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Breathtaking natural beauty, tolerant, safe and prosperous. That is the picture we have of Canada in the Netherlands. But is it really that paradisical, or does Trudeau's country know how to put on a mask of civility? Writer Emy Koopman travels in Paradise Canada from Vancouver to Montreal and looks at the problems brewing beneath the surface. The series delves into all the urgent themes of our time and examines the state of Canada with racism and gender equality, migration, climate change and the welfare state. Emy Koopman speaks to famous Canadian intellectuals such as Charles Taylor, Margaret Atwood and Jordan Peterson.
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E1Lost Women
In Canada, indigenous women are six times more likely to die of violent causes compared to white women. Emy Koopman speaks to relatives of an indigenous girl who disappeared along the 'Highway of Tears' twenty-five years ago, and discovers that these disappearances are still not a thing of the past. Since the 1970s, unofficial estimates suggest that more than 40 (most of them indigenous) women and girls have disappeared along British Columbia's endless highway. This is said to be the result of more than a hundred years of colonial policy, whereby indigenous children were snatched from their families to be placed in boarding schools to destroy 'the Indian in the child'. Practices that took place well into the 90's.
E2Toxic Masculinity
Emy Koopman investigates the struggle of equality between men and women in Canada. The country seems extraordinarily progressive, but there have been two attacks so far, specifically targeting women. The perpetrator of the 'Toronto van attack' stated that he belonged to the 'incels', an online group of men who do not have sex and blame women for it. How can such misogyny proliferate in Canada and what is being done about it? Koopman talks with male feminists and female boxers, but also speaks to self-help guru and psychology professor Jordan Peterson, who became known for his critique of contemporary feminism. Is Canada Polarizing?
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