Asper to receive Roblin Award

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The University of Winnipeg has named Gail Asper the recipient of the 2014 Duff Roblin Award.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 05/09/2014 (4104 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

The University of Winnipeg has named Gail Asper the recipient of the 2014 Duff Roblin Award.

Asper will receive the award at a dinner Nov. 18 at the Fort Garry Hotel — it recognizes outstanding Manitobans for their commitment to education and community.

In 2002, Asper became President of The Asper Foundation, a private charitable foundation established by her parents, Babs and Israel Asper. The Foundation supports and initiates numerous projects in Canada and Israel. She has also spent the last 14 years working to establish the Canadian Museum for Human Rights as Canada’s first new national museum in 45 years and the first national museum to be located outside of the capital region.

Hadas Parush / Winnipeg Free Press
Gail Asper speaks to Free Press reporter, Geoff Kirbyson, at the Free Press News Cafe, about the Canadian Museum for Human Rights currently under construction at The Forks in Winnipeg on Tuesday.
Hadas Parush / Winnipeg Free Press Gail Asper speaks to Free Press reporter, Geoff Kirbyson, at the Free Press News Cafe, about the Canadian Museum for Human Rights currently under construction at The Forks in Winnipeg on Tuesday.

Proceeds from this year’s dinner will go towards the Duff Roblin Scholars Fund. This fund provides Graduate Fellowships in the Indigenous Governance and Master’s of Development Practice programs at The University of Winnipeg. Its aim is to enhance educational opportunities for Manitoba’s Indigenous population.

The inaugural Duff Roblin Award was named in honour of and presented to the late Duff Roblin in 2007. This prestigious award recognizes a recipient’s qualities as an outstanding Manitoban, a patron of education, and someone who demonstrates exemplary citizenship and life-long commitment to his or her community. Past recipients include Tom Jackson (2008), Kerry Hawkins (2009), Edward S. Kennedy (2011), Charles Coffey (2012), and Jan Belanger (2013).

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