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Between 1957 and 1986, thousands of Haitians fled their country and its dictatorship. Among them were a number of intellectuals who had been critical of the Duvalier Regime and who chose to come to Quebec to launch or pursue their careers in French. This is how Jean-Joseph Moisset arrived in Québec City in 1978, where he embarked on a brilliant career as a professor of education at Université Laval.
1975 - 2019

An ever-more diverse population

At the end of the 20th century, migration and population movement increased around the world. Québec City’s cultural landscape rapidly diversified during this time. The city’s quality of life and professional opportunities attracted people from all over. Some endured great difficulty, fleeing authoritarian political regimes in Haiti or Eastern Europe for instance. Others sought refuge from armed conflicts, such as those in Congo, Vietnam and Cambodia. Get a glimpse into the lives of individuals to discover how this sweeping phenomenon of immigration played out on a smaller scale in Québec City!

Jean-Joseph Moisset, bearer of knowledge

Jacques Deschênes Between 1957 and 1986, thousands of Haitians fled their country and its dictatorship. Among them were a number of intellectuals who had been critical of the Duvalier Regime and who chose to come to Quebec to launch or pursue their careers in French. This is how Jean-Joseph Moisset arrived in Québec City in 1978, where he embarked on a brilliant career as a professor of education at Université Laval.
Chronoscope Can you date this photo? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Ville de Québec All rights reserved: Ville de Québec - Le Soleil Fonds - Date: December 80