My mother was born in 1921 and she carries a Canadian passport. So, sometime before that.
The easy answer would be Canada but with 40% of Canadians not being born in Canada or having at least one parent not born in Canada the country does have the smallest number of native born citizens for similar sized countries.
Canadians are citizen that lives and born in Canada.
yes
yes bronko nagurski was born in Ontario Canada
British Columbia, Canada
if you were born in the USA you are an American, if you were born in China your are Chinese, if you are born in Holland you are Dutch, as an example, if you were born in the Holland and you immigrated to Canada with your parents, you are now Dutch-Canadians or just Canadians. You take on the name of the country to which you immigrated.
British Columbia, Canada
No, geographically Canada is mostly wilderness with varying amounts of human activity. Up until the middle of the 20th Century most Canadians lived in that wilderness or on farms or in small farming towns, mostly farms and small farming towns. Today most Canadians live in medium to large cities and many have no rural Canadian roots at all or have forgotten their rural history. With 40% of Canadians not being born in Canada or having at least one parent born in Canada that is to be expected.
There is no ancestral group that large in Canada. French are less than 25%, English less than 30%, Scottish and Irish less than 20% and while most Canadians maybe first and second generation there is no one group anywhere near even 50% of Canadians. 66% or more of Canadians may have been born in Canada.
Tom Stade was born in British Columbia, in Canada.
Brian McCroary was born in British Columbia, in Canada.
Anastasia Fontaines was born in British Columbia, in Canada.