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Michaëlle Jean

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Michaëlle Jean, CC, CMM, COM, CD [mi•ka•ɛl ʒɑ̃] (born September 6, 1957 in Port-au-Prince, Haïti) is the current Governor General of Canada. Jean was appointed by Queen Elizabeth II, on the recommendation of Prime Minister Paul Martin, to succeed Adrienne Clarkson and become the 27th governor general of Canada since Confederation in 1867.

As the current Governor General of Canada, she is entitled to be styled Her Excellency while in office, and The Right Honourable for life; she will be sworn to the Queen's Privy Council for Canada after her term as the Queen's representative has ended.

An official announcement about the appointment was made on August 4, 2005. Her investiture took place on September 27.

Prior to becoming Governor General, Jean was a journalist and broadcaster on the CBC.

She is the first person of African-Caribbean heritage to serve as Governor General, the third woman, and the second immigrant.

Biography

Jean fled Haïti with her family from dictator François Duvalier's regime in 1968. Her father, with whom she has recently reconciled, was a philosopher who was tortured under Duvalier's regime and separated from the family for 30 years. The Jean family settled at Thetford Mines, Quebec.

Besides French and English, Jean is fluent in Spanish, Italian, and Haïtian Kréyòl and can read Portuguese.

As a student at the University of Montreal, Jean received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Italian and Hispanic languages and literature and, from 1984 until 1986, taught Italian Studies while completing a Master of Arts degree in comparative literature. Jean attended the universities of Florence, Perugia, and the Catholic University of Milan to continue her studies in language and literature.

While attending university, Jean worked at a shelter for battered women from 1979 until 1987. She later helped establish a network of shelters for women and children across Canada. Jean also worked in organizations that helped immigrants to Canada and then later worked for Employment and Immigration Canada (now Human Resources and Skills Development Canada} and at the Conseil des Communautés culturelles du Québec. Jean began writing about the experiences of immigrant women. She held dual citizenship (Canadian and French) as a result of her marriage, but on September 23, 2005, announced her voluntary renunciation of her French citizenship "in light of the responsibilities related to the function of Governor General of Canada and Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces."[link]

Family

Jean married documentary film-maker Jean-Daniel Lafond. They have one daughter, Marie-Eden, adopted from Haïti.

Jean was born in Haïti; Lafond in France, and Marie-Éden in Haïti; making the entire vice-regal family of non-Canadian and non-Commonwealth birth.

Career

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Jean was an award-winning reporter, filmmaker, and broadcaster. She and Lafond have made several films, including the award-winning, Haïti dans tous nos rêves (Haïti in all Our Dreams). In the film, she meets her uncle, the poet and essayist René Depestre, who fled from the Duvalier dictatorship into exile in France and wrote about his dreams for Haïti, to tell him Haïti awaits his return. She has hosted and produced news and documentary programming for television on both the English and French services of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. She was most recently the host of CBC Newsworld's The Passionate Eye and RDI's Grands Reportages, as well as an occasional anchor of Radio-Canada's Le Téléjournal.

Governor General

Announcement

Michaëlle Jean exiting the Canadian Senate with Paul Martin to announce her appointment as Governor General on August 4, 2005.
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Michaëlle Jean exiting the Canadian Senate with Paul Martin to announce her appointment as Governor General on August 4, 2005.

In announcing Jean as his choice to succeed Clarkson, Prime Minister Martin said she "is a woman of talent and achievement. Her personal story is nothing short of extraordinary. And extraordinary is precisely what we seek in a Governor General — who after all must represent all of Canada to all Canadians and to the rest of the world as well." [#endnote_PMO]

Jean is Canada's first black Governor General, the second person without either a political or military background (after Adrienne Clarkson), the second person from a visible minority and (again after Clarkson), foreign-born (like Clarkson and breaking tradition since Vincent Massey's appointment), the second person in an interracial marriage (again after Clarkson), the third woman (after Jeanne Sauvé and Clarkson), the fourth-youngest person (after Lord Lorne (33 years old in 1878), Lord Lansdowne (38 years old in 1883) and Edward Schreyer (43 years old in 1979), and the fourth journalist (after Sauvé, Roméo LeBlanc and Clarkson) to hold the position. She is also the first Governor General to be born during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II.

