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District mayor Ralph Mercier stands with a family from El Salvador at their Canadian citizenship ceremony at the town hall in Charlesbourg in 1989. Eleven other immigrants also took part. Pictured here are Aida Margarita Marquez-Cruz, Cesar Antonio Carillo-Salvador and their son Cesar Augusto. After leaving El Salvador, they spent four years in Mexico before arriving in Canada.
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!

A long way from El Salvador

Gilles Lafond District mayor Ralph Mercier stands with a family from El Salvador at their Canadian citizenship ceremony at the town hall in Charlesbourg in 1989. Eleven other immigrants also took part. Pictured here are Aida Margarita Marquez-Cruz, Cesar Antonio Carillo-Salvador and their son Cesar Augusto. After leaving El Salvador, they spent four years in Mexico before arriving in Canada.
Chronoscope Do you have any memories of Mayor Ralph Mercier? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Ville de Québec All rights reserved: Ville de Québec - Le Soleil Fonds - Date: 1989-04-21