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Governor-General charms Sudbury

Governor-General charms Sudbury 

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Michaëlle Jean, Governor General of Canada, visited Hearst, Timmins and Greater Sudbury from May 3 to 5.

In Sudbury, she visited Collège Boréal and Laurentian University, and hosted an Art Matters forum. She opened the 2010 edition of the Salon du livre du Grand Sudbury Wednesday evening at a gala event at Bryston's in Copper Cliff.

Herménégilde Chiasson, the salon’s honourary president and former lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick was also in attendence at the gala event.

The book fair and literary festival is being held at Sudbury Arena, with special events in various downtown venues.

The following is the text of the Governor General's speech from the opening of the French book festival.

"I had promised myself that I would one day attend a launch of Sudbury’s Salon du livre, to honour the Francophone writers, artisans and book lovers of Northern Ontario and celebrate the cultural vitality of the largest Francophone community outside Quebec.

This gala, charmingly named “Page blanche” or “blank page,” is bound to be a very special event, as it elicits hope and allows our imaginations to conjure all the words, tales, thoughts, feelings, stories and plays that will soon fill the page, transporting us to a world at once so very near to and so far removed from our own everyday lives.

This is the source, if I may say, of all the power of creation, all the power of your creativity.

And you have given this launch an added dimension, a little something extra to complement the pleasures of the mind and heart, in the form of Northern Ontario gastronomic delights to tickle our taste buds.

Indeed, all our senses will be well satisfied!

My dear friends, I have long dreamt of coming here and enjoying with you the wonderful, incomparable cultural richness of your corner of the country, be it through the legacy of CANO, the dramatic works of Michel Ouellette, or the poetry of Patrice Desbiens or the late Robert Dickson, to whom I paid tribute on the 50th anniversary of the Canada Council.

To my mind, literature is a means of exploring, of renewing a language that would otherwise be doomed to stagnation, of taking a closer look at things and of remembering a community and the world.

As essayist Yolande Grisé so aptly put it, without the practice and study of literature, there would be no true knowledge, understanding and appreciation of the difficulty of a life in French in Ontario.

What I personally admire most—and I am speaking here to all Francophones in Northern Ontario—what I admire most is your unshakeable desire to live in French and admirable pride in doing so, no matter what…and by that very fact, your contribution to enriching our beloved language with your own tones, cadences, imagery, accent—in short, your own special and unique contribution to the Francophone world’s global heritage.

In closing, I want you to know, dear friends, how very pleased I am to have had the opportunity to tell you this in person and to take part in the launch of this year’s Salon du livre du Grand Sudbury.

Long live the Salon du livre!

Long live the Franco-Ontarian culture, one of the treasures of this country where everything is possible!"

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