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Because I counted Thankgiving, and holidays for federal employees rather than just statutory ones. Joel Send a noteboard - 28/05/2012 02:03:55 AM
Québec has one left: Christmas. We have a day off following Easter, but it's not a religious feastday. It can also be shifted to Good Friday by employers, which has resulted in many deciding to give both days off since doing business is too difficult and slow on both days.

Our thanksgiving isn't a religious celebration either, it's been imported by American immigrants of british descent to Lower Canada (now Québec) and has moved around the calendar a lot. It has been celebrated for all sort of things, the first time for a failure of the French revolutionaries to induce an insurrection in Lower Canada (in 1799, irrc), and even for victories against the US in the war in 1814. It eventually returned to its roots as a reaping festival, and nowadays if you ask, people will tell you it's the festival celebrating the death of a lot of turkeys (more seriously, it doesn't have nearly the importance of the US equivalent as a day for family reunions).

St-Jean-Baptiste isn't a religious holiday either, despite the old name (in Québec it's officially National Day now).

What were your others?

Wikipedia claims the origins of your Thanksgiving lie even farther back than ours, by the way, and quotes your Parliament establishing it officially in 1957 as "A Day of General Thanksgiving to Almighty God for the bountiful harvest with which Canada has been blessed – to be observed on the 2nd Monday in October." People keep insisting a holiday explicitly created for giving thanks to God is not religious, and I keep struggling to understand why, or even how. It may be only nominally religious, but millions would say (and several here have said) the same about Christmas, or any other religious holiday. Its basis and meaning remain religious just as Mardi Gras/Carneval does, even if many people with little or no religious fervor have since added unrelated aspects. If we say any holiday people used for partying or just general rest and relaxation is disqualified as religious, then NO holiday is qualified.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanksgiving_(Canada)

The others, however, were Good Friday (which Wikipedia claims is a holiday by federal law) and Easter Monday (which it claims is a holiday for federal employees.) Wikipedia further claims Quebec employers are allowed to substitute one of these for the other, but that most grant both.
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Wikipedias list of Canadian federal and provincial holidays
This message last edited by Joel on 28/05/2012 at 02:05:24 AM
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For Our Nordmenn: What Happens to Federal Religious Holidays in the Absence of a State Church? - 27/05/2012 01:33:20 PM 1081 Views
Nothing, they are federal holidays still because of strong unions, not religion - 27/05/2012 06:58:52 PM 502 Views
Hypocrisy FTW, eh? - 27/05/2012 11:04:38 PM 649 Views
No. - 27/05/2012 11:16:11 PM 470 Views
Nothing. - 27/05/2012 07:03:07 PM 463 Views
Replacing it with another, secular, holiday seems the responsible thing to do. - 27/05/2012 11:15:11 PM 433 Views
People. Don't. Care. - 27/05/2012 11:29:07 PM 490 Views
Most of them are stolen from heden traditions and have nothing to do with christianity. - 27/05/2012 07:15:55 PM 680 Views
It's all about watching Kalle Anka and Karl-Bertil Jonsson - 27/05/2012 07:40:45 PM 511 Views
YES! *NM* - 27/05/2012 10:48:06 PM 464 Views
Thanksgiving isn't a religious holiday. - 27/05/2012 08:43:58 PM 536 Views
That is rather debatable. - 28/05/2012 12:08:53 AM 598 Views
The Distinction - 29/05/2012 07:41:47 PM 551 Views
How do you come to four for Canada? - 27/05/2012 11:29:57 PM 430 Views
Because I counted Thankgiving, and holidays for federal employees rather than just statutory ones. - 28/05/2012 02:03:55 AM 586 Views
This succession of two long weekends is rather nice, yes. - 28/05/2012 01:41:05 AM 456 Views
I think Grunnlovsdagen ate Ascension Day. - 28/05/2012 02:57:27 AM 561 Views
It's funny how you use "federal" to mean "mandated by national government". - 28/05/2012 03:49:17 PM 465 Views
I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:26:38 PM 492 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 28/05/2012 04:50:32 PM 464 Views
Re: I was thinking more "central" government, but OK. - 01/06/2012 02:03:40 AM 656 Views
I think you've got the Scotland Act backwards. - 01/06/2012 09:48:36 AM 587 Views
I did, though the practical effect is much the same. - 01/06/2012 08:41:03 PM 561 Views
There's a lot of countries that call "devolution" federalism, though. - 01/06/2012 09:52:23 PM 560 Views
What about when most of the country is still under central control? - 02/06/2012 10:25:47 AM 463 Views
I wasn't saying the UK is a normal federal country. - 02/06/2012 10:17:08 PM 518 Views
There is a Campaign for an English Parliament. - 03/06/2012 10:12:21 AM 454 Views

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