Soiree of Wednesday --August 2, 1995
--the 700 anniversary of these consecutive soirees.
The special guest for the occasion was his "Honor the Mayor of Montreal --Monsieur Pierre Bourque".
Before I give a short account of the evening, I would like to write a few words on Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson. Diana and David as known to their friends and guests. Please See Sam Totah's special intro to this 700th
Monsieur Le Maire: Pierre Bourque
What can one talk about when the Mayor of the most important city in the Province of Quebec, is present. Of course, one talks and talks and talks about Montreal and the joy of living here and of course the problems associated with any big city...and the special problems associated with 'Montreal' (small 'm'). While all Montrealers cannot be Westmounters, all Westmounters are of necessity Montrealers!
The guests talked about Montreal and the greater Montreal --i.e. the surrounding neighborhood. The mayor was not on the stand --in fact he shared many of the concerns expressed by the citizens --be they real Montrealers, or Westmounters, or from other neighboring parts of the Metropolitan Greater Montreal. Of course --no one could claim more knowledge of the city than the Mayor himself --having been a city employee for some 30 years before he retired. A politician termed the stand taken by the mayor vis-à-vis the city administration and work/labor force as "courageous".
Many people shared their joys of living or residing in Montreal --whatever the case might be. For many guests Montreal is "pied a terre" and they continuously travel around the globe to come back and renew their energy.
The love of the mountain comes first. Then comes the safety of the streets --despite the fact that Montreal is divided like a cartel among combating gangs! If not for them --we hear a lot about the dissidence among the natives. Problems we have. Equally we share the joy of many events specially during summer: the Jazz festival, the beer festival, the ethnic festival, the movie festival...and on and on and on. Montrealers do attend if the event is called "festival" --otherwise they go to and sit in the multitude of cafes along St. Denis, St. Lawrence, Crescent and most recently Sherbrooke street west. In fact Montreal could boost itself as the only city in the globe where the number of lawyers per capita would soon equal the number of cafes!
Back to the Mayor and the soiree.
The host David Nicholson expressed in very eloquent terms his appreciation to Mr. Pierre Bourque and the fact that the Mayor of Montreal had chosen such an important anniversary as the occasion of his first Wednesday Night. Mayor of Westmount Peter Trent gave a warm and charming introduction of the Mayor Pierre Bourque.
The head table included an international investment advisor, a prominent professor and labor lawyer, the English community spokesperson in City Hall, the Mayor of Westmont and other distinguished and prominent guests. In summary, the guests included individuals who live in various areas of Greater Montreal. Among this diversity the Mayor made a very valid point. Montreal is known for its parts rather for its whole. In other words, Montreal lives amongst the diversity of its mini suburbs: Cote St. Luc, Westmont, Outremont, the North end, the East end, the Black community, the ethnic community, the rich, the less rich, the homeless, and the real estate owners ....and on and on. Mayor Bourque vision is to bring the diversities together so that they can work "ensemble" harmoniously for the good of the metropolis they share. Bonne Chance.
Guests came out of this evening with great empathy for the Mayor's vision and understanding of the problems he faces.
More problems vs. pleasure: Union vs. non-union enterprises. The schools and the education standards. The homeless and the literacy rate. The municipal government vs. the provincial government and their respective clouts to bring "real" change. The taxes vs. the services rendered.
Then, the miracle video arrived on the scene. Mr. John Ciaccia playing piano and singing too! That scene brought back the whole group to the pleasure of life...music, singing, friends, joy in the air, arts, color, wine, women, men too, and on and on and on.
The moral of the story: politicians are humans too and they share and
participate like all of us --in the joys and problems of life. No more. No
less. Politicians become known for their legacy in instituting life-long
values to the population they serve. Mayor Bourque is in that class of a
humanitarian.
by Sam Totah
List of Wednesday Nights past By Herb Bercovitz By Sam Totah
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Respectfully submitted on behalf of the Wednesday Nighters of Aug 3 1995
S. Totah
Email:
Sam Totah at bulmer@mersi.com
or to the Nicholsons
Tel. 514-933-3712 Fax. 514-933-9914
© 1996 David T. Nicholson
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33 Rosemount Ave
Westmount Que H3Y 3G6
Canada
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