Were she still in her old job as a journalist,
one wonders what type of story or documentary Michaëlle Jean would
create about the nearly six months she has spent as Canada’s 27th Governor
General.
Would it focus on the people she has met
or places she has visited? Would it mention the controversy that greeted
her appointed last summer? Perhaps a reflection on the priorities she set
out to pursue while occupying the vice-regal post, and some thoughts about
moments of inspiration - and of disappointment?
A comprehensive work of that nature will
have to wait for another time, once Jean and her family have vacated the
Governor General’s official Ottawa residence, Rideau Hall.
But in many - often refreshingly candid
ways - she has already provided a glimpse of her thoughts and feelings
on some of those points, and others.
Last month in Toronto, during her first
official visit to Ontario, the 48-year-old, Haitian-born former Radio-Canada
broadcaster underscored her interest in young people that she outlined
in her first speech as Governor General last fall during a morning address
at the provincial legislature.
“Nothing in today’s society is more disgraceful,”
she said, “than the marginalization of some young people who are driven
to isolation and despair.
“We must not tolerate such disparities...We
have a duty to encourage and support them in their efforts to join us in
creating a better world.”
That afternoon, Jean visited a downtown
centre for street youth.
| Earlier
in February, at a Montreal event marking Black History Month during her
first official visit to Quebec, the descendant of slaves paid tribute to
recently departed American civil-rights icons Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott
King and delivered an impassioned plea against the continuing oppression
people of colour face here in Canada. |
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Citing statistics that indicate the challenges
blacks face challenges finding jobs or suitable housing, and that they
are “liable to being harassed or arrested for an act they did not commit,”
Jean said “this discrimination sinks its insidious roots in the soil of
ignorance and lack of understanding.”
“It has,” she explained, “no place in a
society that prizes above all the values of respect, openness and sharing,
which are paramount for me.”
On that tour of a province she long considered
home, Jean also displayed candour about political matters, as reported
by The Canadian Press.
When asked by a reporter about International
Trade Minister David Emerson’s defection from the Liberals to the Conservatives,
she said it was “a matter of his own conscience” - and described Prime
Minister Stephen Harper as “very methodical.”
It was, of course, Harper’s prime ministerial
predecessor, Paul Martin, who last August named her as the first black
person - and only the third woman (not to mention the consecutive third
journalist-broadcaster after Adrienne Clarkson and Roméo LeBlanc)
- to serve as the Queen’s representative in Canada. Almost three-quarters
of 539 Quebec respondents to a poll conducted by Léger Marketing
agreed with the appointment.
But jubilation quickly turned into panic
when novelist René Boulanger wrote an article in the sovereigntist
periodical, Le Québécois, claiming that Jean’s husband, French-born
filmmaker Jean-Daniel Lafond, was friends with hardcore separatists linked
to the Front de Libération du Québec (FLQ) while directing
the 1994 National Film Board documentary, La Liberté en colère
(Freedom in anger).
In the article, Boulanger said he visited
Lafond - “a pure indépendantiste” - and Jean in their Montreal apartment
when the future vice-regal consort showed off a bookcase built by Jacques
Rose, a member of the FLQ convicted as an accessory after the fact in the
kidnapping and murder of Quebec cabinet minister Pierre Laporte in 1970.
Boulanger wrote that Lafond even joked
that Rose built a false-bottomed drawer in the bookcase to store guns -
an accusation Lafond vehemently denied later during a Radio-Canada interview.
Days later, Jean herself got dragged into
the separatist allegations when Le Québécois dredged up an
appearance she had made in La Manière Nègre (The Negro Manner),
a documentary her husband made in 1991 (adapted into a book two years later)
about the influence of Martinique poet Aimé Césaire on Quebec’s
independence movement.
In the film, Jean is seen seated with hardline
Quebec separatists in a bar toasting the concept of independence - “not
something that is given [but] something that is taken,” she says.
Meanwhile, in the book, Lafond favoured
Quebec independence and promised to attend “all” of the St-Jean Baptiste
Day parades.”
Conservative premiers Ralph Klein of Alberta
and New Brunswick’s Bernard Lord called on the couple to clarify their
position on federalism.
