Gov. Gen. Mary Simon in the Senate in Ottawa on Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021. Canada's first Indigenous Governor General is making a visit to a number of remote northern Quebec communities, including her own hometown. Mary Simon will make stops next week in Kuujjuaq, Kangiqsualujjuaq, Kangiqsujuaq and Inukjuak.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
Republished May 05, 2022 - 2:49 PM
Original Publication Date May 05, 2022 - 2:11 PM
OTTAWA - Canada's first Indigenous Governor General is making a visit to a number of remote northern Quebec communities, including her own hometown.
Mary Simon will make stops next week in Kuujjuaq, Kangiqsualujjuaq, Kangiqsujuaq and Inukjuak.
The five-day tour of Nunavik includes visits to schools, community gatherings and stops at Kuururjuaq National Park and Pingualuit National Park.
She's also set to meet with local governments, Inuit leaders and elders as she works to promote her office's priorities of education, mental health and Indigenous reconciliation.
Simon is a well-known Inuk leader who was involved in negotiating the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, Canada's first land claims agreement.
She was born at a Hudson’s Bay Co. post near the Nunavik village of Kangiqsualujjuaq in 1947 and has said her appointment to the viceregal office is a step forward in reconciliation.
Simon attended a federal government day school as a child, where she was prevented from speaking her mother tongue, Inuktitut. She was also denied the chance at those schools to learn French, she has said.
Quebec Premier François Legault met with Simon on Thursday. He said it's "not ideal" she doesn't speak French but she is taking lessons and was able to speak a few sentences to him in the language.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 5, 2022.
News from © The Canadian Press, 2022