Marc123
You got it dude!
I concur.
Montreal-Nord, Pie-IX, Quartier Saint-Michel and some corners of Anjou are pretty much the Haitian ghettos.
Some clusters of the city northwest-to-northeast besides the Quartier Arabe as well as about one quarter of the city of Laval (from the island of the same name facing Montreal northward) are pretty much populated by Arabs and North Africans.
Bordeaux-Cartierville, Ahunstic, Saint-Laurent and the residential neighborhoods around the Blv. Saint-Hubert in the center-south are the hot spots for the Congolese, who are the second largest black diaspora here following the Haitians, and other Central African diasporas.
Côte-Des-Neiges is one third polgrom, one third North African ghetto and one third middle upper class white borough with an overall multiethnic commercial layout. Outremont is half Jewish Orthodox polgrom, half white posh borough.
Westmount, the McGill borough and Senneville are pretty much where the English speakers are the most flocked.
La Petite-Bourgogne used to be one of Canada's oldest Afro-Canadian ghettos and a hot spot for jazz music in North America during the Golden Age of Blues and a spot for the Civil Rights in Quebec around the 1960-70s, but most everyone forgot about it. Montreal as well as the Transcanadian railroad has been basically built by these people, but this too has been eclipsed from history books.
The Village Gay holds well its name and Chinatown is more touristic than residential.
But the rest-- I mean the 55,7 percent of the 4 millions of Montrealers, are pretty much but Whites (26,6% French Canadians, about less the same of British Canadians and far-smaller minorities of Irishs and Italians) .
Yea.
I lived in ville Lasalle in the 90s/early 2000s.
Its mostly Italians there.