That's a very good question. In 1967, I was very young; I was two and a half years old. My parents went to Expo 67 almost every weekend. My father worked there. The Expo passport has been carefully preserved at home.
Museums are the guardians of our heritage, because they conserve objects, but, given the people who work there and the activities presented there, they are also very lively places. A passport would be a kind of throwback, a nod to 1967. We're talking about a physical visit, but as I mentioned earlier, it is also important to go and discover the thousands of objects that every museum has in its museum reserves. We also have to be able to exhibit them.
I believe the passport is a winning idea. We would have to see. In that case, the museums visited would be compensated. Earlier I mentioned Médiat-Muse. A territorial exhibition was produced and involved costs to visitors. That experience was really very successful, at the Musée des Abénakis, among other places.