Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montreal Protesters March To Protest Racism, Denounce New Government

The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2018 10:10 PM
    MONTREAL — A diverse crowd of protesters took to the streets of Montreal on Sunday to march against racism and denounce the newly-elected Coalition Avenir Quebec government.
     
     
    Muslim families pushing strollers, Indigenous community leaders, masked anti-capitalist activists and members of some 50 community groups marched through the city's downtown in a protest that stretched across several blocks.
     
     
    Many demonstrators carried signs targeting premier-designate Francois Legault, who has promised to cut immigration and submit new Quebecers to a French and values test within three years of arriving.
     
     
    Legault has also said he's ready to use the Constitution's notwithstanding clause to pass legislation banning public servants in positions of authority from wearing religious clothing such as Muslim hijabs, Jewish kippahs and Sikh turbans.
     
     
    Members of Sunday's crowd, which included a large number of women in hijabs, made it clear they weren't among the new premier's supporters.
     
     
    "Not only will I keep my veil, Mr. Legault, I'll put on my cowboy hat to fight for my rights," read one poster.
     
     
    "Stop telling us to take off our clothes," read another that was accompanied by a hand-drawn picture of a woman with her head covered.
     
     
    Jennifer Jerome, a Mi'kmaq woman, said she was there to act as example for all of Quebec's children, including her own four kids.
     
     
    "We are first peoples here, and we shouldn't have any politician discriminate against others that are coming here and creating our diversity — in Montreal especially," she said. 
     
     
    "Quebec wouldn't be anything without immigration."
     
     
    While Legault's party won 74 of Quebec's 125 seats in last week's election, only two of those were on the island of Montreal, which contains 27 ridings.
     
     
    Yazid Mahlah, 18, was one of about a dozen people at the front of the crowd helping to hold up a large black banner denouncing racism and hate.
     
     
    He explained he was there for his mother, who wears a Muslim head covering.
     
     
    "If you take away my mother's veil, basically you take my mother from me," he said. "You take her identity from her."
     
     
    The march occurred hours after a downtown statue of Sir John A. Macdonald was spray-painted red.
     
     
    An anonymous group describing themselves as anti-colonial, anti-capitalist activists claimed responsibility for the damage, which police say occurred Saturday night.
     
     
    The group said in a news release that it wasn't involved in organizing Sunday's demonstration, but wanted to support the event by defacing the statue of Macdonald, whom they described as a white supremacist who contributed to the genocide of Indigenous peoples.
     
     
    In 1883, Macdonald argued in the Commons for the removal of Indigenous children from their "savage'' parents so they could learn the ways of white men.
     
     
    The Montreal statue has been spray-painted on several previous occasions, including this past August.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Widens Investigation In B.C.’s Okanagan After Fatal Ferry Shooting

    RCMP Widens Investigation In B.C.’s Okanagan After Fatal Ferry Shooting
    The RCMP are examining possible links between two violent incidents in British Columbia's Okanagan less than 24 hours before a deadly shooting involving police Tuesday on Vancouver Island.

    RCMP Widens Investigation In B.C.’s Okanagan After Fatal Ferry Shooting

    WATCH: Homeowner's Video Shows Waves Crashing Into New Brunswick Sunroom

    WATCH: Homeowner's Video Shows Waves Crashing Into New Brunswick Sunroom
    Dawn Burke returned to her Grand Lake, N.B., home to grab extra clothes for her kids on Friday night, after days of staying with a nearby friend. She found waves crashing through her sunroom, and shaking the house's foundation.

    WATCH: Homeowner's Video Shows Waves Crashing Into New Brunswick Sunroom

    Tory MP's Comment In The House On Abortion Triggers Scorn Of Liberals, NDP

    A Conservative MP's comment about abortion on Wednesday in the House of Commons triggered a flood of criticism from Liberals and New Democrats.

    Tory MP's Comment In The House On Abortion Triggers Scorn Of Liberals, NDP

    Joins Nova Scotia In Banning 'ethically Problematic' Cat Declawing

    Joins Nova Scotia In Banning 'ethically Problematic' Cat Declawing
    The College of Veterinarians of B.C. says the new standard was implemented Tuesday after it researched other jurisdictions and consulted with provincial vets.

    Joins Nova Scotia In Banning 'ethically Problematic' Cat Declawing

    Placing Live Crabs On Toronto Subway Seats Is A 'Shellfish' Act, TTC Says

    Placing Live Crabs On Toronto Subway Seats Is A 'Shellfish' Act, TTC Says
    A picture posted on Facebook shows live crabs placed on seats on a Toronto subway car.

    Placing Live Crabs On Toronto Subway Seats Is A 'Shellfish' Act, TTC Says

    Viral Videos Make It Harder To Deny Racism: Creator Of #MakeItAwkward Campaign

    The video shows a woman turning to the booth next to hers and yelling at the men to go back to their country. She accuses them of not paying taxes and threatens physical violence several times.

    Viral Videos Make It Harder To Deny Racism: Creator Of #MakeItAwkward Campaign