Cape Breton Post

Immigrants plead with politician­s to calm rhetoric over language

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Along Montreal’s Saint-Laurent Boulevard are rows of greystone and red-bricked buildings dating from the early 20th century, many of which used to house businesses owned by first-generation Jewish immigrants who didn’t speak French very well.

Steve Schreter’s clothing store — opened by a relative in 1928 — is one of the few from that time period remaining on the city’s famous strip.

Schreter and his family, particular­ly the youngest among them, can all speak French, Quebec’s only official language.

“People’s education was disrupted by WW2,” said Schreter, whose father, a Jew from Romania, moved to Montreal in 1948 and eventually bought the store 10 years later from his first cousin, Joseph.

“They weren’t educated — in that sense. They had street smarts, they had entreprene­urial skills. They managed to learn French well enough to do their business.

“But, they probably could never have passed a (French) test.”

A French-language test, however, is what newcomers to the province will have to pass if they want to remain in Quebec, according to a controvers­ial election promise by the party leading opinion polls.

Francois Legault says his Coalition Avenir Quebec, if elected

Oct. 1, will reduce annual immigratio­n by 20 per cent and expel newcomers who fail a Frenchlang­uage exam after three years in the province.

Legault is armed with a series of statistics he says reveal how the “integratio­n” of immigrants in Quebec has been a “failure” under the Liberals.

If Quebec’s official language isn’t protected from the threat of non-francophon­e immigratio­n, Legault says he worries “our grandchild­ren won’t speak French.”

But the Schreter family, along with leaders of many of Quebec’s prominent immigrant communitie­s, are urging Legault to be patient.

First-generation immigrants might not speak French well, but their children will, they say — because their experience proves it.

Moreover, these communitie­s are asking how many

of their members would be around today if their grandparen­ts had to pass a French exam when they arrived following the Second World War.

“I would not be here,” said Antonio Sciascia, 71, if his parents — who came to Canada from Italy with him in 1958 — had to pass a French test to stay in the country.

The head of the Quebec branch of the National Congress of Italian-Canadians said in an interview his parents never really learned the language — but he certainly did, as did his siblings and his five children.

“(This policy) is an insult to immigrants,” said Sciascia, a commercial lawyer.

“We have proven how integrated our community has become.

“We built this country — literally. The major buildings you see today, the roads, it was Italian builders.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Steve Schreter poses outside his clothing store in Montreal recently.
CP PHOTO Steve Schreter poses outside his clothing store in Montreal recently.

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