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Quebec history woven into family saga

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  • Quebec history woven into family saga

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    April 30, 2005 Saturday
    Final Edition

    Quebec history woven into family saga: Orphanage at core of story is
    run by Christian Brothers

    by CLAIRE HOLDEN ROTHMAN, Freelance


    Le Silence de Mozart
    By Vania Jimenez
    Quebec Amerique, 379 pages, $24.95

    You'd think that a woman with seven children and a job running
    medical services at one of Montreal's busiest downtown clinics
    wouldn't have time to read novels, let alone write them. You'd be
    wrong.

    Named Quebec Family Doctor of the Year in 1999, Vania Jimenez has
    just published Le Silence de Mozart, a historical novel about the
    Notre Dame de la Misericorde religious order and the orphanage it
    operated from 1924 until 1976, when the Quebec government shut it
    down.

    Although Jimenez displays considerable knowledge about Quebec culture
    and history, she is no Quebecoise de souche. Born in Egypt to parents
    of Armenian descent, she came to Montreal at 18 to study medicine at
    McGill University. She speaks five languages and works in one of
    Montreal's most culturally diverse neighbourhoods.

    Le Silence de Mozart is her second novel. The first, Le Seigneur de
    l'oreille (2003), featured a female doctor working in contemporary
    Montreal. This second one moves deliberately away from autobiography.
    The theme is fathers and sons and all but one of the multiple
    first-person narrators are men.

    The plot has nothing to do with the Austrian composer. Set in Quebec
    in the 1930s and '40s, it traces the life of a working-class man
    named Mozart Menard, whose wife dies, leaving him with two young
    sons. Emotionally and financially depleted, he gives the boys up to
    the Church and eventually they end up at the Huberdeau orphanage, run
    by the Notre Dame de la Misericorde Christian brotherhood. The older
    boy, Guy, takes his vows and changes his name to Frere Laurier. His
    younger brother, Louis, is adopted; contact between the boys is
    broken.

    The novel follows Mozart Menard, his sons and eventually his adult
    grandson, Michel. In a stroke of Dickensian coincidence, Michel,
    whose father Louis never mentioned his childhood prior to adoption,
    ends up spending a night at Huberdeau. There, he meets Frere Laurier
    and forges links with a family he was unaware he had.

    Jimenez's book is a fascinating portrait of Quebec from the 1930s
    onward, focusing on institutions that have recently been the object
    of controversy and scrutiny. Christian brotherhoods once provided
    almost all of the education in this province for boys and young men.
    They also provided care for destitute, orphaned, mentally ill or
    delinquent children. In the 1940s, the period during which much of
    the novel is set, there were more than 13,000 men in such groups.
    Today, according to Jimenez, there are barely 1,200 in Quebec and, at
    an average age of 70, they won't last much longer.

    Two of Jimenez's main characters are likable, aging religious
    brothers who argue that their order played a valuable role in Quebec
    society. One of them offers an account of the Huberdeau Orphanage
    from its founding in 1887 to its closing by the Parti Quebecois 90
    years later. He chronicles the fire that destroyed the place in 1946,
    leaving 400 boys homeless, and reminds readers that Notre Dame de la
    Misericorde, which barely had funds to support its members, housed,
    fed, clothed and schooled destitute children on its own, with almost
    no government help.

    While this history is fascinating, Jimenez fails in the writerly task
    of delivering it in dramatic form. Because most of the book is in
    monologue, she slips frequently into summary, forgetting that scene
    is the lifeblood of fiction. The year 1945, she writes in a
    characteristic passage, "marquera la fin de la guerre. Les hommes
    sont-ils revenus au pays? Les femmes se sont-elles remariees?
    Soudain, il semblera y avoir moins d'enfants malpris au Quebec."

    Characters with little at stake in the Menard family drama narrate
    big chunks of the plot, while potentially dramatic incidents, like
    one involving sexual abuse at Huberdeau, appear only peripherally,
    with characters so minor that the reader has trouble caring much. Le
    Silence de Mozart deals with an intriguing, controversial part of
    Quebec's past. Jimenez hasn't quite managed to bring it to life.

    Claire Holden Rothman is a Montreal writer and translator.
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