Australian Reacts To Canada 'Heritage Minutes!'

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • Welcome to Australian Reacts, where an Australian reacts to Canada's 'Heritage Minutes!'. Australian reacts is a series of checking out a whole range of international videos, based around history, peoples findings or even just random little facts. Some videos teach us more about a countries history and others open the door to something we never knew. Meanwhile any videos on Australia get measure up against real knowledge from a local of "the land down-under". Overall we get to see a glimpse of what this incredible world has to offer and have some laughs along the way!
    Original Vids Here :
    Heritage Minutes: Joseph Casavant : • Heritage Minutes: Jose...
    Heritage Minutes: Vancouver Asahi : • Heritage Minutes: Vanc...
    Heritage Minutes: Responsible Government : • Heritage Minutes: Resp...
    Heritage Minutes: Agnes Macphail : • Heritage Minutes: Agne...
    !ENJOY!
    ____________________________________________________________________________
    Maybe you might want to check out some of my other videos and channels...?
    OJB Main - / @actuallyojb
    Gaming - / @ojbplays
    Online Ridiculousness - / @ojbreacts
    Oh and I guess the random social stuff as well if you want...
    Twitter : @OliJBrownbill
    Insta : @olijbrownbill
    #australianreacts #react #international #canada
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Komentáře • 97

  • @gordieparenteau6555
    @gordieparenteau6555 Před 2 lety +45

    The last surviving member of the original Asahi baseball team, Kaye Kaminishi, just turned 100.
    That team was so legendary that they attracted the Tokyo Giants (the same team that regularly plays before 50,000 people at the Tokyo Dome) to play them at puny little Oppenheimer Park in the Downtown Eastside. The park is still there, and there's Asahi baseball markings still there on the baseball diamond. The legend lives on.

  • @terrygaudio1053
    @terrygaudio1053 Před 2 lety +26

    The Japanese internments are another black mark on Canadian History. That's the one thing I like about these Heritage minutes. They try to tell the story warts and all. The Canadian idea to have the elected assembly control their Governor General was eventually extended to all Commonwealth nations including Australia.

    • @cupguin
      @cupguin Před 2 lety +3

      I know a someone who's mother was interned. When her daughter did a school presentation her teacher told her that "Canadians didn't intern the Japanese that was the Americans". It's terrifying to think how easy history, even while it's still in living memory, can be forgotten. It's not a fun heritage minute but I can't help but think there's Canadians who won't face that particular revisionist view of history because of it.

  • @warrenpeterson6065
    @warrenpeterson6065 Před 2 lety +29

    Canada is a very unique country with diverse landscape, resources, and people. I find your interest into our heritage quite interesting and would love to hear your comparison to your heritage.

  • @giorgiopolloni7936
    @giorgiopolloni7936 Před 2 lety +15

    I’m charmed that a young Australian is interested in Canada 🇨🇦, amazing. Regarding baseball, the field is usually called a baseball diamond because of the shape.

  • @mileitman
    @mileitman Před 2 lety +21

    The Governor General remains the Queen's representative in Canada (as in the other Commonwealth realms, such as Australia and New Zealand)

  • @guymarcgagne7630
    @guymarcgagne7630 Před 2 lety +17

    The particularity of ''internment camps'' during WWII was that they were not equal - id est: the Japanese were almost universally deported to the camps, their
    homes and businesses seized with little or no compensation and held for the duration. It took the Federal Gov't over half a century to formally apologize and
    offer a modicum of compensation to the survivors and their heirs. Far fewer Italian/Canadians were rounded up for interment, even fewer of
    German extraction. It was a reflection of the anti-Asian prejudice that was prevalent at the time, both Chinese and Japanese were subjected to it.
    David Suzuki, famous biologist/conservationist and award winning broadcaster (CBC's The Nature of Things) evoke certain aspects of the incredible situation
    where/when, amongst other things, he was ostracized for not speaking Japanese by many in the camps.

