Habiba Hmadi, a native of Tunisia, lives in Hérouxville. (Photo by Nasuna Stuart-Ulin of The New York Times) |
Ten years after Hérouxville's code was established, Canada adopted a sweeping pro-immigration policy, Onishi writes. Now the shift has made its way into Quebec, including Hérouxville. Bernard Thompson, the mayor of Hérouxville, Quebec, a one-time supporter of the town’s anti-immigrant code, told Onishi, "We now want as many immigrants as possible."
New York Times map |
“If we’re unable to respect each other’s culture, whether it’s religious or not, I think that’s a mistake,” Thompson told Onishi. “We have to show an openness.”
Canada's his continuing its pro-immigration policy: "Canada’s federal government has announced plans to welcome record numbers of new immigrants over the next three years, with the goal of adding 1.45 million immigrants to the country’s population of 39 million," Onishi reports. "In contrast to other Western nations, where immigration has cleaved societies and fueled the rise of political extremism, there is a broad consensus in Canada over the value of immigration."
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