
- Victor M.P. da Rosa - Ph. D. Sociologist & Professor, University of Ottawa.[6]
- Ana Maria Silva - Bachelor in fine arts and M.Ed.in education Université de Montreal, Concordia. [4]
- Prof. Elvino Sousa - Ph. D. Electrical & Computer Engineering University of Toronto.[4]
- John Sousa - Professor of Psychology Humber College, Ontario.[4]
- José Carlos Teixeira - Ph. D., Assistant Professor, Okanagan University College, UBC..[4]
- Joaquim Vicente - Ph. D. Professor University of Toronto, Mechanical Engineering. Inventor.[4]
[edit] Film & Television
- Justin Louis, (1967 - ), Actor (sometimes credited as 'Justin Lewis'), appeared on 9 different TV series to date.[7]
- Keanu Reeves, (1964- ), best known for his role as Neo in the action film trilogy The Matrix. (paternal grandmother was Portuguese-Chinese from Hawaii; Rose Lokalia Miguel).[8]
- Sid Seixeiro - News TV Anchor for The Score Television Network.[4]
[edit] Music
- Keshia Chanté (1988 - ) teen pop singer. [9][10]
- Suzana Da Camara - Jazz vocalist & composer. [11]
- Shawn Desman, (1982- ), is a Canadian pop/R&B singer.[12]
- Nelly Furtado, (1978- ), Pop singer-songwriter.[13]
- Anthony Gomes, (1975- ), Canadian blues and blues-rock guitarist and singer.[14]
- Brian Melo, (1982), Winner of Canadian Idol season five (September 11, 2007). Worked as a construction worker. [15] [16] [17]
- Lucas Silveira, singer/guitarist of rock band The Cliks.
[edit] Politicians/ Law
- Evalina Cordeiro-McEachern - City Council, Aurora, Ontario (Born in Toronto of Azorean parents).[4]
- Carlos de Faria- MPP Member of Provincial Parliament Mississauga East, Citizenship.[4]
- Paul Ferreira, (1973- ), NDP MPP for York-South Weston from February 2007 to October 2007.[18]
- Peter Fonseca, (1966- ), Minister of Tourism of Ontario and member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament (2003).[19]
- Keith Martin, (1960- ), PC, MP, BSc, MD, is a Canadian physician and politician.[4]
- Martinho Medeiros MA - Political Analyst, Ontario Gov. (MP 2004) (Portuguese Ancestry, Azores).[4]
- Luis Miranda - First Elected Mayor of Portuguese Ancestry in Canada for the City of Anjou, Quebec.[4]
- Cesar De Morais, (2001 to present) - Justice of the Peace - Ontario Court of Justice Toronto, Ontario [4]
- Ana Nunes - Council Outremont, Montreal, Quebec.[4]
- Nelson Santos - Mayor, Kingsville, Ontario "Canada's Southernmost Town"[4]
- Mario Silva, (1966- ), current Liberal MP representing Davenport and former Toronto city councillor[20]
- Maria Teresa Linhares de Sousa - Judge Superior Court of Justice, Ontario.[4]
[edit] Science/Medicine
- Dr. Horacio Arruda - Chief Medical Officer of Health for Québec (Parents born in Azores).[4]
[edit] Sports
- Daniel Fernandes (footballer), (1983- ), He is currently the first choice goalkeeper of Greek football club PAOK FC.[21]
- Mike Ribeiro, (1980- ), Pro hockey player for the Dallas Stars.[4]
- John Tavares (ice hockey), (1990 - ), "The next hockey phenom." Has been interviewed by media from Portugal and speaks the language fluently. [22]
- John Tavares (lacrosse), (1968 - ), Pro lacrosse player who stars for the Buffalo Bandits. [22] [23]
- Tony Tavares - former President of the Montreal Expos.[4]
- Steven Vitoria - Pro soccer player who was born in the greater Toronto area and now plays for Portugal.[4]
[edit] Groups
Some Portuguese-Canadians adopt the name Luso-Canadians for their local social and business clubs in reference to Lusitania, the ancient name associated with Portugal under the Roman empire. The attendance growth of organizations indicate the growth in small business and universities throughout the community. Leading as a national voice one can find the "Congresso" Luso-Canadiano National Congress.
[edit] Portuguese-Canadian business groups
- Federation of Portuguese-Canadian Business and Professionals
- Association of Portuguese Businesses in Winnipeg
- Alliance Of Portuguese Clubs And Associations Of Ontario
- Alliance des Professionels et Entrepreneurs Portugais du Québec
[edit] Portuguese-Canadian Educational groups
- Portuguese Association of Ryerson, PAR
- York University Portuguese Association, YUPA
- University of Toronto Portuguese Association, UTPA *UTPA 2004 / UTPA 2005 - present
[edit] Other groups
- Congresso - Portuguese Canadian National Congress
- Lusa Web - The meeting place for Portuguese-Americans/ Canadians.
- Viva Portugal Viva Portugal - Linking the Portuguese Communities in Canada, The US, and other countries outside of Portugal.
- pclaonline.com Portuguese Canadian Lawyers Association
- Portuguese Social Club - The Portuguese Social Club is a Society established to Promote, Preserve, Maintain our Cultural Heritage and to Unite all Portuguese of Nova Scotia.
- Portuguese Benevolent Society - a non-profit organization created to promote harmony, education and culture in and about the Luso community.
- Canada's Portuguese Film & Video Festival - presented in multiple cities.
- JOVENSvancouver - youth group in Greater Vancouver.
- Arco Iris BC - a BGLTQ support and social group in B.C.
- Canadian Association of Bandas Filarmonicas - A musical tradition. The CABF works to unite the Portuguese marching bands of Canada.
[edit] Portuguese Publications
- Lusitania - Canada's monthly celebrating the Portuguese world.
- Portugal News - News from Portugal, in English and Portuguese.
- Voz Lusitana - Portuguese/English monthly newspaper.
[edit] See also
List of Portuguese Americans
List of Portuguese people
Luso American
[edit] References
- ^ Population by selected ethnic origins, by census metropolitan areas. 2001 Census Stats Canada. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Population figures for people of Portuguese descent in Canada. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Canada Post: Celebrating Portuguese heritage and Canada's first letter carrier (Pedro da Silva). Retrieved on 2008-01-02.
- ^ 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 Distinguished Americans & Canadians of Portuguese Descent. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Science Direct.
- ^ Distinguished Americans & Canadians of Portuguese Descent. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ imdb.com Bio: Justin Louis. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Keanu Reeves Family Tree; Ancestry. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Interview with Keshia Chanté. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Henley, Tara. Interview with Keshia Chanté #2. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Biography: Suzana Da Camara (Official web site). Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Maplemusic.com Biography: Shawn Desman. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Bliss, Karen. Rollingstone.com Biography: Nelly Furtado. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Biography: Anthony Gomes (Official web site). Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Canadian Idol (Official web site). Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Brian Melo Online (Fan site). Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Yahoo Canada News: "Hamilton rocker Brian Melo crowned the new Canadian Idol. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Biography: Paul Ferreira. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Biography: Peter Fonseca. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Biography: Mario Silva. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ Daniel Marcio Fernandes Bio at myspace.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
- ^ a b Stuart McDonald. Featured Article, 2009 prospects: Q&A with John Tavares. Hockey's Future. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ Inaugural Celebrating Outstanding Portuguese-Canadian Achievement Awards. Portuguese Canadian National Congress. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
[edit] External links
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