    • @laurendamos6651
      @laurendamos6651 Před 2 lety +1

      It was easier for Italians and Germans to hide their heritage, and I might be wrong but I believe Canadian Japanese population had more assets, businesses and property then the other two groups which made it more lucrative for the government to target and easier sell propaganda about that population.

  • @candytoo3729
    @candytoo3729 Před 2 lety +19

    At that time Canada was defined as Upper and Lower Canada, hence his reference to the Canadas.

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 Před 2 lety +2

      It is an error though, since by Lafontaine and Baldwin's time the two colonies were merged into one United Canada. Although United Canada was subdivided into Canada East and Canada West.

  • @andreraymond6860
    @andreraymond6860 Před 2 lety +9

    In French catholic Canada the church organ was a very expensive investment for a small parish. The Casavant organ is recognized for their great quality. They are lke Stardivarius' for violins.

  • @craiggie1628
    @craiggie1628 Před 2 lety +13

    Thank you for including the Vancouver Asahi.
    Prior to WW2, anti-Japanese sentiment had been developing in B.C. due to Japanese people becoming successful in several B.C. industries, such as fishing and farming.
    The war became and excuse to remove Japanese from the coast, and the racist intent was revealed by the fact that the internment lasted two years after the war was over. Also, several RCMP officials did not find Japanese Canadians to be a security threat.
    In addition, the Canadian government took all Japanese Canadian possessions and didn't give them back but instead sold everything off, unlike in the U.S., where Japanese Americans returned to their homes after their internment. After the war, the Canadian government made internees either move to Eastern Canada or to Japan, which was a foreign country and culture to many of those born in Canada.

    • @craiggie1628
      @craiggie1628 Před 2 lety +5

      Forgot to say, it's interesting to hear your commentaries on these Heritage Minutes, to hear your perspective as someone from another country who may not be as familiar with some of the references and to understand how these Heritage Minutes translate cross-culturally.

  • @MrEMan-cy5kl
    @MrEMan-cy5kl Před 2 lety +18

    The Queen had learned from the history of the American colonies that rebelled and gained independence by war...She realised that by acquiescing to Canadian demands that England would be able to maintain close ties and influence over North America for centuries to come.

    • @guymarcgagne7630
      @guymarcgagne7630 Před 2 lety +1

      There was the Patriot Revolt in 1837 in
      Québec, francos & anglos united for greater independace/representation without Royal interferance...

    • @analogueandy8x10
      @analogueandy8x10 Před 2 lety

      England has zero influence over us today. It's all pomp and ceremony.

  • @misterprickly
    @misterprickly Před 2 lety +11

    Canada's one of (if not the first nation) to get it's independence started, through the use of a *politely worded* letter.

  • @vaudreelavallee3757
    @vaudreelavallee3757 Před 2 lety +7

    Even Queen Elizabeth calls us "the Canadas" because Quebec was originally called lower Canada and Ontario was originally called upper Canada.

    • @vaudreelavallee3757
      @vaudreelavallee3757 Před 2 lety

      @@glaframb - that is the more detailed explanation. I was giving him Grade 5 history class. Yes, grade 5 history has New France as being New France=Lower Canada=Quebec - but, if you include both Canadian and American history, New France also took up a lot of area in the USA.
      Also agree that Upper Canada was due to the influx of Loyalists - and that there was one Canada which had this annex added to it because of the influx.

  • @LennoxWilde
    @LennoxWilde Před 2 lety +3

    As a Canadian I have to say... This guy would have made a better Canadian history professor than the one I had...I did a presentation on residential schools 20 years ago... and even my teacher had no idea!

