North America Waiter fired for being too rude says he was 'just being French' Close 1/1 The case signals that a grumpy garçon is a cherished French national trait, not a sign of unprofessional conduct. Stock Image Gallery 1 The case signals that a grumpy garçon is a cherished French national trait, not a sign of unprofessional conduct. Stock Image

A waiter fired for being "aggressive, rude and disrespectful" has insisted there was nothing wrong with his manner - he was just being "French".

Deserved or not, France's reputation for producing surly waiters who eye customers with suspicion, indeed disdain, is known the world over.

Now one waiter has taken that reputation to another level by appearing to claim that a grumpy "garçon" is a cherished French national trait, not a sign of unprofessional conduct.

Guillaume Rey, who worked at a Vancouver restaurant on Canada's Pacific coast, filed a complaint with British Columbia's Human Rights Tribunal against his former ­employer, saying he is the victim of ­"discrimination against my culture".

The restaurant, operated by Cara Operations, accused Mr Rey of breaching its code of ­conduct; it argued that he persisted in unacceptably rude behaviour despite verbal and written performance reviews and that it had no option but to fire him.

However, Mr Rey said his employer was being culturally colour blind as the French approach just "tends to be more direct and expressive".

Au contraire, his "direct, honest and professional personality" was, he insisted, drummed into him at French hospitality school and he was simply ­following its guidelines.

Grumpiness aside, both parties agreed Mr Rey was good at his job.

The restaurant and its parent company had attempted to brush off the discrimination complaint but tribunal member Devyn Cousineau denied that request, meaning it will receive a yet unscheduled hearing.

"Mr Rey will have to explain what it is about his French heritage that would result in behaviour that people misinterpret as a violation of workplace standards of acceptable conduct," she wrote in her decision.

So aware are French authorities of the country's reputation for rudeness, in 2015 the tourist board launched a multi-million-euro drive to improve their "difficult relationship with service and by extension our relation to others".

In 2013, the Paris Tourist Board distributed a "politeness manual" for service industry workers.

Three years earlier, the city paid "smile ambassadors" to be friendly to tourists at the city's main attractions - to little avail.

Irish Independent