Nowruz celebrates the Persian New Year and deep ties to culture

Photo courtesy of the Province of British Columbia

In Metro Vancouver, some 30,000 Iranian Canadians live in flourishing cultural neighbourhoods. Iranian tastes and smells fill the shops and restaurants, and Farsi signs and newspapers catch the eye in places like Lonsdale Ave. On Mar. 20, the Persian community will be celebrating its New Year, Nowruz.

According to the 2016 Census, 210,405 Iranians reside in Canada. After the Greater Toronto area, Metro Vancouver has the largest Iranian population in Canada, with approximately 46,000 people with Iranian roots. North Vancouver is the most significant of these ethnic hubs, followed by West Vancouver and Coquitlam.

With a significant upswing in immigration after the Iranian Revolution in 1979, there has been a steady flow of immigrants from Iran looking for political, economic, and social opportunity. Local store manager Fatemeh – who prefers to remain identified by first name only – came over a decade ago as a skilled labourer. Some of her compatriots fled from Iran as refugees, while others – especially in recent years – seized opportunity as business immigrants. Once here, the existing Persian communities welcomed them with memories of home and the promise of a new future.

Culture meets tolerance

Those who immigrate today can find cultural support in a number of places, including cultural centres, festivals, concerts, poetry classes, mosques, and meet-up groups for walking and talking. Examples of specific groups include the Society of Iranian Canadian Professionals and a Farsi-based media group. There are also organizations that help navigate the line between living in a supportive community and participating in a new culture. The Canadian-Iranian Foundation (CIF), for example, specializes in the orientation and integration of new immigrants. They stand for social responsibility and human welfare, distancing themselves from religion and politics. Education and volunteerism are listed as their most important tools.

Vashaan | Photo courtesy of Rogue Folk

“It is also an aim of this Foundation to educate and advise newly arrived immigrants about education, charitable work and becoming involved in the process for social reform in Canada,” their mission statement reads.

Home ties

Many first-generation Iranian-Canadians retain strong ties to their home country, returning home two or three times in a decade. The later generations are much less likely to visit the land of their ancestors. Interest in the culture, however, is unflagging. Many second and third generation immigrants are raised with Persian values. Fatemeh says her children, here since 2003, see themselves still as Iranian.

Qalandar | Photo courtesy of Rogue Folk

“My home is very Persian. That life is beautiful to me and I raised them, so it is only natural to them,” she says.

Language is seen, by many, as the most important part of passing on Iranian culture. Traditions and festivities also carry strong sentimental value. While religion and politics may still invoke deep personal feelings, they were less significant in community engagement. Fatemeh says that, while she has seen prejudicial and extremist groups meeting in the name of religion, it is not unlike prejudicial groups elsewhere. For the majority of her religious community, Islam is the belief system of a moderate, respectable people.

“Everything is to peace,” she says.

Many others in the community are happy to say that Iranians can embrace secularism as fully as any other.

Trials and triumphs

A highly educated population, the Iranian-Canadian community is well-represented in fields such as engineering, mathematics and computer science, though many who gained their credentials back in Iran struggle to have them recognized in Canada. What started as a flow of political refugees after the Iranian Revolution has largely become a group of skilled workers and investors. Fatemeh says in the last decade or so the demographics of her West Vancouver Iranian-Canadian community has seen a definite turn, with the influx of generations raised under a different political system. She sees that the Iran she visits now is not the same Iran she grew up in and believes that Canada’s political environment – valuing freedom and multiculturalism – will have a positive impact on newcomers in the community.

“Such a system causes people to become more open-minded,” she says.

In order to celebrate Nowruz, The Rogue Folk Club will stream two concerts by Persian ensembles Vashann and Qalandar. For more information please visit: www.roguefolk.bc.ca