Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Quebec's 1970 October Crisis
Episode Date: March 28, 2023Canada has a reputation for being a rather low-key, friendly place. For the most part, this is true. It is a nice place to visit and is never usually that controversial. However, that hasn’t alw...ays been the case. Fifty years ago, Canadians faced the threat of extremism and terrorism, and it almost broke the country apart. Learn more about Quebec’s October Crisis of 1970 on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Canada has a reputation for being a rather low-key friendly place.
For the most part, this is true.
It's a nice place to visit, and it's not usually in the middle of any sort of turmoil.
However, that hasn't always been the case.
Fifty years ago, Canadians faced a threat of extremism and terrorism,
and it almost did irreparable damage to the country.
Learn more about Quebec's October crisis of 1970,
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Do you ever climb into bed ready to sleep,
only to have your mind start racing the moment your head hits the pillow?
thoughts bouncing around, replaying the day or jumping ahead to tomorrow?
That is exactly why Catherine Nikolai created Nothing Much Happens.
Each episode is a gentle, cozy bedtime story where, well, nothing much happens.
No drama, no tension, nothing you need to follow closely.
Just soft narration, calming repetition, and soothing sensory details designed to help your mind slow down and your body relax.
It's not about entertainment, it's about rest.
And millions of listeners around the world use it every night to quiet their thoughts
and finally fall asleep.
If you've ever struggled to shut your brain off at night,
this might be exactly what you've been missing.
You can listen to Nothing Much Happens wherever you get your podcasts.
Episodes are every Monday and Thursday.
For those of you not familiar with the history,
I should first give a background on how Quebec ended up where it did
in the autumn of 1970.
As I mentioned in previous episodes, Canada was once exclusively French.
The land was known as New France,
and it was largely populated with settlers from France.
However, the British started moving in, came into conflict with the French, and defeated them in 1759 at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in Quebec City.
The British now found themselves ruling over a people with a totally different language, legal system, and religion.
The British were going to have a very difficult time controlling Quebec if they tried to force their customs and language on the French settlers.
If you remember back to my episode on Why Didn't Canada join the American Revolution, the solution the British adopted was the Quebec Act of 1770.
This basically gave Quebec autonomy to run things their own way.
They could keep their language, religion, and legal system, although they would still nominally
be ruled by the British.
This actually appeased most of the Quebecois.
They were left largely alone, which is why they didn't join the Americans in revolting.
However, as Canada grew, it mostly grew from British settlers.
Whereas Canada was originally almost totally French, as it grew, it became dominated by
English speakers.
French speakers went from a majority.
to a minority centered solely around the St. Lawrence River in Quebec.
Fast forward to the 20th century, and anger in Quebec started to rise.
The economic conditions Quebec were worse than the rest of Canada.
Many leaders and intellectuals in Quebec believed that the cause of their woes was due to
the Anglophone dominance of Canada, and that the solution was to cut ties with Canada
and for Quebec to become an independent country.
Quebec independence was an idea that had lingered in the Quebeccois consciousness ever since
the battle at the plains of Abraham. However, the Quebec independence movement didn't really start
growing in earnest until the early 1960s. It went from an idea to something people began actively
pursuing. The cause of Quebec independence was boosted when French President Charles de Gaulle
visited Montreal in 1967 and said from the Montreal City Hall, quote,
Vive Montreal, Vive Le Quebec, Vive Le Quebec, Libra. Or, long live Montreal, long live Quebec,
and long live a free Quebec.
I suppose his advocacy of splitting up Canada was his way of saying thanks to one of the
countries which helped liberate France during the Second World War.
By the time of the events of this episode took place in 1970, there were now several Quebec
separatist groups that had become quite radicalized.
The group which is relevant to this story was the Front de Liberation de Quebec or FLQ.
The FLQ was a separatist guerrilla group.
Like many extremist groups of that era, they were Marxists.
and advocated violence to achieve their goals, and they were heavily influenced by communist
revolutions in Cuba and Angola. Between 1963 and 1970, they committed over 160 violent acts,
which resulted in the deaths of eight people, with dozens of others injured. These attacks resulted
in the FLQ being declared a terrorist group by the Canadian government. Bombings took place at
Canadian defense facilities, banks, the home of the mayor of Montreal, McGill University,
department stores, bookstores, and even residential neighborhoods. Perhaps their most notable attack
prior to the events of this episode took place on February 13, 1969, when they detonated a bomb in
the Montreal Stock Exchange during trading hours. The events which became known as the October
crisis began on October 5th, 1970. Several members of the Liberation Cell of the FLQ dressed as delivery
men to trick their way into the home of British diplomat James Cross. Once inside, they produced
firearms and kidnapped him at gunpoint. Later that day, they sent a list of demands, which
included the release of 23 FLQ members from prison, which they considered to be political prisoners,
$500,000, safe passage to Cuba, and for the CBC to broadcast the FLQ manifesto. Their deadline was
October 9th. The demands were the same as those from a failed kidnapping attempt of the U.S.
consul back in June. The next day, October 6th, the Federal Minister for External Affairs,
Fares Mitchell Sharp called the FLQ demands to be wholly unreasonable. Canadian Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau, who was himself from Quebec, announced that any decisions would be made jointly
between the federal and provincial governments. On October 7th, there were police raids in Quebec
that resulted in the arrest of 30 people, and several radio stations were sent messages,
indicating that James Cross would be killed if their demands weren't met. On October 8th,
the CBC honored one of the demands and broadcast the FLQ manifesto on,
all French and English media outlets in Quebec. On October 9th, the FLQ extended its deadline to
October 10th at 6 p.m. And if their demands weren't met, they would once again kill Cross.