Former Prime Minister Paul Martin, Marie-Eden Jean and Michaëlle Jean on the day of Michaëlle Jean's appointment as 27th Governor General of Canada.
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Former Prime Minister Paul Martin, Marie-Eden Jean and Michaëlle Jean on the day of Michaëlle Jean's appointment as 27th Governor General of Canada.
As Lafond was born in France and their six-year-old adopted daughter, Marie-Éden, born in Haïti, the entire vice-regal family will be of non-Canadian and non-Commonwealth birth. Ms. Jean had held dual citizenship; she applied to become a French citizen upon marrying her husband who also held Canadian and French citizenship. She renounced her French citizenship, however, on the eve of her appointment to Governor General, in light of the responsibilities of a head of state.[link] [#endnote_French] It will also mark the first time in over 30 years that children have lived in Rideau Hall.
Jean, in her first remarks after the announcement of her impending appointment, said she wanted to reach out to all Canadians, regardless of their background. Jean also made it a goal to reach out especially to Canadian youth and those who feel disadvantaged. [#endnote_CP] Jean also encouraged all Canadians to become involved in community affairs.

On September 6, 2005, Queen Elizabeth II granted an audience to Jean and her family at Balmoral Castle. Though it is standard for a governor general-designate to have an audience of the monarch before assuming office, this meeting was unique in that Madame Jean's young daughter was present, marking the first time in the Queen's reign that a governor general-designate has brought her young child to an audience.

Reaction

Controversy over recommendation

Soon after the announcement of Jean's recommendation for appointment, Prime Minister Martin was asked if the current political climate in Ottawa caused him to recommend she be appointed by the Queen. Martin denied that his was a political move to gain seats in Quebec, where the Liberal Party lost 15 seats in the last election. [#endnote_Martin] Until Jean's appointment, Jeanne Sauvé, who served from 1984 to 1990, was the last governor general to live in Quebec (though Jules Léger, who served from 1974 to 1979, was the last governor general born in Quebec).

On August 11, 2005 The Globe and Mail reported that in a forthcoming article released early by the Quebec sovereigntist publication Le Québécois author René Boulanger stated that Jean and her husband supported Quebec independence. Boulanger also stated that Jean's spouse, Jean-Daniel Lafond, was friendly with former Quebec terrorists. [link]

Boulanger reported that he had often visited Jean's home and that during one of these visits, Lafond told him that Jacques Rose, a former member of the terrorist FLQ, had built a bookshelf for the couple. Rose was a member of the FLQ cell which kidnapped and murdered Quebec Cabinet minister Pierre Laporte. Boulanger admitted that his statement was intended to cause English Canada to reject Michaëlle's candidature as the next Governor General. Following release of the article, Gilles Rhéaume, former president of the St-Jean Baptiste Society called on Jean to reveal how she voted in Quebec's 1995 referendum, which federalists won by a narrow majority. [link] Sovereigntists have a vested interest in causing a strong reaction in English Canada against francophone candidates which would alienate the public in Quebec. They have also been attempting to garner support amongst the francophone immigrant community, and a high profile federal appointment of this sort does not help their case.

Calls from a few members of parliament and by some of the provincial premiers for Jean and her husband to reveal their sympathies were met with a statement from the Prime Minister that the two had undergone a thorough background check by the RCMP and CSIS, standard procedure for appointment to such a high-profile position. [link] The August 17 edition of La Presse contained the information that Jean had appeared in a video documentary toasting "to independence" in a Montreal bar with several hard-line separatists. In the video she made the statement: "Independence can't be given, it must be taken."

On August 17, Jean responded to the controversy, with the following statement:

I want to tell you unequivocally that both [Lafond] and I are proud to be Canadian and that we have the greatest respect for the institutions of our country. We are fully committed to Canada. I would not have accepted this position otherwise.
She also clarified that she and her spouse "have never belonged to a political party or the separatist movement." Following Jean's statement, Martin responded "There is no doubt in my mind that her devotion to Canada is longstanding and resolute," [link] although some critics continued to argue that her response remained too vague.

By late August, polls showed that 20% of Canadians approved of the reccomendation of Jean as the next Governor General. In response, the Hatian community voiced their support for Jean, even holding special church services in her honour. [link]

Another minor controversy concerned her French citizenship, which she acquired when she married Lafond. A section of the French civil code forbids French citizens from holding government or military positions in other countries and, as Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces and as de facto Head of State, Jean would hold both military and government positions; however, the law is rarely applied. The French embassy stated that there was "no question" that the law would not be enforced in Jean's case.

Still, on September 25, two days before her scheduled appointment to the position, Jean made a statement renouncing her French citizenship, putting this controversy to rest. [link]

In an interview conducted in October 2005 Jean's husband affirmed that he and his wife were Quebecois before they were Canadians.

Jean later said that her opponents had attempted to manufacture a controversy out of the lighthearted event in order to discredit her.

