Excellent. Thank you.
I also want to thank you for reminding us about the effort that francophones in minority communities have to make. I myself am a Quebecker, but every day, as you said, they have to swim—sometimes upstream, it seems—and those of us who enjoy the relative ease of living in Quebec forget that, for our minority compatriots, institutions are important.
As you know, we are conducting a special study of what happened in Ontario. Of course we believe that federal and provincial governments have a duty to promote institutions. That is the crisis we have been going through in recent weeks.
You were a key player on the Montfort file. Can this kind of thing trigger a positive reaction in the community, a kind of electric shock? It all started with Denise Bombardier on Tout le monde en parle, who said that there was no hope outside Quebec. That is what she said, but it was practically a shot across the bow.
This morning you talked about taking responsibility. We agree that governments have a role to play, and we stand with Franco-Ontarians on this. However, you were there for the Montfort saga. Do you think recent events will bring out a sense of pride in young people and maybe a sense of responsibility?
Do you think this has mobilized people? This morning I was reading the press clippings, and there has been phenomenal mobilization, and not just in Ontario. There were demonstrations in Quebec and other places in Canada too.
Would you comment on that Mr. Caza?