Why Now Is The Perfect Time to Wave a Friendly Goodbye to Quebec. Lowell Green
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At the very least now that you have conducted your programs on the matter, tapped into the sentiment outside Quebec and written a book about it, a few Quebecers will begin to understand that we have lost patience, certainly out here in the west. We tried, we gave and gave and gave and received precious little in return. There’s a limit to our patience and at least around here that limit has been reached.
I’ve conducted a little poll out here among friends and family and without exception we all agree with you. Let’s start the process towards a very friendly parting of the ways. No bitterness please; no recriminations. We’ve all shared a very long, sometimes bumpy road together so now that that road is coming to an end, let’s sit down in good faith, both sides and work out an agreement that, while it will never be perfect, at least lets us be good friends after all is said and done.
Other countries around the world have managed to cut the apron strings and are happier now that they have become independent nations. Maybe the same will hold true for Quebec and Canada.
We’ll still be living side by side. We’ll still need to trade with each other, but as you said more than once on your program, maybe, just like some of us who have divorced, maybe we can be better friends after the divorce than we ever were before. A sweet dream, I know. There will be problems, but we’re a good people we Canadians, we can work it out. But you are right, it is kind of sad. Could the great experiment of two languages, two cultures have worked out? We will never know.
Shirley Westover. Surrey, BC
~ • ~
I don’t doubt for a moment that there still a kind of wistful affection percolating amidst our two solitudes, I detect that sentiment in much of the correspondence, but as with a middle aged couple that has been bitterly feuding for decades the passion, the ability to wound, even to disappoint is gone. In relationships such as those, scant attention is paid to anything that is said or done. A document may claim they are still married, but in reality each goes their own separate way, living semi-independent lives, bound together only by economics, apathy and inertia. If they were still hurting each other they would consider divorce, but why bother?
Fact is, if they did bother to get a divorce there’s a good chance they might become, if not lovers again, at least friends. Who among us doesn’t know at least one couple that will readily admit that they are better friends today, after the divorce, than they ever were when married? It works that way with some nations as well. The Republic of Ireland springs immediately to mind, but there are other, perhaps even better examples of where a national breakup has ended centuries of animosity, feuding and fighting and made way to good solid friendships.
For example, Scotland and England.
CHAPTER FIVE
HISTORY TELLS US QUEBEC SEPARATION IS INEVITABLE
On June 23rd and 24th, 1314, an army of Scots under Robert de Bruce defeated a much larger English force led by King Edward II at the battle of Bannockburn in central Scotland.
It was here that Sir Henry de Bohun galloped ahead of the advancing English army to challenge the Scots King Robert de Bruce to single combat, one of the most historic events in the almost thousand year war for Scottish independence.
According to The Scottish National Archives records:
“Robert de Bruce rode forward to meet de Bohun who was fully armoured with lance and shield and rode a heavy destrier horse. De Bruce had a much smaller horse and was armed only with a sword and short axe. De Bohun rode at de Bruce with lance couched. De Bruce evaded de Bohun’s lance point and as the English knight thundered past he struck a deadly blow to his head with his axe.”
De Bohun fell dead demoralizing the English troops who were subsequently slaughtered as they fled.
King Edward managed to escape.
For the Scots it remains to this day the most famous of all the countless battles fought over the centuries for Scottish independence.
What the Scots would sooner forget is what happened about 200 years after the Battle of Bannockburn.
On September 9, 1513 an army of about 20,000 men led by King James IV of Scotland invaded England in response to several provocations including warrants issued by Catherine of Aragon, the Regent in England, to seize all the property of Scotsmen in England.
The Scottish army was met by the English commanded by the Earl of Surrey at what is today know as the Battle of Flodden, or Flodden Field.
It was a terrible disaster for the Scots. King James was killed in battle along with many of the most important noblemen of the day. Total Scottish losses were about 12,000 killed. The English lost 1,500 men killed.
It was the largest battle ever fought between the two kingdoms. Historians describe it as the last great medieval battle in the British Isles. And the last battle on the British Isles during which a monarch was killed.
The battlefield still looks today much as is probably did at the time of the battle. but the burn and marsh that badly hampered the Scots’ advance is now drained. A monument, erected in 1910 is easily reached from Branston Village by following the road past St. Paul’s Church. There is a small car park and a clearly marked and signposted trail with interpretive boards making it easy to visualize the battle.
Each year, the neighbouring Scottish town of Coldstream marks the Battle of Flodden by a traditional horse-ride to the battlefield and then a church service to mark all those men who perished during the fight. This is held during the first week of August.
Since 2008 plans have been underway to mark the Quincentennial of the battle on or before the 9th of September 2013.
It was not until May 1, 1707 that the blood being shed between England and Scotland ended when England, Ireland and Scotland joined together to form the Parliament of Great Britain. At which point, of course the bloodshed began between England and Ireland but that’s another chapter.
What’s important to understand is that while the Scottish war of independence left the battlefields in 1707, the dream of independence, in Scotland just as in Quebec remains very much alive for many.
Humiliation draws a long bow. Scotland has Flodden Field— Quebec the Plains of Abraham!
And just as in Quebec, Scotland has elected a separatist party to power. The Scottish National Party (SNP) lead by Alex Salmon won an unprecedented majority in 2011 and has announced that a separation referendum will be held on September 18, 2014. The question will be “Should Scotland be an independent country?”
Will Scotland be able to win what a thousand years of battles could not? A safe and secure independent nation? Only time will tell of course but just as with Quebec what is happening in Scotland is a powerful reminder that for a proud people, dreams of independence never die!
One of the really amazing things about the movement for Scottish independence is, unlike the situation involving Quebec, there is no issue of language in the British Isles. Since the 17th century the predominant