Yes, thank you very much.
I'm going to continue with the en garde, for a second. It was Churchill who said,
“Prenez garde: je vais parler en français.”
I come from the south of the province, where we do not have a lot of Acadians. But we have a place called Saint Croix Island, where Samuel de Champlain spent the winter before he ever made it to Quebec. For us, it is an important place for both Canadian communities.
I would just like you to speak about the Acadian presence in New Brunswick, the way in which it has changed in the last 10 or 20 years and the sharing between Acadians and anglophones. It comes as no surprise that the north is French-speaking and Acadian and the south is mostly English-speaking. But there are places like Moncton and even Fredericton where both linguistic communities are found. I would like to hear your ideas about that.