
Group’s plans to re-enact de Gaulle’s ‘Quebec libre’ speech thwarted by city
MONTREAL — Charles de Gaulle may have made history when he shouted “Vive le Quebec libre” from the balcony of Montreal’s city hall in 1967, but 50 years later the city doesn’t seem keen on re-creating the iconic moment, a sovereigntist group said Wednesday.
The Societe Saint-Jean-Baptiste said it had wanted to re-enact the former French president’s famous speech in its original location on July 24, but its request for access to the balcony was denied.
Former Quebec premier Bernard Landry, an honorary president of the group, said de Gaulle’s call for a free Quebec was important not only for the nationalist movement but for the province as a whole.
Before the speech, “a large part of humanity had never heard of Quebec, nor of the Quebec question,” Landry told a news conference to announce details of events marking the July 24 anniversary.