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Mary Simon will officially become first Indigenous governor general on July 26

Mary Simon will officially become first Indigenous governor general on July 26

Prominent Inuk leader and former diplomat Mary Simon will officially become Canada’s first Indigenous governor general in a ceremony on July 26.

The Department of Canadian Heritage announced the ceremony on Tuesday, one week after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Simon — who speaks English and Inuktitut, but not French — will take over the role as the Queen’s representative in Canada.

Simon has said she was denied the chance to learn French while in a federal day school, but plans to learn it on the job and conduct the business of the office in both official languages.

READ MORE: New Governor General Mary Simon can’t speak French. Not all of Canada is pleased

Simon, whose Inuk name is Ningiukudluk, is a prominent Indigenous leader who was formerly the Canadian ambassador to Denmark and who played a leading role in the creation of the Arctic Council.

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She is an Officer of the Order of Canada and has been honoured over the last several decades with the National Aboriginal Achievement Award, the Gold Order of the Canadian Geographic Society and the Governor General’s Northern Award. As well, she has been inducted into the International Women’s Hall of Fame and is a fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographic Society, among other honours.

Simon is also the former president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the national Inuit organization.

READ MORE: Mary Simon, Indigenous leader, will be Canada’s next governor general

Until she is sworn in, Simon is referred to as the governor general designate.

Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Richard Wagner has been acting in the role of administrator — which can fulfil the duties of the office as needed —  since former governor general Julie Payette resigned in disgrace in January following a probe into allegations of workplace bullying.

Le Conseil des écoles publiques de l’Est de l’Ontario — Ontario’s public French school board — decided last month to remove Payette’s name from the Ottawa-area elementary school that had borne it since 2017 over concerns about how the allegations against Payette might reflect on the school.




© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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