  • @Bluewhalebig
    @Bluewhalebig Před 2 lety +7

    The Governor General is the head of state in Canada still, not the Prime Minister. Probably because of this idea of "responsible governance", or we would have likely declared indepedance like the US by now. Our laws are still dependant on royal ascension/approval so they are sort of technically still dictated by the English royal family. Effectively, however, this is not the case, as the process is a formality and they never interfere with our elected representatives' decisions. I'm pretty sure it's the same in Australia, as we're both constitutional monarchies. If that is the case for Australia, I wouldn't feel too bad for not knowing; lot of Canadians don't know/remember that our Prime Minister is not technically our head of state. Myself included, before I minored in political science, even though I'm sure I learned that in school earlier in life.

  • @evelynproulx1853
    @evelynproulx1853 Před 2 lety +1

    The Casavant company has been sold in 2019, I don't know to whom. But till then, it was still in the same family. Quite an impressive achievement. They made modest organs for several parish across the province of Québec of course but also everywhere across the globe. But to my knowledge, one of the most famous is in Montréal, in the Basilique Notre-Dame, you know? the church where Céline Dion got married?

  • @pierrelevasseur2701
    @pierrelevasseur2701 Před 2 lety +14

    Unfortunately, Canada had internment camps for people of Japanese ancestry, even as they were born here. David Suzuki was one of those people, he was in a camp as a youth.

  • @mightheal
    @mightheal Před 2 lety +3

    Some of the heritage minutes are actually edited down from mini series or tv movies. The Avro Arrow one was edited down from a mini series and a lot of the hockey ones are from tv movies.

  • @fluterify
    @fluterify Před rokem +2

    Canada does still have a governor general. Our current Governor general is the first native Canadian who does not yet know French because she was not taught it.

  • @pendorran
    @pendorran Před 2 lety +1

    Baseball is big in Japan in large part because it was introduced during the American Occupation post-WWII.

  • @D-Maulish
    @D-Maulish Před 2 lety +3

    I just found your channel, looking forward to watching more of these! It's great to see Heritage Minutes from an outsider's perspective.

  • @guymarcgagne7630
    @guymarcgagne7630 Před 2 lety +4

    Governor Generals have since that approval by Queen Victoria, been Canadian citizens named/appointed by Parliament in Canada and later, in Australia, New Zealand, etc.

    • @paranoidrodent
      @paranoidrodent Před 2 lety +4

      Not quite. Responsible government dates to 1840. It was the big reform before confederation, shifting a lot of authority to the local Canadian legislatures. The first Canadian governor-general was Vincent Massey after WW2. We had a century of British aristocrats as GG before that.

  • @l.c.6282
    @l.c.6282 Před 2 lety +9

    A lot of countries interned their citizens during WWII, including the United States and Australia.

    • @johnr797
      @johnr797 Před 2 lety

      People talk about it like "dirty history" but it only makes sense. Sorry, if I'm going to war with the Nepalese, I'd probably want to make sure the Nepalese aren't a liability.

  • @CorwinAlexander
    @CorwinAlexander Před rokem

    The ending of Responsible Government "it's a Canadian idea" and the response "pity ma'am" alludes to a popular series of tea commercials of the time that ended, in reference to availability, "only in Canada, you say? . . . Pity"

  • @nathanserres5749
    @nathanserres5749 Před 2 lety +6

    Kingston Pen 5 minute walk down the road for me. No longer in service and now actually a lot of filming has been happening there over the last few years. Including Kings Town, and the Jack Reacher show

    • @drewc981
      @drewc981 Před 2 lety +2

      Murdoch Mysteries had an episode filmed there as well.

    • @Bucko55667
      @Bucko55667 Před 2 lety +1

      StarTrek Discovery also filmed there

    • @Mystress1980
      @Mystress1980 Před 2 lety +2

      I once lived about a 5 minute walk away, too :) Loved the little stroll to Lake Ontario, but wasn't a fan of the high security prison that held Paul Bernardo. I felt safe though, because I figured if anyone escaped, surely they wouldn't be dumb enough to hide so close.

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 Před rokem

      @@Mystress1980 Especially when the city is full of prison guards, RCMP, city and Provincial police.

