Marchand elected mayor after nerve-wracking night Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter ruby@qctonline.com Québec Forte et Fière (QFF) leader Bruno Marchand was declared mayor-elect of Quebec City just after 11:30…
Tag Archives: November 10 2021
Quebec City residents march for bolder climate action
Quebec City residents march for bolder climate action Cassandra Kerwin cassandra@qctonline.com On an unseasonably warm day at the start of a once frigid, long and snow-filled season, Quebec City residents…
COMMENTARY: Air Canada CEO shares memories of corporate “contempt” in Quebec
COMMENTARY: Air Canada CEO shares memories of corporate “contempt” in Quebec Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter peterblack@qctonline.com It was one of those intertwinings of time worthy of a Christopher…
Abandoned zoo greenhouse faces demolition
Abandoned zoo greenhouse faces demolition Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter Barring a last-minute reprieve, the former Indo-Australian greenhouse on the site of the abandoned Quebec City zoo will be…
Too soon? City gets ready to erect dozens of outdoor rinks
Too soon? City gets ready to erect dozens of outdoor rinks Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter peterblack@qctonline.com With the mercury still hovering at unusually warm fall temperatures, the city…
26th Community Christmas Hamper Campaign up and running
26th Community Christmas Hamper Campaign up and running Press release The 26th Community Christmas Hamper Campaign (CCHC) is now underway! Once again, we cannot accept any food donations this year…
STREET VIEWS: The story behind Rue de Dieppe
STREET VIEWS: The story behind Rue de Dieppe Shirley Nadeau shirley@qctonline.com The name of this street recalls an episode of the Second World War that was particularly disastrous for the…
Memorials and Things of Fame – November 10, 2021
Memorials and Things of Fame Researched and compiled by Lorie Pierce lorie@qctonline.com November 11, 1821 – The Quebec Gazette Wheat Shipments Great activity has prevailed during the last week in…
CARTOON: Hold it High
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Théberge: Community-led schools ‘crucial’ for minorities
Théberge: Community-led schools ‘crucial’ for minorities
Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter
ruby@qctonline.com
In the early 1960s, growing up in the almost entirely French-speaking town of Sainte-Anne-des-Chênes, Man., southeast of Winnipeg, Raymond Théberge and his classmates attended elementary school in English. They were handed social studies textbooks with the title My British Heritage. “None of the students in my class,” recalled the current commissioner of official languages, “could identify with that.”
Public education in languages other than English had been outlawed in Manitoba since 1916, when bilingual schools were shut down by an anglophone-dominated government aiming to create a standardized English-only public education system. Until 1947, it was even forbidden to teach French as a second language, and French-language textbooks weren’t available until 1959. What Théberge learned about his own culture, heritage and mother tongue came from his parents.
In 1969, when Théberge was 16, the federal government passed the Official Languages Act. “For my generation, that was an affirmation of who we were as French-Canadians, and later, as Franco-Manitobans,” he recalled. The following year, Manitoba officially authorized French as a language of education; Théberge’s younger siblings, and the generations of students that followed, were able to attend school in French. However, ripple effects of previous policies led to language loss in many families. “I have countless cousins and acquaintances [from francophone families] who do not speak French, and I often hear the expression ‘I used to be French,’” Théberge remarked.
“The examples of Manitoba and Ontario [which had similar legislation restricting French-language education in the early 20th century] illustrate how watering down language rights had an impact on generations of children, and … contributed to the assimilation of francophones outside Quebec,” Théberge said.
Théberge shared his reflections on minority-language education in closing remarks given to the Quebec English- speaking Community Research Network (QUESCREN) Vitality Forum on Nov. 5. The forum focused on the role of education in maintaining the vitality of English-speaking communities in Quebec.
“Educational institutions will always be linked to community vitality,” noted Théberge, who was rector of the Université de Moncton before his appointment as official languages commissioner. He noted that English-speaking communities in Quebec, particularly outside of Montreal, face difficulties accessing early childhood education that are analogous to the struggles francophones outside Quebec face.
“The needs in early child- hood education described [by the Community Health and Social Services Network in Quebec City and the Committee for Anglophone Social Action (CASA) in the Gaspé] reminded me of the same needs I had as a parent in a francophone community in Manitoba,” Théberge noted. He mentioned the implementation and expansion of Bright Beginnings, a CASA-led bilingual early childhood education initiative in the Gaspé. He praised the “willingness to innovate” shown by English-speaking parents and institutions, which gave rise to the Community Learning Centre system, and decades before that, to French immersion.
Théberge expressed concerns that Bill 96, the sweeping reform to the Charter of the French Language proposed by the Legault government, could have a detrimental effect on enrolment in English-language schools in Quebec. Similar concerns have been expressed by Voice of English-speaking Québec, the Quebec Community Groups Network and the Central Québec School Board. Théberge said he hoped the government would “keep lines of communication open” with the English-speaking community as it moved forward with Bill 96.
Théberge could not directly comment on Bill 40, the provincial law which replaced elected school boards with provincially run service centres, due to the fact it is currently being challenged in court. However, he noted that a measure of community control of schools was “crucial” for the vitality of language communities.
“The more community- based the school is, the more it can deal with local conditions and local situations,” he said. “One of the strengths of education in Canada is decentralization of school management. Communities know what’s best for their communities, and we have evidence supporting that.”