Again, I hope you guys don't think I'm crazy for adding these things.
I teach at this francophone university. I'm an anglophone by birth, and I'm a firm believer that we all have something to contribute.
I teach at the Université de Saint-Boniface in the faculté d'éducation. I teach all the courses linked to diversity, cultural diversity, and to aboriginal perspectives. I am not aboriginal; if you look at me, you'll see that I'm pretty white-bread. Nonetheless, I believe that as anglophones we all have something to contribute as allies within a bilingual country.
Certainly, like Ray and Chris, I love to bring people into my class, because we need.... For example, in my aboriginal perspectives class, I bring in aboriginals and we do a sweat and all sorts of things, because I think that.... Also, some of my students are from Togo. They don't speak English, so you think of what you have to do to bridge the gap. Because all the courses are done all the time in French, it means we have a translator there who's doing translation for my students. Rather than just looking at things as a challenge, you look at what solutions you can find to do this in French too.
Another thing is—again, hopefully you won't think I'm crazy—sometimes I think about what if people were colours, like such-and-such a personality is a vibrant orange, or red, or maybe beige, and I say, “Ah, imagine...”. One of the things that makes us vibrant as a nation is that I think we're this vibrant palette of different colours, and lively, and I fear, in the monotone of unilingualism, of becoming beige.