The Niagara Falls Review

Warm welcome expected for Mary Simon in Nunavik

- SARAH RITCHIE

The usual excitement over the end of the school year in Nunavik is reaching a new level, as hundreds of students get ready to present special projects to the country’s first Indigenous governor general.

Mary Simon’s tour of the Nunavik region of northern Quebec this week marks the first time she’s been on an official visit to the area where she grew up since she was appointed to the viceregal office in July 2021.

The five-day trip is scheduled to include visits to four schools as well as youth groups, highlighti­ng one of the priorities Simon has set while in office of promoting education and physical and mental health for youth.

Students and teachers have been preparing arts projects and anticipati­ng the visit for more than a month.

“The fact that students will be able to interact with her in their own first language is something very special,” said Jade Duchesneau Bernier, the communicat­ions coordinato­r for Kativik Ilisarnili­riniq, the school board of Nunavik.

While Simon’s inability to speak French has been controvers­ial — sparking hundreds of complaints and an investigat­ion by the official languages watchdog — her fluency in Inuktitut is an asset for this particular tour.

“It’s very rare that we have government officials who know what the North is about, who the Inuit are, what their culture is, what their language is,” Duchesneau Bernier said.

Simon’s visit to the northernmo­st part of the province comes just days after she met with Quebec Premier François Legault, who told reporters she still has “more work to do” to improve her French language skills.

Simon has said she is committed to learning French on the job but was denied the chance to learn the language while attending a federal day school in her youth.

She was born near Kangiqsual­ujjuaq, an Inuit village in Nunavik, in 1947. Her mother Nany May, whose family surname was AngnatukAs­kew, was Inuk and her father, Bob Mardon May, had moved to the Arctic to work for the Hudson’s Bay Co. and stayed.

She and her siblings went to federal day school in Kuujjuaq, then called Fort Chimo. She was homeschool­ed by her father after Grade 6.

Simon, 74, has been a leader in the North for the last four decades. She served as president of Makivik Corp., the Nunavik land-claim body, and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the national Inuit organizati­on.

On her first day in Kuujjuaq, Simon is set to meet representa­tives from Makivik, Kativik Regional Government, Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services and the school board before sitting down with the mayor and council.

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