Canada kicks off four months of festivities celebrating the Queen's
Diamond Jubilee Monday, and royal watchers predict the Canuck
celebrations will be among the most enthusiastic in the world.
Revived political interest in the monarchy, coupled with residual
glow from last year's blast of royal star power, has whet the country's
appetite for activities honouring one of the longest reigns in the
institution's history.
Royal commentator Rafal Heydel-Mankoo said Canada's long-standing
love for its official head of state will also fan the flames of royal
fervour in the coming months.
"It's been absolutely remarkable to see this resurgence of
support and enthusiasm for the crown," Heydel-Mankoo said in a telephone
interview from London. "I think that's a sign of maturity ... a mature
nation doesn't tamper with a tried, tested and proved formula which has
given Canada stability and good government."
In Toronto, Ontario Lt.-Gov. David Onley will present inaugural Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee medals to Stephen Lewis and Gordon Lightfoot at Mirvish Theatre.
Monday marks the 60th anniversary of the Queen's ascension to the
British throne, which took place automatically with the death of her
father King George
Heydel-Mankoo said Canada's privy council hailed her as the new
sovereign hours before any other realm, including the United Kingdom.
Her official coronation was held 16 months later to allow time for preparations and a period of mourning for the late king.
Worldwide celebrations of the Diamond Jubilee begin Monday and
will continue for four months, culminating in a lavish ceremony in
London on the anniversary of the coronation.
Members of the royal family will fan out to various commonwealth countries to take part in global festivities.
Canada will play host to Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, in
May, and will also mark the occasion through smaller local ceremonies
in the coming months.
The Prince of Wales' visit is the third royal tour of Canada in
as many years, following a glamorous nine-day sojourn by Prince William
and his wife Kate last summer and a visit from the Queen herself in
2010.
Canada's regular presence on royal itineraries, Heydel-Mankoo
said, is a clear sign of the country's place in the family's affections.
"In three successive years they've had the three biggest-ticket
items in the royal family," he said. "I think that's clearly a sign of
the regard with which the Canadian people are held."
Royal commentator Richard Berthelsen said Charles' May visit will
be a lower-key affair than William and Kate's whirlwind tour, which saw
crowds of several thousand strong descend on the newlyweds and shower
them with praise.
Charles and Camilla lack the novelty and glamour associated with
the younger generation, but will have a driving purpose to their agenda,
he said.
"The Prince of Wales has been here many times since probably
about 1970. Those visits to Canada have undergone various stages over
the years," Berthelsen said. "It's going to be a tour that will have, in
the background, the focus on the Queen's Diamond Jubilee."
Such a focus seems appropriate for a monarch who is enjoying the
second-longest reign in British history and who has had a front row seat
to many seminal Canadian moments of the past half-century.
The Queen attended the country's centennial in 1967, appeared at
Canada's first Olympic games in Montreal eight years later, and has been
present for numerous smaller celebrations over the years, Berthelsen
said.
Her frequent visits have bred a familiarity that spans many generations, he added.
"For a lot of Canadians, I think she is sort of that great aunt
figure who is in your family somewhere and who you like to see
periodically ... almost a third of the time the country's been in
existence, she's been in this position," he said.
Even the monarchy's detractors acknowledge the Queen's reign deserves some acknowledgment.
Tom Freda, national director of Citizens for a Canadian Republic,
said commemorative ceremonies are entirely appropriate for a woman of
such prominence in Canadian cultural and political tradition. But such
ceremonies, he argues, should not come with the multimillion-dollar
price-tag the federal government has committed to.
Ottawa has pledged $7.5 million to help fund four months worth of
commemorative activities across the country, starting with flag-raising
ceremonies in all provincial capitals on this morning.
The government will also award 60,000 Canadians jubilee medals for their dedication to community service in the coming weeks.
Freda said contributions to a commonwealth charity would be a
more appropriate way of acknowledging the Queen's rule, particularly at a
time of economic uncertainty.
"In light of these tough times when there are budget cutbacks
everywhere and the government is pinching pennies and putting people out
of work ... yet they feel it's necessary to put this amount of money
into celebrating the Queen's reign," he said.
Heydel-Mankoo, however, feels the government's support for the
Diamond Jubilee is a tribute to the characteristics that have made the
Queen only the second monarch in British history to attain 60 years on
the throne.
"The Queen's life has really been one of dedication to duty, of
self-sacrifice and service," he said. "She took an oath when she became
queen to dedicate her life to her peoples, and she's lived up to that
expectation and shows no signs of letting that down."