You should not, You can lose your PR. What people do not understand is that as a Refugee, you do not lose that status until you become Canadian citizen so even after you become PR you are still a refugee and not allowed to take the protection of the country you claim to be under persecution from
This person answered this question very well
https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/time-line-for-permanent-residence-application-for-refugees.683967/post-10189962
They even showed some recent cases where a woman lost her refugee status after getting a passport and returning home.
This woman told the Judge that her dad was in jail, so the fear was no longer there but the judge said that does not matter and since the fear that made her file for protection is gone, she no longer needs it.
you lose your protection from Canada you also lose your PR too. if you want to travel to a different country get a PRTD and travel meet your family in neighbouring countries etc, but also if you meet too close to your home country CBSA will grill you when you get back to Canada.
Here are excerpts from the law
The term “re-availment” is often used when referring to a return to a country of persecution.
Note119
The issue of reavailment can arise in the context of the Board's assessment of a claimant's subjective fear in the determination of a refugee claim .
Return to the country of nationality is the kind of re-availment that is most often discussed in the case law.
It is quite proper for the Refugee Division to take the plaintiff's actions into account in assessing his subjective fear. It is reasonable for it to conclude that the fact he returned to the country where he feared persecution makes the existence of such a fear unlikely (
citations omitted)
In
Ortiz Garcia,
Note122 the Court held that reavailment typically suggests a lack of a subjective fear of persecution:
Similarly, in
Kostrzewa,
Note123 the Court stated: