Adrienne Clarkson calls it a sign of Canadian evolution.
She's the first immigrant to be named Canada's governor general.
She says she remembers a cold and snowy Ottawa with "white people" everywhere.
Clarkson says the country has evolved since then, when minorities were much less visible.
Ms. Clarkson says Prime Minister Jean Chretien approached her ``early in the summer'' about replacing Governor-General Romeo LeBlanc, who had asked to step down.
She says she plans to play an active, yet sensible role in Canadian unity.
LeBlanc, who will be 72 in December, was appointed in 1995.
"I am very humbled by the idea of serving beyond, really, what I could ever have expected to do for my country," said Clarkson.
"I will do my best to live up to that and to give the best of myself to it."
"Most important of all, she is a person who loves her adopted country and its people.
Her appointment is a reflection of the diversity and inclusiveness of our society, an indication of how our country has matured over the years.''
3. Who says Prime Minister Jean Chretien approached her ``early in the summer'' about replacing Governor-General Romeo LeBlanc, who had asked to step down?
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