The
poster in the Montreal metro car with the headline “Juste pour toi,” caught my
eye as we headed northeast of the city to Pie–IX, the stop that would take us to
the Botanical Gardens. Below the slogan
was a graphic design of the skyline of the city including a mosque, a
cathedral, and high-rise buildings. On looking closer I saw that it was an
advertisement for Bell Canada, a telecommunications and media company
headquartered in Montreal. The
juxtaposed mosque and cathedral in the poster caught my attention. “Just for
you” is an example of the Canadian message of inclusivity that pervades
television commercials, radio, billboards, and public service notices. The message
is that Canadians live and work for the betterment and the good of all –
promoting a nationalistic pride in all things Canadian. I was struck by the contrast to the
divisiveness and hate rhetoric in the media that seems to pervade the US at the
moment.
Vacationing
last week in Montreal in a rented downtown high rise apartment came from a
desire to go back to a city we had visited often and loved when we owned our
house in Vermont. A weekend in
multicultural Montreal, usually in the winter, was an annual event we planned
for every year. A mere 3-hour drive
from Rochester, Vt., we could be in this sophisticated French city where we indulged
in shopping, ate in ethnic restaurants, caught up on foreign films, and took in
whatever exhibits were at the Musee de Beaux Arts. It was like going to France and being in Europe without the
long journey to get there. Returning there after a 10-year absence triggered many
memories.
Chihuly at the the Beaux Arts Museum
“ Oh look,” Art said, “isn’t that the expensive downtown
Sheraton we stayed at that time we brought Hayden and Megan with us after
Christmas? How did we afford a room
there, I wonder?” Or I suddenly
remembered, “Isn’t this the neighborhood where we stayed in that upscale B
& B one February and we had a jacuzzi in our room? Remember?” Or,
“There’s La Baie where we bought those wine glasses we are still using.” Or,
“Remember the time we had Hayden with us when he was home from Serbia and he
bought out the men’s department at Simons while we stood like clothes trees?”
As we walked the
downtown I looked for familiar landmarks – our favorite Indian restaurant, The
Taj; Simons where I bought all my winter sweaters which I couldn’t bear to
throw away for years; The Forum, a renovated hockey rink, where we went to see
2 or 3 movies in a weekend; and Cora, the place we’d order a hearty breakfast
on cold winter mornings. They are
all still there! The Beaux Arts
has doubled in size and now has an underground passage to the big church across
Sherbrooke St. that is part of the museum. We walked to Notre Dame Cathedral in
the Old City and had the time to go to an afternoon concert in the choir loft where
we were thrilled by the grandiose sound of the French organ. Despite the
familiar landmarks, I felt different being in Montreal this time.
Notre Dame Cathedral
The first
afternoon we arrived, we walked towards downtown and encountered the longest
Gay Pride parade we had ever seen on Rue Rene Levesque. Led by Justin Trudeau,
the Prime Minister, it appeared that all of Montreal lined the downtown streets
on an overcast Sunday afternoon
cheering and waving at the decorative floats, gay and transvestites dressed in
sparkly costumes, holding banners with messages (“Say No To Faith Based Hate Groups”…)
moving along to catchy rhythms. There were few police around and no anti-gay
demonstrations. The following
morning the Globe and Mail carried Trudeau’s smiling photo and a caption that
lauded the PM for being the first to attend such an event but reminding people
“more concrete action is needed”.
An editorial in
the the Montreal Gazette last Friday titled “Everyday Racism” called upon the tolerant people of Canada
to band together to sponsor Syrian Refugees “to atone for past wrongs” which is
a reference to the long held racism against indigenous peoples. In the same issue the Gazette had an article
calling for the people of Quebec not to fall into the French “Burkini Ban”
which they said has “no place in Quebec, no place in Canada.” As an American it was hard for me not
to be drawn into the aura of inclusivity that seems so pervasive in Canada.
“Did you notice
any security checks at the Beaux Arts Museum or even Notre Dame Cathedral? I
commented to Art.
“None”, he
replied. “But did you see how all
their police are out during rush hours controlling traffic lights to move cars
along? I haven’t seen them
anywhere else.”
It seemed that
life in Montreal is how life used to be in the world before terrorism, the
Iraq War and the extreme political divisiveness. We noticed the high number of Muslim women in headscarves
and African immigrants who seemed to be accepted and assimilated into Canadian
society. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police came out this week to say they would
not take issue with women in the force wanting to wear the hijab.
Remembering our many
trips to Montreal, continued all week but returning after ten years, I was reminded
that we, too, have changed. We are
retired, older, and have moved South to Asheville away from the northeast
winters. This time I looked beyond the ethnic meals, the new movies we see all
the time where we live, and the shopping which isn’t important any longer. What I saw was a very multicultural
French city that is working hard to promote inclusivity. That seemed hopeful and is what I chose
to take away with me on this visit.
Montreal Botanical Gardens











I liked this post Mom. Its nice that you have built up a lot of memories in that city and that a lot of familiar places still remain the same. The political climate and inclusiveness does sound good. We are so beaten down after this current election cycle i could see how Montreal was such a breadth of fresh air.
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