On Aug. 17 as governor-general designate,
Jean issued a statement in which she insisted that she and Lafond were
“unequivocally…proud to be Canadian” and that they are “fully committed
to Canada.”
That reassurance, however, did little to
stop some 250 people from gathering on Parliament Hill in late August to
protest a “separatist as head of state,” as one sign read - nor did it
prevent a group of veterans from turning their backs on Jean less than
three months later at the Remembrance Day ceremony in Ottawa. (Two days
before her installation as Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of the
Canadian Forces, she also renounced the French citizenship she only received
the year before.)
There was a bit more “noise,” as Jean called
it last fall too, when her sister, Nadege - a member of the Parti Québécois
- publicly criticized Jean for poking fun during the annual (and satirical)
Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery dinner at party leader André
Boisclair’s admitted cocaine use.
Jean dismissed all the fuss and challenges
to her Canadian patriotism in an interview last October with the Winnipeg
Free Press. She said it was the result of a “very mean strategy” to “build
an image” of her that would “really frighten the rest of Canada.”
As it has turned out, the complete opposite
has happened. From Prince Edward Island to Manitoba - which had the distinction
last October of hosting her first official visit less than a month after
her Sept. 27 installation as Governor General - Canadians have been quite
smitten by Jean.
So too have the media, which will soon
run out of ways to describe her mesmerizing,” “dazzling” and “rock-star”-quality
appearances at events across the country that regularly elicit cheers and
ovations.
| “What
has impressed me most is that so many people from all walks of life have
kissed her, hugged her, shook her hand and told her, ‘We can relate to
your life story’ - and that connection has really created an emotional
bond between her and Canadians,” says Randy Mylyk, who serves as Jean’s
press secretary.“
From the day she took office, she told
me that the countdown has begun until the end of mandate and I have to
touch as many lives as I can.” |
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The latest stop on her cross-country tour:
British Columbia, from March 7 to 9. While in Vancouver, Jean will participate
in the unveiling of the 1952 Olympic flag from the first Winter Games in
Oslo - a fitting gesture for a woman who recently represented Canada at
the closing ceremony of this year’s Winter Olympics in Turin and who could,
as Governor General, officially open the XXI Olympic Winter Games when
they come to Canada four years from now.
As Canada’s de facto head of state, Jean
has to fulfil the duties of her high office.
From B.C., for instance, she heads to Chile
for the inauguration of newly elected President Michelle Bachelet, an event
at which Haiti’s new president, Réné Préval.
Just a few months into her job, she presided
over the post-election changeover of the federal government from a Martin
to Harper administration.
She’s met the powerful: U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleeza Rice (perhaps the first black female American president
and head of state one day?) at Rideau Hall last October - and whom she
will see again in Chile on March 11, and Pope Benedict XVI last month in
his private library where Jean reportedly spoke to the pontiff in French
and Italian.
However, as part of her desire to break
down the “two solitudes” (her official motto is in fact “Briser les solitudes”)
- beyond the traditional linguistic lines - and the “narrow notion of ‘every
person for himself,’” Jean pledged to make the governor general’s role
“a place where citizens’ words will be heard, where the values of respect,
tolerance, and sharing that are so essential to me and to all Canadians,
will prevail.”
Thus far, fulfilling that mission appears
to most energize her.
In her first English-language television
interview with CTV’s Canada AM in February, Jean said “it’s very powerful
to be as close as possible and to feel that energy in people who believe
in community actions, who believe in certain values - who are not individualists,
but believe in that collective strength and to make things happen.”
She has also reached out to groups - accompanying
Aboriginal youths and veterans on a “spiritual journey” last October to
France to visit war-related commemorative sites, including Juno Beach in
Normandy, as part of Canada’s last event marking the 60th anniversary of
the end of the Second World War; and spending two “intense” hours “in a
reflexive dialogue on personal responsibility, dignity and freedom” with
inmates at Montreal’s Bordeaux penitentiary who “shared their deepest fears
and aspirations” with her.
Though Jean had been to Bordeaux before
as a journalist, her visit marked the first by a Governor General to a
prison.
As she said during her installation as
Governor General, “I know how precious…freedom is…I whose ancestors were
slaves, who was born into a civilization long reduced to whispers and cries
of pain, know something about its price, and I know too what a treasure
it is for us all.”
