Answer to Question 1
a
Answer to Question 2
Assimilation and domination have been the plight of most minority groups. The French speaking people of the province of Quebecthe Qubcois, as they are knownrepresent a contrasting case. Since the mid-1960s, they have reasserted their identity and captured the attention of the entire nation.
Quebec accounts for about one-fourth of the nation's population and wealth. Reflecting its early settlement by the French, fully 95 percent of the province's population claims to speak French compared with only 13 percent in the nation as a whole.
The Qubcois have sought to put French Canadian culture on an equal footing with English Canadian culture in the country as a whole and to dominate in the province. At the very least, this effort has been seen as an irritant outside Quebec and has been viewed with great concern by the English-speaking minority in Quebec.
In the 1960s, the Qubcois expressed the feeling that bilingual status was not enough. Even to have French recognized as one of two official languages in a nation dominated by the English-speaking population gave the Qubcois second-class status in their view. With some leaders threatening to break completely with Canada and make Quebec an independent nation, Canada made French the official language of the province and the only acceptable language for commercial signs and public transactions.
In 1995, the people of Quebec were given a referendum that they would vote on alone: whether they wanted to separate from Canada and form a new nation. In a very close vote, 50.5 percent of the voters indicated a preference to remain united with Canada. The vote was particularly striking, given the confusion over how separation would be accomplished and its significance economically. Many French-speaking residents now seem to accept the steps that have been taken, but a minority still seeks full control of financial and political policies.
Answer to Question 3
b