Oh yeah. They have their strict language & thought police to protect their heritage & language. Fortunately by the time they started all that weirdness, I already knew plenty of people in both cities, so they were helpful.
But even back then. I remember getting ready for my first trip ever to work up there & asking my boss if it would be better the change my American money to Canadian at a bank here or up there. I remember in Toronto every establishment had their own varying rip-off exchange rate, so I would change my money before I got there. He said not to exchange it at all so I'm not mistaken as a Canadian who can't speak French. He said as soon as they see American dollars, they'll be real friendly, & then some will even speak English.
Apparently they feel every Canadian visiting a predominantly French area should know & speak French. But those cities, esp. Quebec city, are tourist towns. Their economy depends on it a lot. So they're overly friendly & welcoming to Europeans & Americans but many of them will treat their own countrymen like crap just because they're not fluent in French. I was also lucky because I was working on the organ in a Cathedral that was also an national icon, & continental icon. It turns out the organ company & the work we were going to do up there was in their local paper weeks before we got there.
A couple weeks after I got up there our company was on their local news about it again. But I was on my way back home so missed it. They interviewed my boss. I didn't know the company, & even me was mentioned on the news until my next trip up. He kind of exaggerated about me, the rest of the crew, & even himself to make the company look good. He touched on the truth but made us sound much better & bigger than we actually were.
He made me sound like his star worker & some kind of genius. He said to the news I was the son of Polish immigrants, & a student in music, science, electronics, & that everyone in my family was a musician. Yeah, my brothers, sister, & myself could play an instrument, but it wasn't paying the bills so we all had day jobs. I took music, piano, & even clarinet lessons, but was not a music student. My father was from Poland, but was already a USA citizen who fought in WWII in the USA army, long before he met my mom. My mom was Irish/German. Her & her parents were born here.
So when I got back up to Quebec, suddenly I was this amazing Polish musician, scientist kid, & electronics wizard (in my early 20s) working on the Cathedral for this cool French company & artist! Wow was that guy a good bullshitter.
I was basically just a young laborer stuck in a strange town where I knew nobody, & couldn't speak the language burping beer on my day off in a Pub because of lack of anything better to do. When I go back 2 weeks later, I'm this mysterious European music, science, & electronics genius burping beer on my day off in a Pub.