Businessman Mitch Garber calls for end of ‘two solitudes’ dividing Quebecers
Montreal businessman Mitch Garber called for Quebec’s francophone and anglophone communities to expand their horizons and put an end to the “two solitudes” that has divided them for nearly 40 years.
“The refusal of some members of my Jewish and anglophone community to learn and live in French is embarrassing,” he said in a bilingual speech Monday to the Canadian Club of Montreal.
The Cirque du Soleil chairman and CEO of Caesars Acquisition Company also said that francophone Quebecers shouldn’t only limit themselves to speaking the language of Moliere.
Garber, 52, said former premier Rene Levesque was correct to make French the predominant language of Quebec. But that doesn’t mean that francophones shouldn’t also learn the language of Shakespeare.


