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15

5

ROSALIE JUKIER

JOSÉ WOEHRLING

Religion and the Secular State in Canada

I.

T

HE

R

ELIGIOUS AND

S

OCIAL

C

OMPOSITION OF

C

ANADA

Canada is a country of 33.8 million people populating a vast

geographic area of

almost 10 million km

2

, stretching 8,000 km from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans. Its

current demographic composition is both a natural consequence of its founding peoples,

the French Roman Catholics who settled New France (or Lower Ca

nada, now the

province of Quebec), the English Protestants who settled Upper Canada (now Ontario)

and the aboriginal communities that lived here for millennia

,

1

as well as the product of a

robust immigrant population from around the world. These complexiti

es make it

difficult to pinpoint the religious and social composition of Canada in just one or two

sentences. It would be most accurate to describe Canada as a bilingual, multicultural

federation operating within a pluralistic society.

2

The data pertaini

ng to the religious and social composition of Canada

that was used

in the original prepration of this Report in 2010

was compiled in the 2001 census, at a

3

Its results reveal that seven out of

every ten Ca

nadians self

identified as either Roman Catholic or Protestant,

4

with almost

R

OSALIE

J

UKIER

is Professor in the Faculty of Law

at McGill University

and

a member of its Paul

André

Crépeau

Research Centre of Private and Comparative Law.

Her principal academic interests lie in the area of

comparative private law.

Professor Jukier wishes to thank Corey Omer and Michael Otto for their invaluable

research assistance which was made possible by t

he generosity of the Wainwright Trust of the Faculty of Law,

McGill University

.

J

OS

É

W

OEHRLING

is Professor in

the Faculté de droit de l

Université

de Montréal, with principal academic

interests in Canadian constitutional law and comparative international law, human rights, and minorities.

Professor Woehrling wishes to thank Arnaud Decroix for his researc

h assistance in preparing this R

eport.

[This R

eport has been updated by the authors for the 2014 publication, and the portions which appeared in

French in the 2012 Interim Volume have been translated into English.]

1

. At the time of the initial presentation of this Report, t

he most recent 2006 Canadia

n Census enumerate

d

1,172,790 Aboriginal people in Canada, comprising 3.8 percent of the country

s total population.

See Statistics

Canada,

Aboriginal Peoples in Canada in 2006: Inuit, Métis and First Nations

(Aboriginal Peoples, 2006

Census), Statistics C

anada Catalogue no. 97

558

XIE2006001 (Ottawa: Minister of Industry, 2008), online:

Statistics Canada

,

http://www12.statcan.ca/census

recensement/2006/as

sa/97

558/p2

eng.cfm

.

Since this

Report was originally prepared, there has been a 2011 National

Household Survey in Canada reporting the

aboriginal population at 1.4 million or 4.3

percent

of the population

.

See

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily

quotidien/130508/dq130508a

eng.htm

2

.

Contrary to the

melting pot

notion prevalent in the United States, Canada sees itself as a mosaic

celebrating multiple identities.

In 1985, Parliament passed the

Canadian Multiculturalism Act

, R.S.C. 1985

(4th Su), c. 24 aimed at promoting the understanding that multiculturalism ref

lects the cultural and racial

diversity of Canadian society and is a fundamental characteristic of Canadian heritage and identity, and

acknowledging the freedom of all members of Canadian society to preserve, enhance and share their cultural

heritage.

3

.

A

lthough Canada conducts a census every five years, questions pertaining to religious affiliation are

only asked every ten years and as such, the data from 2001

was

the most recent official data on this subject

at

the time this Report was prepared

. See

Stat

istics Canada,

Religions in Canada

(2001 Census: analysis series),

Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 96F0030XIE2001015 (Ottawa: Minister of Industry, 2003), online:

Statistics

Canada

,

http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/Products/Analytic/companion/rel/p

df/

96F0030XIE

2001015.pdf

(Statistics Canada,

Religions

).

As mentioned in note 1 above, there

has been a more recent

census, the

2011

National Household Survey.

Statistics that are significantly different from those obtained

from the 2001 census will be

highlighted.

4

.

Id

.

at 5

.

According to the 2001 census, 72

percent

of the population identified as either Catholic or

Protestant.

The 2011 figures indicate that the population identifying as Christian is down to 67.3

percent

.

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