A growing number of new immigrants to Canada are bringing with them increasingly diverse languages, setting a record for the number of Canadians whose mother tongue is neither English nor French, new 2021 census data reveals.
One in four people in Canada have a mother tongue other than English or French, and about 12 per cent of people predominantly speak a non-official language at home as of last year.
Proficiency in those languages tends to fade after a generation or two, however, Statistics CanadaB次元官网网址檚 deputy head of the Centre for Demography said Wednesday.
B次元官网网址淔rom 2016 to 2021, the number of Canadians who predominantly speak languages other than English and French at home grew significantly,B次元官网网址 said 脡ric Caron-Malenfant at a media briefing.
The trend is mainly driven by immigration, and continued even during the pandemic when immigration slowed considerably due to COVID-19 health restrictions and related backlogs, Caron-Malenfant said.
The average age of new immigrants is typically between 25 and 35, he said.
B次元官网网址淎fter that, when you have children in Canada, often more and more English and French will be spoken at home,B次元官网网址 he said.
British Columbia speech-language pathologist June Cheung noticed that phenomenon play out in her own Cantonese-speaking family and community when she was growing up in Edmonton.
B次元官网网址淢y parents were the ones who originally immigrated here from Hong Kong whereas my siblings and I, we were all born here,B次元官网网址 Cheung said in an interview.
B次元官网网址淢y parents would speak to my older brothers and myself in Chinese but often we would reply in English.B次元官网网址
The generational language shift inspired her masters thesis, which further showed how B次元官网网址渉eritageB次元官网网址 language proficiency fades with each generation.
B次元官网网址淏y the time the second generation has kids, itB次元官网网址檚 very unlikely that theyB次元官网网址檒l choose to use a heritage language,B次元官网网址 she said.
The trend was also true for French-speaking families outside of Quebec in most provinces, the census data shows.
The proportion of Canadians living outside Quebec whose first official language spoken is French was down to 3.3 per cent in 2021 from 3.6 per cent in 2016.
Statistics Canada attributes the decline to the fact that people whose first official language is French tend to be older, and havenB次元官网网址檛 consistently passed the language on to the next generation. Sometimes other languages can take over inside the home.
Cheung, who says sheB次元官网网址檚 reinvested in her Cantonese-speaking skills, says fading language proficiency can create intergenerational divides.
B次元官网网址淚 can ask you where the bathroom is, versus being able to talk about your hopes and fears, your dreams,B次元官网网址 she said. B次元官网网址淚tB次元官网网址檚 a lot harder to have those conversations sometimes if there is that language barrier.B次元官网网址
Mandarin and Punjabi are the most common non-official languages, with more than a million people predominantly speaking one of the two languages.
Statistics Canada noted a large increase in the growth of the number of Canadians who predominantly speak South Asian languages such as Punjabi, Gujarati, Hindi or Malayalam since the last census in 2016, a rise which was fuelled by immigration.
The growth rate of the population speaking South Asian languages was at least eight times greater than that of the overall Canadian population during the same period.
The massive increase in the growth of South Asian languages closely aligns with immigration trends from those countries.
At the same time, European languages like Italian, Polish and Greek are fading in Canada.
B次元官网网址淭his decline is primarily linked to the speakers of these languages aging, a significant proportion of whom emigrated to Canada before 1980,B次元官网网址 Caron-Malenfant said.
Relatively few recent immigrants from those countries have recently landed in Canada, he said.
Regardless of their mother tongue, most people in Canada access services in one of the two official languages.
English and French are still by far the most common languages spoken in Canada and 90 per cent of Canadians speak at least one of the official languages.
B次元官网网址擫aura Osman, The Canadian Press