  • @loreneoikawa
    @loreneoikawa Před 2 lety +1

    One of the main points is that the forced uprooting, dispossession, internment, and exile was carried out by the Canadian government against Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry. 22,000 (babies to seniors) Canadians of Japanese ancestry were removed from the west coast of Canada. Senior Canadian military and RCMP (police) told the government there was no need to take action against Japanese Canadians. There were multi-generational families like mine who were in Canada since the 1800s. My grandfather was a baseball pitcher who played for the Vancouver Asahi baseball team. Japanese Canadians fought for Canada in the First World War with distinguished service and loyalty. They were part of the 22,000 who were forcibly removed. Internment started in 1942 and didn't end until 1949, four years after the end of the Second World War. The Canadian government's actions weren't for national security. It was a racist act for which they apologized in 1988.

  • @drewc981
    @drewc981 Před 2 lety +2

    Kingston prison closed in 2013, Mu aunt worked their briefly as a corrections officer in the mid 70's I think

  • @glennstewart5397
    @glennstewart5397 Před rokem

    Japanese Canadians enlisted in the Army and fought in the European Theater and landed in Italy fought hard and helped the Canadian Corps take position after position! No I am not Japanese descent, I am of Scotish descent!

  • @debbie541
    @debbie541 Před rokem

    2 Canada's being referred to, most likely is in the year 1840 when the Act of Union, united Upper and Lower Canada into one Province of Canada.

  • @stewiepid4385
    @stewiepid4385 Před 2 lety +1

    " I heard you needed an 'Organist' ....... oh, not that type." ~ Glen Quagmire - Family Guy

  • @K1ddkanuck
    @K1ddkanuck Před 2 lety +2

    Canada still has a Governor General. That position in effect constitutes the role of Canada's Head of State, as the chief representative of the Crown. The role is largely ceremonial, but when it comes to things like proroguing Parliament, it can be... divisive.

  • @jasonlittle6542
    @jasonlittle6542 Před rokem

    My former boss is of Japanese decent. His parents were moved to southern Alberta under the internment during WWII. While it is a dark mark on our history, I am glad that history has brought them to our area. We are so much richer to have this element of our community here.

  • @gordg6904
    @gordg6904 Před 2 lety

    Really enjoying your stuff, thank you

  • @engee4944
    @engee4944 Před 2 lety +4

    love these reactions!

  • @mayloo2137
    @mayloo2137 Před 2 lety

    I'm happy to know you know about our Heritage Moments. I miss those along with those shorts about nature. I went to public schools in the 60s and 70s. Don't remember if I even learned about Canadian history back then. I didn't learn about it until my first year in university. And then, it was only one course.

  • @mikeecho33
    @mikeecho33 Před rokem

    The camps that the Japanese/Canadians were kept in were called 'Internment Camps'

  • @pierrelevasseur2701
    @pierrelevasseur2701 Před 2 lety +2

    Wikipedia: Melbourne, Australia was named after Lord Melbourne.

  • @vaudreelavallee3757
    @vaudreelavallee3757 Před 2 lety +2

    So who was the first female MP in Australia?

  • @giorgiopolloni7936
    @giorgiopolloni7936 Před 2 lety +1

    Upper Canada and Lower Canada back in the day.

    • @caralynne2809
      @caralynne2809 Před 2 lety

      Upper Canada now called Ontario, Lower Canada now called Québec.

  • @SweetBrazyN
    @SweetBrazyN Před 2 lety +1

    A good video for you to react to is ‘how many countriese half has ever invaded visualised’ you’d be surprised

  • @terrancebrown87
    @terrancebrown87 Před 2 lety +1

    Once again amazing reaction 🙌

  • @rachelledube-hayes1649

    Responsible Government: a discussion that explains the creation of Canada as a country.

  • @collinscody57
    @collinscody57 Před 2 lety

    It wasn't about teaching you everything it was about making it interested so you go learn more on your own

  • @trevorhallett8592
    @trevorhallett8592 Před rokem

    I think Austrralia, has a Governed General, as well. We invented it, most commonwealth countries followed.

