I found your description of life in a minority community very moving, from beginning to end. I grew up in that setting, I know it well, and I contributed to it.
First of all, I really liked the analogy you used, comparing the fight for linguistic rights to swimming. I noticed that my colleagues around the table, especially those who live in a majority setting, seemed to really appreciate that.
For 15 years now, every time I give a speech, I always say that living in a minority community means going to bed later and getting up earlier. It is necessary for survival, and it fits in well with your swimming analogy, which, I repeat, is very interesting.
I also often say that when times are tough economically, it becomes even more obvious when those in power lack leadership. Here's a good illustration: when there's less water in the lake, the animals around the lake look at each other differently.
That is very, very important.
We could spend hours talking about this, but I'll begin with a quick example.
St. Francis Xavier University has a very good reputation. It was founded on Isle Madame and, from the first year, classes were originally in French. It was moved to Antigonish and is now an English-speaking institution.
Last week marked the 50th anniversary of saving Université Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia, a francophone university that was supposed to be moved to Yarmouth, an English-speaking city. People fought relentlessly to save the university. It remains an outstanding French-language university today.
Of course, as you mentioned, we have the Université de Moncton, which could have been a bilingual university, which is what some people wanted. Thanks to people who never stopped swimming, that didn't happen. This is also extremely important.
Alain Dupuis, from the FCFA, was here a few weeks ago and his comments also really moved me. He said that in Quebec, everything is done to protect institutions. In minority situations, however, it's the institutions that protect minorities. That is very powerful.
This leads me to my questions. As I said, I could talk about this for quite some time.
I have three questions for you, which I will ask one after the other, but you can answer them as you wish.
My colleagues from Quebec might appreciate this. I wonder if you could talk briefly about the people of Quebec City compared to the francophone minority in Ontario.
I wonder if you could also talk a little bit about provincial responsibilities. Once again, the lack of leadership is more obvious when we hear that the federal government can't intervene because this is a provincial jurisdiction. I have a problem with that when it's a question of the two founding nations, as you mentioned.
I have so many questions, but I'll try to stop there.