Thank you, Mr. Chair. I appreciate it.
Thank to you to our witnesses.
I guess I'll start with a little bit of a recap, because I think some of what has gone on has been factually challenged. Statements that were made about my position and that of my government are in fact not accurate.
I want to be clear. My family's history in Canada began at Pier 21 in Halifax in 1927. My grandfather got a job with CP Rail. They moved him to a little town called Britt, near Parry Sound. That's where my father was born. He suffered a severe accident working in sub-standard working conditions, because they weren't given the good jobs, they were just given jobs. He lost one leg and nearly died. He came back from that through the use of a prosthetic limb and worked as long as he could there. He repaired locomotives, but he had to get a different job because he was physically incapable of doing it with his prosthetic limb. He passed a test in English that he was forced to take in order to become a porter. He didn't have a lot of formal education. He was not fluent in English from a literary perspective. In fact, my wife would tell you that his English was pretty tough to understand. I got it. He did that and he passed it.
He became a porter and worked until he was seventy years old and cried like a baby the day they made him retire. The only other time I ever saw him cry was when my grandmother died. They lived through this. They lived through this mess. My father's name was Enrico Giuseppe. I never knew it until I was twelve years old and saw his birth certificate. I thought his name was Henry Joseph, and he went by “Hank.” My family lived this stuff. It matters. What happened to the Italian community was wrong. It was wrong.
The fact that it happened in this country is remarkable, but this country is not perfect. We've made a lot of mistakes, and frankly we have never adequately acknowledged that. Growing up as a kid, I didn't have that understanding. I think the immigration guide that new immigrants to Canada now have to read reflects this fact. The test they will now have to pass reflects the fact that this country is not perfect, that this country has made mistakes.
This was a major transgression. I want to make that clear.
I want to go to a couple of comments that were made.
Mr. Campione, you said that the Italian community is proud and united, but Mr. Sciascia, you indicated that the members on CHRP do not represent the community, that there's no support from the main groups for CHRP. So how can we reconcile that the Italian community is proud and united? By the way, the Italian-Canadian community is most certainly proud to be Canadian, and most certainly proud of its roots. How can we square that circle and say that we're united, but these groups over here, this is an insult that these Italian Canadians have stepped up to represent us, because they don't represent Italians? How can we make that distinction?