Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for having me.
I'd like to start by saying a few words about who we are. The Société nationale de l'Acadie, or SNA, has been the voice of Acadians since 1881, making it the oldest organization in Canada's French-speaking community. SNA has a unique mission. Not only does it represent a linguistic community, but it also promotes and protects the rights and interests of a distinct population: the Acadian people. SNA brings together Acadian organizations from the four Atlantic provinces, as well as associate members from around the world.
Keeping alive and nurturing an entire people without state institutions is no easy feat. It takes considerable human resources, community support and, of course, funding.
Let me be clear: SNA is very concerned about the lack of federal support for its mission, the only one of its kind in the country.
With that in mind, I have three priorities to share with you today.
First, I want to discuss funding for National Acadian Day.
Through the celebrate Canada program, Heritage Canada funds activities to mark four major celebrations in Canada: National Indigenous Peoples Day, Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day, Canadian Multiculturalism Day and Canada Day. National Acadian Day is not one of them—despite being a unique opportunity to express our pride and our place from coast to coast to coast and to celebrate the Acadian people, their determination and their courage. The day is also an opportunity to reflect on our motto—in unity, there is strength—a value central to our history and our future.
At our urging, in 2019, Canadian Heritage began providing funding for National Acadian Day, as a pilot project under the celebration and commemoration program. The funding was not renewed in budget 2023. This financial assistance supported community activities highlighting Acadia right across the country, including in Quebec and as far as the Northwest Territories. More than 200 community celebrations have been held since 2019. In 2022, a total of 67 communities throughout the country received funding. Thanks to this support, small communities and predominantly English-speaking communities that could not afford to celebrate National Acadian Day previously were able to do so.
What's more, CBC/Radio‑Canada provides additional funding of approximately $135,000, depending on the year, to pick up and broadcast the official show. Producing a show of this scale for national broadcast by CBC/Radio‑Canada would simply not be possible without the financial support Canadian Heritage provides, which has a leveraging effect when it comes to other backers.
We strongly urge the government to make this funding permanent and include it in the next fall economic statement as well as in budget 2024. To that end, we are calling on Canadian Heritage to recognize funding for National Acadian Day as part of the celebrate Canada program.
Second, I want to talk about funding for Acadia's international mission.
For more than 60 years, SNA has been active on the international stage, working to bring together members of the Acadian community all over the world and securing a place in international bodies. Those include the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, which we have been part of since 2005, as an international non-governmental organization, and UNESCO, where we have been present since 2021.
We have extensive international experience. Take, for instance, our bilateral agreement with France, which every jurisdiction in the country has renewed since the 1960s. It's worth noting that this is the only bilateral agreement the French government has with a stakeholder that is not another government. We also have bilateral agreements with Belgium and the Wallonia-Brussels community, and a relationship with Louisiana Cajuns. Wherever it may be, we exemplify a people without a state who have a strong civil society, pioneers in community governance, youth leadership and identity-building, and a community with excellent tools for sharing its experience and know-how with the world.
The work we do and the tools we have developed to promote our culture and artists, and encourage francophone immigration and mobility among our youth are unmatched in the country. Nevertheless, the federal government fails to recognize our work and provide resources to support it. We had hoped that the government would duly recognize our civil diplomacy efforts in the new action plan for official languages, but we were sorely disappointed.
That is why we are here today, reiterating how important it is for the government to recognize the unique nature of the Acadian people and include funding in budget 2024 so that the voice of the Acadian people, SNA, can carry out its international work. We are calling on Canada to develop a civil diplomacy strategy that recognizes the Acadian community's unique nature and expertise in this arena. Targeted investments to showcase Acadian artists on the world stage and to support the international mobility of our youth would be transformational, in our view.
Third, I would like to address the issue of funding for Acadian organizations, so I will conclude by talking about all the organizations that, like the SNA, are dedicated to the development of our Acadia.
Dramatic increases in the cost of living and inflation have put a strain on our already modest budgets. This situation, which affects all sectors of our society, makes our work increasingly difficult and has a negative impact on our employees and volunteers, who are constantly being asked to do more. We are therefore asking for an increase in core funding for our organizations to correct this imbalance.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your attention. I hope you will see that this is about recognizing the Acadian people, but also about the fact that the initiatives we are putting in place are beneficial to Canada as a whole, to its values and its own actions.