  • @vaudreelavallee3757
    @vaudreelavallee3757 Před 2 lety +1

    Japanese Canadians were stripped of property and buisinesses and sent to internment camps during WWII after Pearl Harbor in the States. Another famous person sent there as a boy was Environmentalist David Suzuki whose daughter Severn Cullis-Suzuki gave that famous speech in 1992.
    German Canadians were not interned but they were harassed - my mom told me of two German Canadian girls at her school who were chased by the boys as soon as school let out.

  • @brendamiller5785
    @brendamiller5785 Před 7 měsíci

    Yes, we still have a GG, representating the Crown

  • @dennisdwyer6500
    @dennisdwyer6500 Před rokem

    Baseball Diamond is their pitch

  • @scds1082
    @scds1082 Před rokem

    Yes, we still have a governor general, who represents the monarchy in Canada. But we are governed by the government, elected by the people. The governor general and monarchy are figureheads more than anything else.

  • @lindafletcher1628
    @lindafletcher1628 Před 2 lety +1

    you really nned to do a video about Terry FOx a true Canadian hero, Every year school kids do a run to raise money and awareness for Cancer care

  • @Xerxes2005
    @Xerxes2005 Před 2 lety

    To be honest, I really doubt the Queen's opinion on whether or not Canada should have a responsible government mattered much. It was a decision from the Parliament in London because it had abandoned its protectionist policy towards its colony. Canada needed to be more autonomous. It was not a "Canadian idea" either, since that is how UK had been governed since Walpole in the 18th century. What was new is that a colony should also have it.
    And yes, the city of Melbourne is named after William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, who had been Prime Minister from 1834 to 1841. It is a strange idea to set that clip in 1841 since Canada was not afforded a responsible government before 1848, the same year Melbourne died. After the Rebellions of 1837-38, Lord Durham advised the adoption of a responsible government and the union of Lower and Upper Canada. Melbourne accepted the union (which became effective in 1840) but not the responsible government.

  • @analogueandy8x10
    @analogueandy8x10 Před 2 lety

    We still have a Governor General. Mary Simon.

  • @captaincanada67
    @captaincanada67 Před 2 lety +1

    Keep your stick on the ice, good job.

  • @nanciecianfrini9168
    @nanciecianfrini9168 Před rokem

    Italians were interred too.

  • @evelynproulx1853
    @evelynproulx1853 Před 2 lety

    In Canada, to this day, we still have a governor general... (hm... wondering it the spelling is right here)... anyway I'm sure you take the jist...

  • @caralynne2809
    @caralynne2809 Před 2 lety

    Kingston Penitentiary was Canada's longest employed prison. It has held the majority of our most dangerous and notorious criminals through its nearly 180 years of use. Not impossible to escape as Alcatraz might be, yet not a too frequent occurrence. A sentence to Kingston Pen most likely meant you were a lifelong convict.

  • @dalemcleod3439
    @dalemcleod3439 Před rokem

    baseball diamond

  • @bluebird1239
    @bluebird1239 Před 2 lety

    The camps were called internment camps. Many Japanese Canadians were sent to camps and their homes, businesses, fishing boats and other possessions were confiscated and sold to non-Japanese people. They were forcibly interned and relocated in the name of national security. In 1988, Prime Minister Mulroney issued an apology, a month after President Regan in the USA. Canada announced a compensation package of CA $20,000 to each surviving internee, and the reinstatement of Canadian citizenship to those deported to Japan.

  • @craigmorris4083
    @craigmorris4083 Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, we still appoint our Governor General.

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor Před rokem

    Baseball field. Or the diamond. Ebbet's Field Flannels makes a Vancouver Asahi Jersey. There was a huge anti-Japanese racist sentiment in British Columbia before the war and the Japanese haters ran with the anti-Japanese feelings post-Pearl Harbor.

  • @bl_leafkid4322
    @bl_leafkid4322 Před 2 lety

    Have you seen a blacksmith in person while he is morning?

