An Act to promote the French language in Québec

Bill 63, more formally known as the Loi pour promouvoir la langue française au Québec (or "Law to promote the French language in Quebec"), was a language law passed in 1969 in the Canadian province of Quebec. The law was passed by the Union Nationale government of Jean-Jacques Bertrand because of controversy and violence that erupted when the Catholic school board of Saint Leonard, Quebec insisted that children of mostly Italian immigrants be required to go to French schools.[1] Section 2 of the Bill made available for all residents of Quebec the option of an English-language education for anyone desiring it for the children in their care. This right has popularly become known as "freedom of choice."

The law promoted French by:

The law was passed before the resulting Gendron Commission was set up to make recommendations addressing Quebec's language issue. It fell short of the expectations of many citizens (among them many Quebec Nationalists) promoting that French become the common public language of all Quebec residents. The main criticism of the law was that it kept in place the existing educational system, under which all Quebec residents could send their children to schools whose language of instruction was either French or English. Opposition to the law led to the coalition Mouvement Québec français.

In 1974, under the Liberal government of Robert Bourassa, the act was superseded by Bill 22.

Notes

  1. Hudon, R. (2007). "Bill 63". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2007-03-03.
  2. Government of Quebec (1969). "An Act to promote the French language in Quebec" (PDF). Office québécois de la langue française. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-10-25. Retrieved 2007-03-03.

See also

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