David Leslie, in his article "Multiculturalism and the Hyphenated Canadian", argues that, even though Canadians characterized diversity as a "melting pot" of North American culture, and most of us feel we are treated equally and fairly, some minor groups are still named "hyphenated Canadians." Canada is a multicultural country with many hyphenated Canadians: Asian-Canadians, Irish-Canadians, and other-Canadians. Furthermore into the article, diversity, that characterizes the "Hyphenated Canadians," is divided into many factors: race, religion, and culture.
In reality, David Leslie shows, real Canadians hyphenate other groups of Canadians to mark their uniqueness; although most of these other groups do not want to be classified as "other-Canadians." Members of the minority groups believe that assimilation is a way to blend, to share, and to live in the culture of Canada; although the process of assimilation itself is a slow process. For these minor groups, assimilation into the Canadian culture is a fight, a struggle, and a process to be acknowledged as real-Canadians.
The concept of assimilation in religion is really difficult. It's more than just adapting to other religions; it's believing, accepting, and applying other belief to someone's life. In the film "Masala," a young Indian man struggles between two different beliefs: "one that dictates arranged marriages and one that tolerates sex without marriage." He is a victim of the conflict that he has within himself; his decision about what he believes in will be crucial to end this conflict and assimilate himself with the Canadian's beliefs.
The attempts, to accept different cultures in Canada, often lead to failure. Canadians view some practices of difference cultures as violations of human rights: "clitoridectomy, polygamy, and the forced marriage of girl children to men selected by their families." Susan Moller Okin makes this claim: "many culturally based customs aim to control women and render them, especially sexually and reproductively, servile to men's desires and interests.