Thank you very much, Mr. Paradis.
I will make a short presentation. I'm going to raise three points that I raise every time I have a chance to talk about the status of minority francophone communities, and not just those in Ontario.
First, I would like to talk to you about what it means to be a member of a linguistic minority because that is important to keep in mind. That is probably not the case for everyone here, but it is for some of you.
Second, I would like to talk about the reinforcements we need. We must seize every opportunity to take advantage of supports that are available.
Third, I would like to talk about how rights-holders are vulnerable and some other issues that must be addressed.
Being part of a linguistic minority means making a continuous effort. Those who have experienced it know what I mean. I have an analogy for those who have not experienced it.
Francophone Acadians, Franco-Ontarians and Franco-Manitobans can never rest. They have to keep swimming. They have to make a conscious decision every day to keep making an effort. Swimming requires constant effort and constant movement. No matter what, the desire to preserve our language and culture must be instinctive.
While members of the francophone minority swim, the anglophone majority travels by boat. I'm talking about Ontario, but it's the same everywhere. They live their lives without ever having to make an effort to maintain their language and culture.
Assimilation happens when a francophone stops swimming. He won't die, but he'll get on the boat and start living with the anglophones on board. Once a francophone is on the boat and stops swimming, he forgets how to swim in no time. If he forgets how to swim, he can't teach his kids to swim, and they can't teach theirs. That is when irreparable harm is done and francophones end up being assimilated because those who should be swimming end up on a boat.
Franco-Ontarians, Acadians and Franco-Manitobans must make it a priority to keep swimming. One way to do that is to swim alongside others. Franco-Ontarians swim alongside each other. The more people they're swimming with, the more motivated they are to swim.
Swimmers also need encouragement. They need beacons to show them where to swim. The Montfort is one such beacon. I can go into more detail about that later if people have questions. The Montfort hospital is a lodestar for all swimmers, not just those who will one day require care there. All francophones in minority communities can see that the institutions exists. That buoys them and sends them the most important message there is: it is worth fighting to save our language and culture. That message needs to be broadcast at every possible opportunity.
When we protect and strengthen institutions, we send the linguistic minority the message that their efforts are worthwhile. Constitutionally, a government cannot tell a linguistic minority that its efforts to keep swimming are futile. As I just said, if we stop swimming, irreparable harm is done. We lose a significant share of the linguistic minority that keeps our language and culture alive.
As I said, we need reinforcements. I have good news. Reinforcements arrive every day at the Ottawa airport, the Toronto airport and other airports. Those airplanes are carrying francophones from around the world. Many of them are from Africa, Haiti and other countries that are home to francophones. These people will be the salvation of francophone minorities. They are the best possible soldiers in the war against assimilation.
Upon arriving at the airport, these people should be welcomed as heroes by the linguistic minority, for that is what they are. Most of them are parents who want a better life for their children and believe they can find that here. They want their better life here to be lived in French.
As I said, it is important to welcome them into our communities, our social circles and our families with open arms. We need them. They are the bravest soldiers and they can help us fight the war against assimilation. I have worked with many people from other countries who have come here to join our community, and I can tell you how amazing it is to see them leap from the plane right into the water and start swimming with us. They don't wait. We don't have to convince them. They jump right in and swim with us. They are everywhere. We have to encourage these people, these soldiers, to come together and settle all over the country where we need them to swim alongside our swimmers. Some of our own family members are reluctant to swim. I have two examples relating to rights-holders, francophones in this case.
Some francophone parents enrol their kids in English schools. That is something we have been seeing for decades. In many cases, they do it because of an illusion. They believe that their kids will learn English better and become perfectly bilingual. That is not true. The fact is that young francophones who end up in English schools start assimilating and losing their language and culture. They become anglophone, they stop swimming, and they live out their lives on the boat. Rights-holders who enrol their children in English schools put them on the boat instead of making them swim with the rest of us so they can preserve their language and culture.
My second example involves francophone rights-holders who enrol their children in immersion programs. Immersion schools are one of the best things that has happened to the linguistic minority. They have made an entire generation aware of linguistic minorities. For the past two decades or so, our population has been much more aware and recognizes the importance of having linguistic minorities in every province, of having a language and culture that are not solely anglophone but also francophone. This phenomenon is due in large part to immersion programs. Once these people have that awareness, they spread it to their family members. That is really positive, but the fact is that immersion schools are for anglophones, not francophones. Immersion is a tool that enables anglophones to develop an understanding of the Canadian reality and the francophone reality across Canada. Francophone students should not be enrolled in immersion schools. Kids in immersion live on the boat. Parents who put their kids in immersion school are putting them on the boat.
I would like to raise another important fact that people may not be aware of. Graduates of French-language schools in places like Ontario and New Brunswick who then go on to pursue master's and doctorate degrees at Cambridge or Harvard obviously do that work only in English. Students at those schools are the very best. I can name francophones who have risen to the very top at big universities around the world. Those francophones learned English at French-language schools. Graduates of French-language schools master English just as well as anglophone graduates of English-language schools. It is important to remember that, spread the word, and encourage each other.
Francophone parents, rights-holders, are a huge liability. Kids are not the ones deciding. We have to do everything we can to make sure that francophone parents decide to put their children in the water rather than on the boat so they can swim as their ancestors did for generations. By learning to swim, children can access one of the most amazing experiences: knowing their language and culture.
In conclusion, let me say that it's now or never. As someone said to me this morning, the wolf is at the door in Ontario and New Brunswick, and maybe in other provinces too. We cannot back down. Our institutions, such as the Université de l'Ontario français and the role the French Language Services Commissioner should be playing, must be preserved. They are essential.
I would like to read a short excerpt from the decision on the Montfort Hospital. I'm going to read this because people need to understand that the constitutional grounds for saving the Montfort Hospital had nothing to do with its being a hospital. Here is a quote from paragraph 71 of the Court of Appeal for Ontario's decision:
Apart from fulfilling the additional practical function of medical training, Montfort's larger institutional role [or that of the Université de l'Ontario français or the French Language Services Commissioner or any of our institutions] includes maintaining the French language, transmitting Francophone culture, and fostering solidarity in the Franco-Ontarian minority.
That is what an institution is supposed to do.
Every province has institutions like these, and we need to do everything in our power to protect them so we can accomplish our main goal, which is to send the message as often as possible to as many members of the linguistic minority as possible that our constant efforts to preserve our language and culture are worthwhile.
Thank you for this opportunity to speak to you. I'm ready to answer your questions.