Everything about The Quiet Revolution totally explained
The
Quiet Revolution (
French:
Révolution tranquille) was the 1960s period of intense change in
Quebec,
Canada, characterized by the rapid and effective
secularization of society, the creation of a
welfare state (
État-providence) and a re-alignment of Quebec's politics into federalist and separatist factions.
The provincial government took over the fields of health care and education, which were in the hands of the Roman Catholic Church. It created ministries of Education and Health, expanded the public service, and made massive investments in the
public education system and provincial infrastructure. The government allowed
unionization of the
civil service. It took measures to increase Québécois control over
the province's economy and nationalized
electricity production and distribution.
Origins
The Quiet Revolution began with the reforms enacted by the
Liberal provincial government of
Jean Lesage which was elected in the July
1960 provincial election. It is generally accepted to have ended before the
October Crisis of 1970, but Quebec's society has continued to change dramatically since then.
Many events are said to have been precursors of the Quiet Revolution. Among them are the
Asbestos miners' strike of 1949, the
Maurice Richard Riot of 1955, the CBC strike of 1958-59, the signing of the
Refus Global by
les Automatistes and the publication of
Les insolences du Frère Untel, which criticized the near absolute dominance of the
Roman Catholic Church in Quebec.
RadioCanada, the newspaper
Le Devoir and political journal
Cité Libre are also credited with being intellectual forums for critics of the Duplessis regime.
The government of Quebec was controlled by the fiercely conservative
Maurice Duplessis, leader of the
Union Nationale. Electoral fraud and corruption were commonplace in Quebec. The Union Nationale had the support of most of the
Roman Catholic Church clergy, which continued to run most of the province's schools and health care system. Parish priests sometimes quoted the Union Nationale slogan
Le ciel est bleu, l'enfer est rouge (Heaven is blue, hell is red — referring to the colours of the
Union Nationale (blue) and the Liberals (red)). The Catholic Church wasn't unanimously with Duplessis. Some Catholic Unions and members of the clergy, including Montreal Archbishop
Joseph Charbonneau, criticised Duplessis but the bulk of the small-town and rural clergy supported the premier.
Because of the small population of Quebec – and Canada as a whole – capital for investment was regularly in short supply. As such, the province's natural resources were mainly developed by foreign investors. As an example, iron ore was explored for and its mining developed by the
U.S.-based
Iron Ore Company of Canada. Until the second half of the 20th century, the majority of Francophone Quebec workers lived below the poverty line and didn't join the executive ranks of the businesses of their own province. Msgr Felix Leclerc described this phenomenon, writing, "Our people are the waterboys of their own country."
In many ways, Duplessis's death in 1959, very soon followed by the sudden death of his successor
Paul Sauvé, served as a trigger for the Quiet Revolution. Within a year of Duplessis's death, the
Liberal party was elected with
Jean Lesage at its head. The Liberals had campaigned under the slogans
Maîtres chez nous (Masters of our own house), a phrase coined by
Le Devoir editor
Andre Laurendeau and
Il faut que ça change (Things have to change).
Secularization
The
Commission Parent was established in 1961 to study the education system and to bring forth recommendations, which eventually led to the adoption of several reforms, the most important of which was secularization of the education system. Although schools maintained their Catholic or Protestant character, in practice they became secular institutions. Other reforms included mandatory school attendance until the age of 16 and free instruction until the 11th grade.
Despite the Union Nationale's return to power in 1966, the reforms continued. In 1967,
CEGEPs were created to offer post-secondary professional public education everywhere in the province. In 1968 the government created the
Université du Québec network to achieve similar goals for university-level education.
With the diminishing role of the Church in society, which coincided with (though wasn't caused by) the reforms of the
Second Vatican Council, the birthrate among Francophones began to drop significantly, with the rate of divorce rising. Proclamations against the use of
birth control by the Church largely went ignored.
Economic reforms
Seeking a mandate for its most daring reform, the nationalisation of the province's electric companies under
Hydro-Québec, the Liberal party called for a new
election in 1962. The Liberal party was returned to power with an increased majority in the
National Assembly of Quebec and within six months,
René Lévesque, Minister of Natural Resources, enacted his plans for
Hydro-Québec.
More public institutions were created to follow through with the desire to increase the province's economic autonomy. The public companies SIDBEC (iron and steel), SOQUEM (mining), REXFOR (forestry) and SOQUIP (petroleum) were created to exploit the province's abundant natural resources. The
Société générale de financement (General financing corporation) was created in 1962 to encourage Quebecers to invest in their economic future and to increase the profitability of small companies. In 1963, in conjunction with the
Canada Pension Plan the government of Canada authorized the province to create its own
Régie des Rentes du Québec (Quebec Pension Plan); universal contributions came into effect in 1966. The
Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec was created in 1965 to manage the considerable revenues generated by the RRQ and to provide the capital necessary for various projects in the public and private sectors.
A new labour code (
Code du Travail) was adopted in 1964. It made unionising much easier and gave public employees the right to strike. It was during the same year that the
Code Civil (Civil Code) was modified to recognise the legal equality of spouses. In case of divorce, the rules for administering the
Divorce Act were retained using Quebec's old
Community property matrimonial regime until 1980, when new legislation brought an automatic equal division of certain basic family assets between spouses.
Nationalism
While visiting Montreal for
Expo 67, General
Charles de Gaulle proclaimed
Vive le Québec libre! in
a speech at Montreal City Hall, which gave the
Quebec independence movement further public credibility. In 1968, the
sovereignist Parti Québécois was created, with
René Lévesque as its leader. A small faction of Marxist separatists began terrorist actions under the name
Front de Liberation du Quebec.
Important figures
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