I'm a new immigrant but I'm not new to Canada. I've spent all my adult life here (9 years and counting).
When I first came to this small Prairie city from my native country of India, I thought "Wow, everyone is so nice and friendly and welcoming here!". In a few years, I realized that the niceness was usually fake. I also began to notice subtle incidents of racism. In the past nine years, I never made a single Canadian friend. I know what you're probably thinking: "this guy needs to get out of his Indian cultural shell". Well, that is precisely my point. I was never very Indian to begin with, and I never associated with the Indian community. I don't have Indian friends either, but I do have non-Indian, non-Canadian friends, and a spouse who is from the EU. In other words, local people are unable to pigeonhole me (and especially, us) into a certain ethnic, political, national, or religious group. I have deduced that people need to be able to classify someone using their own preconceived notions before being able to interact with them naturally.
Have other immigrants observed this? Do any Canadians want to tell me if my theory is correct? I'm not trying to rile anyone up, btw.
When I first came to this small Prairie city from my native country of India, I thought "Wow, everyone is so nice and friendly and welcoming here!". In a few years, I realized that the niceness was usually fake. I also began to notice subtle incidents of racism. In the past nine years, I never made a single Canadian friend. I know what you're probably thinking: "this guy needs to get out of his Indian cultural shell". Well, that is precisely my point. I was never very Indian to begin with, and I never associated with the Indian community. I don't have Indian friends either, but I do have non-Indian, non-Canadian friends, and a spouse who is from the EU. In other words, local people are unable to pigeonhole me (and especially, us) into a certain ethnic, political, national, or religious group. I have deduced that people need to be able to classify someone using their own preconceived notions before being able to interact with them naturally.
Have other immigrants observed this? Do any Canadians want to tell me if my theory is correct? I'm not trying to rile anyone up, btw.