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Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

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Page 1: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today

CHC2D8Ms. Gluskin

Page 2: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

VocabularyModernization (noun) – updating of technology Modernization of York Mills, if it ever happened, would include computers in every classroom. Separatist (adjective) – wanting to separate from something Quebec separatists still want Quebec to leave Canada and become an independent country. Emergency (noun) – a situation where things might not be normal and help might be neededA lockdown is an emergency. A fire is an emergency. Official (adjective) – legal, recognized Canada has two official languages – French and English. Switzerland has four. Bill (noun) – what a law is called before it is passed into law by voting in parliamentIn parliament MPs vote on whether to accept a bill. It then becomes a law if it is passed.

Page 3: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Referendum (noun) – a national or provincial vote on a question (like a plebiscite) In a referendum citizens can vote yes or no on a question.

Constitution (noun) – a country’s highest lawsOur class does not have a constitution. We do, however, have rules. Compromised (verb) – worked together to find a solution acceptable to everyone in the groupStudents and teachers sometimes compromise on the due date of an assignment. Accord (noun) – agreementPrime Ministers often try to get all the provinces to agree to an accord. Distinct (adjective) – special, uniqueEvery single person on earth has a distinct personality making him or her different from everyone else.

Page 4: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quebec’s History

• Settled in the 1600s by people from France

• Many Aboriginal people lived there before the French arrived

• Britain took over the French colony in 1759

CBC, Seven Wonders of Canada, Old Quebec City, Quebec, 2014, http://www.cbc.ca/sevenwonders/wonder_quebec_city.html (May 16, 2014)

Beautiful and historic old Quebec City is 400 years old

Page 5: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quebec and Assimilation

• Even though Britain controlled Quebec as a colony, it didn’t force the people to assimilate.– Quebec kept its own language, religion, culture

and legal system.

• However, Quebec’s French speakers have always been concerned because they were and are surrounded by the rest of English-speaking Canada and the US.

Page 6: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quebec and Canada

• The relationship between English and French Canada has been tense, problematic, rocky.

• Between Canada and Quebec there have been problems, tension, conflict, misunderstandings.

Quebec language police strike again, Global Post, Feb. 26, 2013http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/canada/130226/quebec-language-police-restaurant-conti-caffe (May 16, 2014)

Page 7: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Old-fashionedIn the early 1960s many Quebeckers felt their province and Union Nationale government were old-fashioned and they wanted to be more modern:• Quebec’s education system had problems• No medicare (public health coverage)• Unions (groups of workers) lacked power• Married women had few legal rights• English was the language of business; many large corporations were

owned by English-speaking Canadians or Americans• Average income of French-speaking Quebeckers was lower than that of

many other groups• French speakers believed that their language and culture were not

valued and respected

Page 8: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Income in Quebec

Page 9: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Old and New

old fashioned modern

Quebeckers wanted to catch up and have a fair and updated society

Page 10: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Quiet Revolution

• How can a revolution be quiet?• We tend to think revolution is…

ViolentFastExtreme

Page 11: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Types of Change

1 Small 10 Biglittle influence big influencelittle impact big impactlittle effect big effect

radical, extreme, revolutionary

Page 12: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

Separatists

• People who want to separate (break away) from something– FLQ wanted Quebec to leave Canada• and become independent• FLQ members were a small minority of allseparatists Mailbox, 1971,

Montreal – mailboxes were a symbol of the federal government

Wikipedia, October Crisis, May 15, 2014, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_Crisis (May 19, 2014)

Page 13: Quebec in Canada, 1960s to Today CHC2D8 Ms. Gluskin

War Measures ActPrime Minister Pierre Trudeau said the October Crisis was an emergency.

The Act was controversial; people disagreed about it.

Some people said it was a good way to solve the crisis and protect society, some said it was a very bad idea that would take away individuals’ rights and freedoms.