  • @glennstach4439
    @glennstach4439 Před rokem

    QUEEN Victoria before 1867 !!! 👍✌🖖🌻🍁

  • @jcee8493
    @jcee8493 Před 2 lety

    10:00 Canada has a Constitutional Monarchy.

  • @danielleduplantis9449
    @danielleduplantis9449 Před 2 lety

    We still have a governor General In 2022

  • @danielleduplantis9449
    @danielleduplantis9449 Před 2 lety

    The Canada's were the upper Canada and the lower Canada

  • @CraftAero
    @CraftAero Před rokem

    7:50 I'm sure the "cutsey" acting was hardly realistic.
    It's not abnormal for a wealthy female to hold sway in those days (via her husband or father).
    The "smarmy" portrayal kinda puts it outside of reality context.

  • @ilanasamaai2138
    @ilanasamaai2138 Před 2 lety

    Another video is top 10 heritage minutes from "watchmojo" channel ... great canadian channel

  • @danielleduplantis9449
    @danielleduplantis9449 Před 2 lety

    A baseball field

  • @robertwhitehead8671HMCS

    Interment is the word here or detention camps is not one or proudest moment in Canada it was just Japanese not germans or Italian but there were some German pows in POW camps think most were German navy

    • @robertwhitehead8671HMCS
      @robertwhitehead8671HMCS Před 2 lety

      Still have the queens rep a figurehead position at best

    • @robertwhitehead8671HMCS
      @robertwhitehead8671HMCS Před 2 lety

      Flogger I'm sure Australia had there dark period in there penal system

    • @singtweetypie
      @singtweetypie Před rokem

      Italians and Germans were indeed put in internment camps during WW11. This past year, the Italians finally got an apology. from our government. You should read up on the stories of how the Italians were treated and what our government took from them. Most of them were picked up because they got together at the Italian social clubs and many of them had their own businesses so they were suspected of being communists. One of the fellows whom they rounded up had four sons fighting for Canada in WW11.

  • @viewer1959
    @viewer1959 Před 2 lety

    Australia also interned people during WW2. As did the US

  • @hufflepunkslitherclaw7436

    No, they were concentration camps. People taken there lost all of their rights, freedom, and property. Conditions were horrible. They would save the cardboard from supply deliveries to try and insulate their "houses" so they wouldn't freeze to death. When they were released they had lost their businesses and homes and had to start over in poverty. The same thing happened to Italian Canadians.

  • @Kaziklu
    @Kaziklu Před 2 lety

    What they don't tell you about Agnes... is she campaigned to fix the system but the Tory Gov't refused. It wasn't until a more centre, more compassionate gov't took power that any real change occurred.
    She slams that down and says is this Normal... and the Tory MP would have been like... ya it is... they had no issues with it. Sadly Tories are often on the wrong side of history.

    • @zammmerjammer
      @zammmerjammer Před 2 lety

      @Halbinoni Imagine someone wanting to ignore the facts of political ideology by dismissing it as "tribalism."

  • @canadianicedragon2412
    @canadianicedragon2412 Před 2 lety

    The Japanese "Internment" Camps were not a shining moment, but the idea was many Japanese lived on the west coast and "modern fishing" ships could reach... Japan. So they were relocated during the "war" to landlocked parts of the country. War doesn't bring out the best in people. I'm glad we don't bury or hide the darker parts but... not a proud moment. As another said in the comments it was an anti-Asian move as few of the other "enemy countries" immigrants were treated that way. I suspect that the "ships" excuse was just that an excuse.
    Prison reform is rarely a "priority" as it is the "worst" members of society. So it takes... a new eye to see the flaws and change it.
    In Canada the Governor General acts as the Royal Representative, and the "final" approval of law/policy but he or she cannot really overrule the elected government, so more a formality than a position of power. (The position has some authority obviously but... limited. Kind of like a constitutional monarchy. 😉)