On October 10th, events escalated. At 5.40 p.m., 20 minutes before the deadline,
Quebec Justice Minister Jerome Chouquet announced that if Cross were delivered alive,
members of the liberation cell would be a loud passage to Cuba, but no other demands would be
honored.
moments after the deadline passed, another FLQ cell known as the Cheigny cell
abducted the Quebec Minister of Labor, Pierre Laporte, who was playing ball in his front yard
with his nephew.
The abduction of a second government official was a major escalation.
Moreover, the Shinyee cell took a much harder line than the liberation cell did.
On October 11th, politicians all over Quebec started to panic and began to demand protection.
The Shinye cell announced that Laporte would be executed by 10 p.m.
unless all the demands were met and released proof that he was alive, but then later gave him a stay of execution.
On October 12th, the Liberation Cell issued a message contradicting the Chigny cell,
saying that if just 23 prisoners were released, they would release their captive.
Troops of the Royal 22nd Regiment were the first to be sent to Montreal.
So far, this has been a normal kidnapping drama, if there's such a thing, although perhaps with higher political stakes.
But on October 13th, Prime Minister Trudeau was asked by the press about the increased military presence in Quebec.
He replied, quote,
Yes, well, there are a lot of bleeding hearts around who just don't like to see people with helmets and guns.
All I can say is go on and bleed.
But it's more important to keep law and order in society than to be worried about weak need people.
End quote.
And when he was asked how far he would go, he responded, well, just watch me.
The same day, Robert de Me, a senior official within the Quebec Liberal Party,
began negotiating with FLQ lawyer Robert Lemieux, who was now representing both cells.
On the 14th, negotiations continued with the FLQ, and in Ottawa, the federal parliament began
debating the implementation of the War Measures Act.
The War Measures Act dates back to the early days of the First World War.
It gave the Canadian government broad powers to maintain security and order.
During World War I and World War II, the act was used to suspend the civil liberties of suspected
enemy aliens. On the 15th of October, a thousand federal troops were sent to Montreal.
Quebec Premier Robert Burrassa and Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau requested even more federal troops
be sent. Tanks were stationed outside of the Parliament building in Ottawa. On October 16th,
at 3.30 in the morning, the federal government escalated things further by invoking the War Measures Act.
time in Canadian history that it's been invoked during a time of peace. Under the War Measures
Act, the FLQ was outlawed and all members were declared criminals. This was not done without protest.
Opposition Party members in Parliament objected, liking it to the use of a sledgehammer to crack a peanut.
Within 48 hours of the invocation of the Act, over 250 people were arrested in Quebec. This included
people who were known members of the FLQ, as well as people who simply offered public sympathy with them.
On the evening of October 17th at 10.50 p.m., the body of Pierre Laporte was found in the trunk of a car near the Saint-Hubert Airport.
It was determined that Laporte had been strangled.
With the death of Pierre Laporte and the invocation of the War Measures Act, arrest warrants for murder were issued for the members of the Chigny cell.
On October 20th, the funeral of Pierre Laport was held, and by this time, 1,628 raids had been conducted under the auspices of the War Measures Act.
On October 25th, it became obvious just how much the actions of the FLQ had backfired on them.
Municipal elections were held in Montreal, and the incumbent mayor, Jean-Drepoe, and his party won a whopping 92% of the vote.
James Cross, however, was still being held captive.
Arrests continued to be made throughout November, and a reward was issued of $150,000, leading to the arrest of the kidnappers.
On December 1st, the War Measures Act was replaced by another act, quote,
to provide temporary emergency powers for the preservation of public order in Canada.
Finally, on December 3rd, James Cross was released in exchange for the safe passage of liberation
cell members to Cuba. Cross had lost weight, but otherwise was unharmed.
The last military troops left Quebec on January 4, 1971, and the emergency measures were
finally rescinded on April 30th. The aftermath of the October crisis has reverberated for years
in Canadian politics. While most Canadians initially supported Trudeau's invocation of the War
Measures Act, there were many concerns about its impact on civil liberties. There were over
100 people improperly detained who were later given $30,000 each in compensation. It also mostly
put an end to attempts to achieve independence through violence. Separatists in Quebec put their
efforts behind separation through political means. The result was referendums for independence of both
1980 and 1995.
The first referendum failed with 60% voting no, and the 1995 referendum failed with 51% voting no.
Efforts then shifted to political parties that supported independence, such as the
party Quebeccois and the bloc Quebec.
While Quebec separatism is still alive and well, it doesn't seem to be the issue it was
even 25 years ago.
Current polling shows support for independence only at 36%, with only 26% supporting it in the 18-24-year-old
demographic. In 2020, on the 50th anniversary of the October crisis, the leader of the
Block Quebec party in the federal parliament introduced legislation for a formal apology for invoking
the War Measures Act. And believe it or not, no one in Canada has yet formally said
they're sorry. The October crisis was one of the seminal events in the history of Canada.
And echoes of what happened in October 1970 in Quebec can still be seen in Canada today.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
This is just a quick reminder that episode 1,000 is coming up soon.
If you'd like to have your message included in the show,
you can leave a short audio message at speakpipe.com slash everything everywhere.
You can leave one of your favorite episodes, a story about where or how you listen to the show,
or something else.
I'll be closing this in a few days as I'm going to be moving this weekend.
I also have links to the page in the show notes as well as in the Facebook group.
