Updates from September, 2025 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 16:59 on 2025-09-01 Permalink | Reply  

    La Presse published an op‑ed Monday from the Catholic archbishop of Montreal saying the impending ban on public prayer violates fundamental freedoms.

    But I notice two telling flaws here. One, both the CTV article and the La Presse article identify Christian Lepine as the archbishop of Montreal. Neither one specify that he’s a Roman Catholic prelate. We have other denominations here too, but in Quebec, default is always going to be Catholic.

    The other is more subtle. Lepine starts his article “La prière, dans sa forme la plus simple, est un élan intérieur.” That may be true of most Christians. But it isn’t so true of Muslims, whose basic practice of five prayers a day involves washing, physical gestures and prostrations. A Christian can, I suppose, commune with the deity inside their head without any prep, but a Muslim has a more external practice by its nature. The archbishop should be aware of that.

     
    • Joey 17:38 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      I’m Jewish, so this is a sincere question – aren’t Catholics supposed to pray at mass, ie at a gathering officiated by priests? I’m sure Muslims can mumble prayers to themselves too, but don’t both religions effectively demand communal prayer?

    • Blork 17:40 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      I’m not an expert, but I don’t think the Muslim practice of ritualized prayer five times a day in any way excludes the “inner impulse” to pray on-the-fly or as the need or feeling arises. In the same way that Catholics going to mass every Sunday (or every day in some really strict communities) excludes ad-hoc prayers when the feeling moves them.

    • Kate 19:37 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      Joey, Catholics are supposed to go to mass on Sundays or, in recent years, permissibly on Saturday afternoons instead. Either way, they’re supposed to go weekly and on a few other special days in the calendar, Christmas being the most obvious example.

      Mass is defined as a very specific set of readings and ritual, some of which varies throughout the year, but is fundamentally grouped around the magic bit where the priest turns bread and wine into Jesus. Only an ordained priest can do this and it has to be a man, no women allowed.

      Catholics have various gestures they have to make communally as well – genuflecting, crossing themselves, giving the handshake of peace at one point during the service, taking the communion host and so on.

      Blork, my point isn’t that there isn’t the option of the “inner impulse” but that, in different ways, for Muslims and Catholics, a certain amount of external gesturing is also included in the basic practice.

      It’s just so Québécois to feel that crossing yourself or genuflecting and all the standing and sitting and kneeling at various points in the mass are “normal” while making Salah is alien and invasive. Even while almost nobody in Quebec goes to mass any more anyway.

  • Kate 08:54 on 2025-09-01 Permalink | Reply  

    Spotted this featurette on the five oldest houses on the island of Montreal.

     
    • PatrickC 12:02 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      Maybe I don’t have the right blocker, but there are so many pop-ups on that site that I gave up reading the article.

    • MarcG 12:31 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

    • Nicholas 13:32 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      Interesting how their entire snippet on the Hurtubise house never mentions the city it is actually in (says Montreal repeatedly).

    • Kate 20:31 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      Sorry, PatrickC. I happened on that page with my browser that’s got ad blockers on it. Normally I only blog with Safari and no blockers, so I can see what’s there.

      Nicholas is correct, but discreet. The Hurtubise house is in Westmount.

      If anything, I thought the pink house was in Westmount as well, but it’s a short block and a bit on the NDG side.

      Speaking of things on Côte St‑Antoine, here’s an item from 1684 which isn’t a house but is mildly interesting.

    • Alex L 10:16 on 2025-09-02 Permalink

      I have to say that article is a bit sketchy. It doesn’t include older houses like the Leber-Lemoyne house, built in 1669-1671. It doesn’t talk about the Old Seminary in the old Montreal, built 1683-1685, or the towers of the Fort de la Montagne, built around 1685, yet it includes the Pointe-aux-Trembles windmill, which isn’t a house and was built decades later.

    • Nicholas 12:12 on 2025-09-02 Permalink

      Kate, thanks for the stone marker story. I feel like I remember seeing that plexiglass at some point, but never paid it any mind. I’ll have to check it out. And the pink house, a former toll house on Cote Saint Antoine, is in that part of NDG that’s called Westmount adjacent by real estate agents, and was almost annexed by Westmount, which was originally named the Village, later Town, of Cote Saint Antoine.

      Alex, I agree that article is a bit of a mess.

  • Kate 08:10 on 2025-09-01 Permalink | Reply  

    Concern for the environment has apparently been forgotten in the plans to enlarge Montreal‑Trudeau.

     
    • Nicholas 13:55 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      The best thing Canada could do to reduce emissions in aviation is to hurry up on high speed rail, which would also free up space and reduce the need for expansion as those gates get reallocated elsewhere. But all this expansion is for (non-US) international flights, and that demand is not going anywhere. I could rant about quotes from all sides here, but won’t.

    • Kate 20:35 on 2025-09-01 Permalink

      If you sit on Flightradar 24 for awhile, you’ll see a shocking number of flights to and from Toronto every day. A faster train service might be able to reduce those numbers, although I have the sinking feeling that if we ever do build that dream train, a ticket might well cost more than a cheap flight.

    • Orr 17:39 on 2025-09-02 Permalink

      If the Green Party of Canada could get its act together, instead simply being a copy-paste of NDP, they are exactly the kind of national profile political voice for promoting the protection of the environment and of defending people’s well being from environmental damage, which includes things like noise pollution from aircraft, not just the more traditional notions of pollution like hazardous chemicals.

  • Kate 08:07 on 2025-09-01 Permalink | Reply  

    Everyone has notes on what’s open and closed Monday.

     
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