Calgarians marking their first day as Canadians were among thousands who celebrated the nation\u0027s birthday at events across the city Saturday
Ereka Mauricio said the Heritage Park swearing-in was the final act in bringing her young family fully together under Canada’s umbrella.
“Canada handles every problem here in this country … I love it here, people are so nice and there’s lots of opportunities,” said Mauricio, standing near a table overflowing with sugary cookies shaped like maple leafs. Over the past year, the country and Calgary have become refuges from war as thousands of people fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have settled here.
Under brilliantly sunny skies and a heat warning, revellers decked out in maple leaf face painting and flags enjoyed multi-cultural food, pow wows, turban tying, musical performances and in the city’s Chinatown, dragon dances.Article content
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
Fewer Canadians see recession on the horizon, says Bank of Canada surveyBank of Canada survey found one\u002Dthird of Canadian companies are planning for recession compared with half in the first quarter. Read more
Lire la suite »
Fewer Canadians see recession on the horizon, says Bank of Canada surveyBank of Canada survey found one\u002Dthird of Canadian companies are planning for recession compared with half in the first quarter. Read more
Lire la suite »
Fewer Canadians see recession on the horizon, says Bank of Canada surveyBank of Canada survey found one\u002Dthird of Canadian companies are planning for recession compared with half in the first quarter. Read more
Lire la suite »
Fewer Canadians see recession on the horizon, says Bank of Canada surveyBank of Canada survey found one\u002Dthird of Canadian companies are planning for recession compared with half in the first quarter. Read more
Lire la suite »
CANADA: Poll shows most Canadians would flunk the citizenship testThey need to score at least 75 per cent to pass, but the average score of the Canadians who were surveyed was only 49 per cent
Lire la suite »
CANADA: Poll shows most Canadians would flunk the citizenship testThey need to score at least 75 per cent to pass, but the average score of the Canadians who were surveyed was only 49 per cent
Lire la suite »