Dear Alex,
"Je me souviens" is the Quebec motto - and yet they forgot how their province's leadership quickly changed allegiance to the British Crown when the French Revolution burst forth with its terror and anti-Catholicism.
You are correct that "je me souviens" is the new Quebec motto which was adopted by the French separatists when they came to power for the first time in the mid 1970's.
The line however comes from a native French Canadian poem which is very favorable to the British and their monarchy;
I remember (je me souviens) that although I'm born under the fleur-de-lys, I have prospered under the rose. The 'fleur-de-lys' of course was the symbol of the French Royals and the 'Rose' that of the English monarchy. In other words the first line of the poem's opening salvo states (roughly translated); the French (fleur-de-lys) were lousy colonizers and their European Masonic Republican revolution destroyed society and the Catholic church, but under the British (rose), we have been able to grow and prosper here in the new world.
It has always been an inigma to us how this line from a pro-British monarchy poem became the motto for the French separatist cause.
The Crown does not require one to become part of mainstream English society and protects one's rights. Quebec can be the Nation it is under the Crown and be distinct from English Canada.
You are correct, and the former Canadian Governor General (Monarch's representative in Canada) Ray Hnatyshyn delivered his first innauguration speach in Canada's two official languages: English and French, but then stunned the combined houses (Commons and Senate) when he also spoke in Ukrainian

. He wanted to make the point that the monarchy was for all the citizens of the Dominion, not just those of Bristish ancestry.
The flag of English Canada is seen as foreign in Quebec since French Canadians see in it a republican spirit - to make everyone "Canadian" (read: English Canadian).
You are correct again, but this was not always the case. In fact, the symbol of the 'maple leaf' (and the word
Canada ) have their origins in what is now francophone Quebec's St-Laurence Valley area (Southern Quebec). These were in fact very patriotic symbols of the francophone colonists who viewed themselves as a distinct 'nation' in North America. They became particularly strong after the French revolution when the Royals were executed and new symbols of their 'Frenchness' in North America were needed.
Fast forward a couple of generations, and the maple leaf and the very word 'Canada' where usurped to become the name and symbols of ALL Canadians - from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
The French Canadian separatists of course now reject the symbol of the 'maple leaf' as being too Anglo colonial (and/or 'ethnic inclusive') and have instead opted for the 'fleur-de-lys'.
Hritzko