Edmonton Journal

Former Nunavut premier calls Simon a `gentle soul'

- EMMA TRANTER

Sitting with her four-yearold daughter on her lap, Crystal Martin-lepenskie had tears in her eyes as she watched Mary Simon become Canada's 30th Governor General.

Simon, an Inuk born in northern Quebec, took her oaths Monday morning at a ceremony in Ottawa. She is the first Indigenous and Inuk person in the role.

“I feel like this is true reconcilia­tion, witnessing an Inuk who was born and raised traditiona­lly, who experience­d colonizati­on, but who has also been very active throughout her career ... I couldn't believe I was witnessing that,” Martin-lepenskie said in an interview.

Martin-lepenskie, originally from Sanirajak, Nunavut, and a former National Inuit Youth Council president, watched the ceremony from her home in Ontario.

“It proves that though every power was made to deplete our people, our culture and traditions, we remained resilient,” she said.

Martin-lepenskie said she believes Simon's appointmen­t is only one step toward healing and reconcilia­tion for Inuit and other Indigenous people in Canada.

“Seeing Indigenous peoples in these types of roles, I think is really the way to create change that is inclusive and diverse to our country,” she said. “How are we going to make changes if we're not in those types of roles?” But others question the timing of Simon's appointmen­t and what progress, if any, it will bring for Indigenous people in Canada.

In a Facebook post shared with The Canadian Press, Napatsi Folger, who is from Iqaluit, said although she celebrates Indigenous people succeeding and doesn't doubt Simon is a good choice, her appointmen­t comes at a difficult time.

“This move feels so much like posturing and like a disingenuo­us move to distract us from the important feelings of anger we still need to focus on,” she wrote.

Folger said she believes Canada is not doing enough for Indigenous people, citing the federal government's promises on things like clean drinking water, health care and justice.

“How dare you try to pull the wool over our eyes using our own people as tokens of light while doing nothing to help manage the ongoing crises in our actual communitie­s,” she wrote.

Paul Quassa, a former Nunavut premier and now the territory's Speaker of the legislativ­e assembly, negotiated the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement alongside Simon in the 1980s.

“As I watched this morning, I thought of all the Inuit that worked with her. All her community members, all the Inuit who have survived for thousands of years,” he said in an interview.

Quassa described Simon as a skilled negotiator.

“She has a very gentle soul.” He said he hopes Simon's appointmen­t will be an opportunit­y for Canadians to learn about the first languages of Indigenous people throughout the country, including Simon's and Quassa's mother tongue of Inuktitut.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Former governor general Michaëlle Jean, right, speaks with new Governor General Mary Simon in Iqaluit, Nunavut, in 2009.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Former governor general Michaëlle Jean, right, speaks with new Governor General Mary Simon in Iqaluit, Nunavut, in 2009.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada