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https://lequotidien.lu/actualites/fa...a-montpellier/Holder of a bachelor's degree, working in human resources, Fatiha remembers the "great social mix" she experienced during her schooling: today, at 29, she fights so that her two children have the same "chance" in their working-class neighborhood of Montpellier.
This radiant and willing inhabitant of the Petit-Bard/Pergola neighborhood highlights the collective adventure represented by the fight launched in 2015 by a collective of this neighborhood for "social diversity and equal opportunity.
https://www.rtl.fr/actu/debats-socie...oux-7778599062These four schools bring together about 600 children, all of Moroccan origin, just like the population of Petit Bard (...) How do you expect them to feel French when they grow up exclusively among themselves? We would like to see little blonds or redheads sitting next to them in the class photos," Said Safia, one of the people involved in this fight
I experienced the same thing tbh except that there was some belgian students in Latin/Greek options while I was in Science. Economy options were only composed of North Africans and overall the school was mostly composed of moroccans (many teachers were also moroccan btw). In both Belgium and France, if you want to be mostly surrounded by locals you would have to move to the countryside, big cities are mostly inhabited by foreigners.
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