Her story, she explained, of watching as
a little girl family and friends “grappling with the horrors of a ruthless
dictatorship” in her native Haiti to become Canada’s Governor General “is
a lesson in learning to be free.”
Born in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince
on Sept. 6, 1957, Jean experienced the terror of François “Papa
Doc” Duvalier’s dictatorship.
| Her
father, Roger, a school principal and philosophy teacher, was abducted
by “government thugs” in 1965 and days later was returned, “dumped in the
street” outside the family home - “his head so badly swollen from the torture
that he was barely recognizable,” according to a CanWest News Service story
published on the eve of Jean’s installation as GG. |
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Roger Jean sought asylum in Quebec in 1967.
His wife and two daughters arrived the following year - and the family
carved out a life in Thetford Mines, an asbestos mining town about 100
kilometres south of Quebec City where Roger Jean landed a teaching job
at a college.
He and his wife, Luce, eventually split
up. Luce ended up in Montreal with the girls where Jean would obtain a
Bachelor of Arts degree in Italian and Spanish languages and literature
at the Université de Montréal, where she pursued - but never
completed - a master’s degree in comparative literature. Scholarships also
allowed her to study at three Italian universities during her undergraduate
years.
From 1979 to 1987, she also worked with
shelters for battered women in Quebec.
But Jean’s connection to Haiti ultimately
landed her a career - and a husband.
In the mid-1980s, she returned to her Caribbean
birthplace for the first time since she left at the age of 10.
She went there to interview women in Creole,
one of five languages she is fluent in (English, French, Italian and Spanish
are the others) for a feminist journal started by a doctoral student who
attended the U of M during Jean’s time there. The assignment led to another
job as researcher for a documentary on Haiti’s 1987 elections. That gig
eventually led Jean to the world of journalism with Radio-Canada, from
hosting the documentary series, “Grands Reportages” and her own interview
show, “Michaëlle,” to serving as anchor of Le Téléjournal’s
daily edition, “Le Midi.”
(She also won the 2001 Gemini Award for
best interview in any category.)
It was through Haiti that she also met
Lafond (13 years her senior with two daughters and two grandchildren from
a previous marriage) who asked her to work with him on that now-infamous
documentary on Césaire.
While they were in Haiti researching the
film, Jean fell in love with him - and they married in 1992.
They twice tried to have children, but
“first one pregnancy, then another, ended in miscarriage,” one of Jean’s
former Radio-Canada colleagues told CanWest.
In 1999, Jean and Lafond ended up adopting
a baby from Haiti -Marie-Éden - who is now the youngest occupant
of Rideau Hall since former Governor General Ed Schreyer’s kids zipped
around its halls more than 20 years ago.
Joining the six-year-old vice-regal daughter
is a vice-regal dog: a fox terrier, from Quebec, which Lafond suggested
Marie-Éden call Chouka - a name given to pooches he has had in the
past.
The puppy was apparently part of the deal
to ease the little girl’s transition from Montreal - where her mother was
known to most Canadians as the host of CBC Newsworld’s “The Passionate
Eye” and “Rough Cuts” - to Ottawa, where mom now represents the monarch
and is the direct link for all Canadians to Elizabeth II.
Smart, articulate, charismatic, hip, attractive
and fashionable, multilingual Jean is “a poster child for” and “one of
the best embodiments we have of what modern Canada is all about,” Université
de Montréal ethics research centre director and philosophy professor
Daniel Weinstock told CanWest News Service last year.
“She’s an example of successful integration
of immigrants from troubled lands to Canada.”
As Jean told the Winnipeg Free Press, she
thinks of Canada “as a country of every possibility, and I think I’m one
of the living examples of this.”
A woman full of life, too, smiling and
clapping her hands and moving to the music - as she has been doing publicly
since Sylvie Desgrosseillers, a fellow Haitian Canadian, and the People’s
Gospel Choir of Montreal blew the roof off Centre Block on Parliament Hill
during her installation ceremony.
“She looks good, Tina Turner good,” said
an Ottawa Xpress writer, “and has the potential to be popular - Oprah popular.”
COPYRIGHT © CHRISTOPHER
GULY, MARCH 4, 2006
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