Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Charcoal Gray Panel Curtains

The registered office of the quiet revolution? Letter from René Lévesque

u Click on the picture to see

First, three quotations to emphasize the importance of the organization sitting at 3405 Saint-Denis in Montreal:

"What we have called the Quiet Revolution is a datable event. That does not mean that it occurred spontaneously. He had been prepared subterranean . A huge job was done thinking during the decade 1950. Think of the newspaper Le Devoir ; of trade union action Gerard Picard and Jean Marchand; in Cite Libre at the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs "
-Text by Jean-Paul Desbiens (Brother Doe) in the Duty of September 5, 2006

" First Radio-Canada was actually the hub of the network of Quebec intellectuals who used to disseminate critical thinking and unconventional. Subsidiary components of this network were Le Devoir Cite Libre the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs and the CTCC . "
Andre Laurendeau and the destiny of a people, Montreal : Québec / Amérique, Publisher, 1983

" In the fifties, three movements are combined to form the real opposition to the Duplessis regime: the Total Refusal, Cite Libre and the Canadian Institute of Business Public . (...) This is the counterpart of the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs and is in the progeny of the Institute of Democratic Senator Bouchard . [note antimasonic: FM notorious Emancipation] It is supported by the bulk of intellectuals, trade unionists, all Liberals, in short all those who oppose Duplessis. "
-Marcel Rioux, Between Utopia and the reason Montreal: New Optical Publishing, 1981


The top image comes from Lovell of Montreal for the year 1963 for the 3405 Saint-Denis Montreal.
Link. pdf document
http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/lovell/

One clearly sees that the journal Cité Libre de Pierre Elliot Trudeau was published in the same building belonging to the family of the future Liberal Senator Jacques Hébert. This building also housed the League of Human Rights, founded by Trudeau, Hebert, Rene Levesque, Jean-Charles Harvey and Masonic leader JZ Leo Patenaude. This place was also used for all organizations founded by Freemason GODF JZ Leo Patenaude. Such as The Canadian Institute of Public Affairs who played a key role in preparing the quiet revolution. While Day Publishing will publish the works of the greatest writers of the era Quebec. For example: Yves Theriault, Victor-Lévy Beaulieu and Marie-Claire Blais. In short, all these agencies who met at 3405 Saint-Denis have profoundly influenced the course of the "Quiet Revolution" in Quebec.
This building was probably also the seat office of the Grand Orient de France in Quebec at the time ...

Background: In 1963, JZ Leon Patenaude was initiated at the lodge "Polar Star" in Paris (source: the book "JZ Leon Patenaude and history," La Sarre, 1993).
On May 7, 1985 Liberal Senator Jacques Hebert received a medal at the Masonic Lodge Montcalm Montreal (at the same time the Prime Minister Rene Levesque).
Link .

The Civic Action League was the party of Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau, from 1951 to 1957.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligue_d% 27action_civique
Jean Drapeau had received his Masonic medal during the official visit of Grand Master Jean-Pierre Prouteau at the hotel de Ville in Montreal in February 1975.

The Canadian Institute of Public Affairs
Pierre Elliot Trudeau gave a lecture in 1954:
http://archives.radio-canada.ca/politique/langue_culture/clips/12901/

Five years before The Insolences Doe's brother Pierre Dansereau, the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs calls into question the educational system of French Canadians (then controlled by the clergy).
http://archives.radio-canada.ca/emissions/342/

subsequent addresses of the League of Human Rights (LDH):

In 1963, League of Human Rights: 3405 St-Denis.
In 1968/69, the Secular Movement in French Language (MLF) and LDH shared the same address: the 8517 St. Laurent in Montreal until 1970/71.
1971-1972, 3411 Saint-Denis.
1972/73, 409 Sherbrooke East.
1974/75, 300 Square Saint-Louis.
1977/78, 3836 Saint-Hubert (roommate amnesty international 78/79)

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