The Tightest Immigration Admissions Policy in Canadian history (1931)
- It is widely acknowledged that Canada's immigration policies throughout the 1900's were discriminatory, racist, and antisemitic.
- This publication by the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 contains copies of three Orders-in-Council that highlight the state of Canadian immigration policies at this time.
- The first Order-in-Council included in this publication was PC 183 passed January 31, 1923, which established a formal list of preferred and non-preferred countries to seek immigrants from.
- This Order-in-Council also prohibited the entry of industrial labourers and only allowed entry to immigrants who were farmers, farm workers, female domestic servants, and close relatives to Canadian residents.
- The second policy highlighted in this publication is Order-in-Council PC 1957, which was enacted on August 14, 1930, which placed further restrictions on immigration, requiring farmers to have enough capital to farm in Canada prior to being accepted.
- Finally, the passage of Order-in-Council PC 695 on March 21, 1931, under Prime Minister R.B. Bennett, marked the tightest immigration admissions policy in Canadian history.
- Due to the Great Depression, this policy heavily restricted and limited immigration to: American and British citizens with the means to support themselves until they found employment, farmers with enough capital to farm in Canada, and the wives and children of Canadian residents.
- Through the immigration measures introduced in 1931, Canada closed its borders and remained committed to this policy denying entrance to any immigrants and refugees outside their specific criteria.
- It was this policy that was used to justify the government's refusal to offer refuge to Jewish refugees escaping Germany on board the MS St. Louis, which is a dark reminder of Canada's contribution to the Holocaust.
Citation
Gagnon, Erica, Jan Raska, Lindsay Van Dyk, Monica MacDonald, Siniša Obradovic, and Steven Schwinghamer. “Order-in-Council PC 1931-695, 1931.” Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21. Government of Canada. Accessed July 25, 2022. https://pier21.ca/research/immigration-history/order-in-council-pc-1931-695-1931#footnote-3.
Further Readings
For more information the Order-in-Council P.C. 695: https://tc2.ca/sourcedocs/uploads/images/HD%20Sources%20%28text%20thumbs%29/Immigration/Jewish%20immigration%20to%20Canada%20during%20WWII/Jewish-immigration-to-Canada-during-WWII%201.pdf
For more information on Canada's discriminatory immigration policies between 1930-1945: https://ccrweb.ca/sites/ccrweb.ca/files/static-files/canadarefugeeshistory2.htm
Overlapping Topics
Culture, Religion & Ethnicity
Policy Sub-Topic
Policy Type
Order-in-Council