Investiture of the 27th governor general

Jean and Lafond on Canada's thrones in the Canadian Senate during Jean's investiture ceremony
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Jean and Lafond on Canada's thrones in the Canadian Senate during Jean's investiture ceremony

At her investiture on September 27, 2005, Jean declared, "the time of the two solitudes [referring to Quebec and the rest of Canada] is past." In her speech, described as "moving," Jean set aside the usual platitudes. She called for protection of the environment, the shielding of culture against globalization and an end to the marginalization of young people. According to one media account, "... the pomp and circumstance of Canada's most significant state function were blended with humour, passion and even tears." [link] Globe and Mail columnist, John Ibbitson, reflected the general captivation with the new governor general in the following way:

"[H]ere is this beautiful young Canadian of Haïtian birth, with a smile that makes you catch your breath, with a bemused older husband by her side, and a daughter who literally personifies our future, and you look at them and you think: Yes, this is our great achievement, this is the Canada that Canada wants to be, this is the Canada that will ultimately make way for different cultural identities." [link]

As Governor General

Following a tradition for governors general, Jean's first months in the position saw her traveling to each province and territory of Canada. Where she went, crowds were large and welcoming, a marked contrast to the low approval levels shown in polls earlier. [link]

In 2006 Jean also visited Italy to attend the closing ceremonies of the 2006 Winter Olympics, where Canada was given the Olympic flag as the hosts of the next games in 2010, as well as to meet Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, and Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican City State.

On April 17, 2006, while on a visit to the territory of Nunavut, Jean opened the annual Toonik Tyme Festival, and announced her donation of eighty books written in Inuktitut, French and English to the Iqaluit Centennial Library, in commemoration of Queen Elizabeth II's 80th birthday on April 21, 2006. [link]

On May 4, 2006, she became the first Governor General to address the Alberta legislature.

Also in May, she attended the investiture of René Préval as President of Haïti, her first visit to her homeland in her viceregal capacity. She was greeted with open arms in her hometown of Jacmel. [link]

Controversy during tenure

The controversies that attached themselves to Jean prior to her appointment continued into the early months of her time as Governor General.

On the October 12, 2005 National Press Gallery dinner, a jovial annual event akin to a roast in which Canadian politicians and reporters gather and by tradition make speeches satirizing one another, Jean stirred controversy when she referred jokingly to Parti Québécois leadership candidate André Boisclair's admitted cocaine use. [link]

During Remembrance Day ceremonies in Ottawa on November 11, 2005, a handful of veterans turned their backs on the Governor General as her car drove up to the National War Memorial. The protesters said they believe Jean and her husband are or were Quebec separatist sympathizers who worked to break up a country the veterans fought to defend. [link]

Arms

Following her installation as Governor General, a personal coat of arms for Jean, depicting her Haïtian roots, was unveiled. The shield shows a sand dollar, a special talisman for Jean and the Crown symbolising her vice-regal authority. The crest is a shell in a broken chain, symbolising her ancestors' escape from slavery. The supporters are two Simbis, water spirits in Haïtian culture. The motto is Briser les solitudes, which means Breaking down solitudes. Around the shield is the circlet of the Order of Canada, with its motto, Desiderantes meliorem patriam, which means They desire a better country.

Honours

Her full style and title in English is: Her Excellency the Right Honourable Michaëlle Jean, Chancellor and Principal Companion of the Order of Canada, Chancellor and Commander of the Order of Military Merit, Chancellor and Commander of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces, Governor General and Commander-in-Chief in and over Canada.

In French it is: Son Excellence la très honorable Michaëlle Jean, chancelière et compagnon principale de l'ordre du Canada, chancelière et commandante de l'ordre du mérite militaire, chancelière et commandante de l'ordre du mérite des forces de police, gouverneure générale et commandante en chef du Canada

As Governor General she is also Dame of Justice of the Order and Prior and Chief Officer in Canada of St John of Jerusalem. She has won many prizes, such as the Amnesty International journalism award.

Country Award or Order Class or Position Dates
Canada Order of Canada Chancellor and Principal Companion 2005
Canada Order of Military Merit Chancellor and Commander 2005
Canada Order of Merit of the Police Forces Chancellor and Commander 2005
Canada Order of St John Dame of Justice 2005
Canada Canadian Forces Decoration
2005
Canada Commemorative Medal for the Centennial of Saskatchewan
2006

Honorary Degrees

References

  1.   [Prime Minister Paul Martin's Announcement] August 4, 2005
  2.   [Stephen Harper's remarks] August 4, 2005
  3.   [Governor General Clarkson's reaction to the appointment] August 4, 2005
  4.   [NDP's Reaction] August 5, 2005

External links

Wikinews has news related to:
"|Preceded by:
Adrienne Clarkson

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Governors General of Canada

Monck | Lisgar | Dufferin | Lorne | Lansdowne | Stanley | Aberdeen | Minto | Grey | Connaught | Devonshire | Byng | Willingdon | Bessborough | Tweedsmuir | Athlone | Alexander | Massey | Vanier | Michener | Léger | Schreyer | Sauvé | Hnatyshyn | LeBlanc | Clarkson | Jean

 


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