What I Wish I Had Told My Children

By Michel Bastarache & Antoine Trépanier
Translated by Julie da Silva
Contributions by Antonine Maillet
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Linguistics, Language & Translation Studies, Law & Legal Studies, Law & Society, Political Science, Auto/biography & Memoir
Series: Biography and memoirs
Publisher: Les Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa/University of Ottawa Press
Paperback : 9780776639598, 288 pages, May 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9780776640129, 288 pages, May 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780776640136, 288 pages, May 2023
Hardcover : 9780776640143, 288 pages, May 2023

Table of contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
CHAPTER 1
“Speak White”
CHAPTER 2
The Path
CHAPTER 3
Stand Up
CHAPTER 4
Activist
CHAPTER 5
Dead Ducks
CHAPTER 6
What of Acadia?
CHAPTER 7
Duality, Eh?
CHAPTER 8
The Task Force That Would Change Everything
CHAPTER 9
The Dream
CHAPTER 10
The Battle of Alberta
CHAPTER 11
Salesman, Teacher, Bureaucrat, Lawyer
CHAPTER 12
Assumption
CHAPTER 13
Politics
CHAPTER 14
The New Justice
CHAPTER 15
Globetrotter
CHAPTER 16
A Historic Case
CHAPTER 17
Not in my Court
CHAPTER 18
The Battle Rages On
CHAPTER 19
Farewell to the Court
CHAPTER 20
One Hellish Commission
CHAPTER 21
One Last Fascinating Chapter
CONCLUSION

Description

In this intimate volume, Michel Bastarache reveals details of his youth in Acadia and his multiple professional roles before becoming the first Acadian justice to sit on the Supreme Court of Canada. In a letter addressed to his two children who died from an incurable disease, Me. Bastarache recounts his constant fight for equality between francophone and anglophone communities. He reminisces on his commitment among groups protecting francophones outside Québec, then on his careers as teacher, civil servant, lawyer, and juge.
In this story, Bastarache takes the reader backstage to his most important causes and he reveals some of the secrets of the highest court in Canada. Me. Bastarache weighs in on the controversy surrounding the Inquiry Commission on the process for appointing judges of the Court of Québec, as well as his mediator work for reconciliation and compensation of alleged victims of sexual abuse by ex-priests in New Brunswick.
Available formats: hardcover, trade paperback, accessible PDF, and accessible ePub