Please complete your profile to unlock commenting and other important features.

Please select your date of birth for special perks on your birthday. Your username will be your unique profile link and will be publicly used in comments.
MTL Blog Pro

This is a Pro feature.

Time to level up your local game with MTL Blog Pro.

Pro

$5/month

$40/year

  • Everything in the Free plan
  • Ad-free reading and browsing
  • Unlimited access to all content including AI summaries
  • Directly support our local and national reporting and become a Patron
  • Cancel anytime.

history

In Montreal, summer means more than just fun in the sun. It's a season that brings people together — something many Montrealers have been missing over the past year.

There's no doubt summer 2021 is particularly special. With restrictions easing for the first time in months, the spirit of celebration is in the air, and people are ready to make this season one for the history books.

Is there any better way to kick off summer in this city than with Saint-Jean-Baptiste? As a celebration of Quebec's heritage and history, it’s one of the province's favourite holidays and with good reason. From bonfires and barbecues to fireworks and fêtes, St-Jean is when Montreal truly comes alive.

Keep readingShow less

As the world gradually begins to reopen, you might be itching to head out on an adventure. Thankfully, Québec City's lively culture, vibrant history and many attractions make it one of the province's most sought-after staycation spots this summer. 

Just a stone's throw away from Montreal, Québec City and its European charm might make you feel like you're on a different continent — minus the travel, expense and crowds. And this summer, the city promises to be better than ever with a season-long lineup of outdoor activities, new urban developments and more.

Keep readingShow less

The Montreal restaurant that went viral for its brutally honest menu is officially going down in food history. Cuisine AuntDai's hilarious menu will be archived at the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library at Harvard University.

It will join the Schlesinger Library's collection of historical menus so it can be used as an artifact for food history buffs and researchers — meaning a little piece of Montreal culture has found a new home at Harvard. 

Keep readingShow less

From great outdoor activities, to newly approved indoor activities, to some important educational activities, there are many things to do in Montreal to not just keep you busy, but keep you smiling all the way until Monday.

Maybe even keep you smiling on Monday, too...

Keep readingShow less

In honour of Black History Month, Montreal's Samuel de Champlain Bridge will be alight in red, green, and yellow lights from sunset to 1 a.m. until February 7.

The bridge was first lit up for Black History Month on Monday night in what was an impressive display. 

Keep readingShow less

If there's one good thing to come out of 2020's mostly indoor lifestyle, it's that the world is finally hopping aboard the K-drama train.

With cliffhangers in nearly every episode, swoon-worthy romance scenes, intense plot twists, and a promise of at least one love traingle (or square) per show, Korean dramas make for some of the most addictive viewing on Netflix. And don't even get us started on the scenery. 

Keep readingShow less

The Quebec government's Groupe d'action contre le racisme just released its new report entitled, "Racism in Québec: Zero Tolerance." Outlining 25 action items that the group recommends towards the fight against racism and discrimination, it breaks down the needs and urgency of the lack of resources and accountability in the system.

Many have been quick to point out that the report is missing one key term in the discussion on racism: systemic.

Keep readingShow less

Montreal is a city that's rich in history and influences that make the city what it is today. But Rito Joseph's* Black history tours of the city ask: which history have we really been taught?

Joseph is a born-and-raised Montrealer and self-proclaimed "history-lover" who offers Black history tours of the city to fill in a gap that he thinks is missing from history class.

Keep readingShow less

The next time you’re in Little Italy, make sure to head down avenue Henri-Julien to the Church of the Madonna della Difesa. Enter this Catholic place of worship and look up. There — surrounded by angels, saints, and henchmen — you’ll see a fresco of the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini in this Montreal church.

The fresco was painted by artist Guido Nincheri in 1931, a time when fascism was gaining in popularity in Montreal and around the world among some segments of the population.

Keep readingShow less

All too often we hear people use the term "Biodome" and "Biosphere" interchangeably, unaware that the two are entirely different buildings. But they are, and the latter has actually played a pretty large part of Montreal's more recent history, even if most people don't realize it.

With a story rooted in Expo 67, and intrinsically tied to America (of all things), the Biosphere has a history that's more dynamic than most people think. Having survived major fires, ice storms, and several closures and re-openings, the Biosphere has seen its fair share of hardships.

Keep readingShow less

Every city has an underside, and Montreal's tends to be a fair bit larger than other cities. Crime has been an integral part to the city's history, and anyone who says otherwise simply doesn't know about Montreal's longstanding legacy with organized crime.

Montreal was once a key piece of real estate for the major crime families of North America, being a major port for drug trafficking, and was run by the factions housed in the city. Organized crime has changed and evolved over the years, and to get a grasp on the impact of mobsters in Montreal, check ten of the most notorious in the history of Montreal below.

Keep readingShow less