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At a French improv tournament, students criticize Doug Ford's cutbacks in services
Jaella Bernstien ° CBC Nevvs ° Posted: (Dec 07, 2018 4:00 AM ET
Last Updated: 2 hours ago
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Regional high school teams compete for (laughs in a French -language improv tournament in
Plantagenet, Ont. (Jessica IRuulbinger/CIBC)
In Prescott -Russell county, about 500 kilometres east of Queen's Park, signs of
Franco-Ontarian pride colour the countryside. In most towns, the Ontario flag is
flown next to its green -and -white Franco-Ontarian counterpart, decorated with both
the fleur-de-lis and trillium.
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12/7/2018 We have fewer rights': Franco-Ontarian youth protest by living proudly 1 CBC News
This is the riding of Amanda Simard, who left her own party in protest of Premier
Doug Ford's cuts to French services.
And while the government has made attempts at concessions since then, it's done
little to quell the fury among these French-speaking communities.
• Ontario francophones give Doug Ford a French lesson
This week, teens from across the region travelled to compete against their peers at
an improv tournament, hosted by a French high school in Plantagenet, Ont.
It's light-hearted fun — an opportunity for like-minded kids to enjoy jokes and quick
wit in their first language.
The competition is friendly, but the event is also coloured by protest.
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Franco•-Ontariian students have donned green -and -white felt cutouts, piinned to theiir shirts in
protest over the provincial government's cuts to French -language serviices, (CBC)
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12/7/2018 We have fewer rights': Franco-Ontarian youth protest by living proudly 1 CBC News
"What they've just cut — the commissioner's office, French -language services — it's
really a huge cut that will make an enormous difference," said Daphnie Bazinet, a
Grade 11 student from Cornwall, Ont.
Among Ontario's approximately 14 million people, there are nearly 500,000 whose
first language is French. About 40,000 of them are unilingual francophones.
C C I'd like to go to a French university,
because that's my identity. > >
Yanick Ranger, Grade 11 student
Many of the students, including Bazinet, have pinned green -and -white felt cutouts to
their shirts to represent the Franco-Ontarian flag.
She's seen some English speakers roll their eyes at all the outrage, but she said they
don't understand her reality.
"They're not informed. They don't know that because we're a minority, we have fewer
rights than them," she said, speaking with CBC News in French after one of
her improv matches.
"Personally, when I go somewhere like a restaurant or a store I always ask for service
in French. It's important, because if we don't ask for it, we won't have it." She
said Ontario anglophones "don't need to ask, so they don't understand."
Among the province's controversial measures is axing plans for a French -language
University in Toronto. It has a direct impact on the futures of many of the students
attending the tournament.
Yanick Ranger, a Grade 11 student from Casselman, Ont., said he was thinking about
applying there.
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"I'd like to go to a French university, because that's my identity. I understand better in
French, a lot better than anything else," he said.
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Referee Olivier Nadon expllaills a call to Yaniclk Ranger, a Grade 11 student from Cassellran, Onto
(jessca Rubiinger/CBC)
While the University of Ottawa is bilingual, some students say they had hoped to
finally have a university to call their own.
At the University of Ottawa, "it's not the same," said Mathieu Bissonnette. "The
environment itself, it's more English. Like if you went to the cafeteria it would be
more English than French."
Improv referee Olivier Nadon said improv is one of the few extracurricular activities
that encourages Franco-Ontarian kids to embrace their culture and language.
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"We're surrounded by anglophones. English is cool. English is the language of
Hollywood ... Sometimes French can be viewed as slightly less cool, but that's not the
case in the improv ring."
Nadon is also a founding member of Ottawa French improv troupe Improteine.
His group responded in their own way to the cuts, by participating in "la resistance"
with a politicalvideo that's sprinkled with tongue-in-cheek remarks like: "French
university programs in Toronto are like the jokes in this video: There aren't a lot!"
Watch lmproteine's video (in French):
Nadon said he finds the best way to send a message is often with a sense of humour,
especially when you're trying to connect with youth.
C C Deciding to exist in French, to live in
French ... to do all your things in French, is
political in itself. > >
Olivier Nadon, founding member of improteine
"When you feel threatened, you've kind of got to laugh about it," he said. "If not,
you're going to be crying."
Nadon said just existing as a Franco-Ontarian is a form of protest, these days.
"Deciding to exist in French, to live in French, to get up in the morning, to buy your
coffee in French, to do all your things in French, is political in itself."
It's how many of the students have chosen to respond to the government's
measures. They all know the stories of how their parents and grandparents fought
for the rights they enjoy today, in a majority English-speaking province.
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• Activists remember the battle to save Montfort Hospital
Bazinet said her high school, Ecole secondaire catholique La Citadelle, exists only
because her grandfather and others fought for it in the 1970s.
"He's the one who really showed me how to be a proud francophone," Bazinet said.
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Mathieu IBiissonnette its from Cornwall, Cent., a majority IEnglhsh•-speaking town. He says it's
important to speak French as much as aossiiblle, even when doing something siillnplle Mille ordering
a coffee. (Jessica IRubiinger/CIBC)
Felix Saint-Denis is a Franco-Ontarian activist and the man behind L'echo d'un
peuple, a huge outdoor show about French history and culture in North America.
He said if there's a silver lining in all of this, it's that it's taught the next generation to
never take their rights for granted.
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"They understand more what their parents and grandparents fought for in the past,
and now it is their turn. As we say in French — on passe le flambeau (we're passing
the torch)."
Saint-Denis said it's time for Franco-Ontarian youth to raise their voices and make
their presence known.
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For Franco•-Ontarilan teens, iImprov ils one of the few extracurrilcullar activiltiles that trully embraces
th&r (language and culture.. (CBC)
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