Clinton makes unplanned trip to CMHR
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 21/01/2015 (3905 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
When Hillary Clinton mentioned her desire to see the Canadian Museum for Human Rights during her speech Wednesday afternoon, the wheels started spinning furiously to make it happen.
The apparently off-the-cuff remark could have been a result of a conversation the former U.S. First Lady had with Gail Asper, the driving force behind the museum, during a VIP meet-and-greet prior to the luncheon at the RBC Convention Centre.
Upon wrapping up the sold-out event, Clinton was whisked out the door and taken directly to the CMHR.

St. Boniface MP Shelley Glover said the visit came together in a matter of minutes.
“As soon as she (mentioned the museum during her speech) we made some phone calls to see if it would be possible and it worked.” Glover said.
Clinton paid special attention to the displays of Mareshia Rucker, which features the red dress she wore to her high school’s first integrated prom in 2013, and Viola Desmond, the black Nova Scotia woman who dared to sit in the whites-only seating area of an integrated movie theatre in 1946, as well as several global atrocities, such as the Holocaust and Holodomor.
“I think she was blown away by what she saw,” Glover said. “I think she had an idea of what this might look like but I think she was doubly impressed.”
Glover said Clinton also enjoyed the technology throughout the CMHR and remarked how it was all very kid friendly.
“She said she had never seen anything like it,” she said.
Glover said Clinton also remarked how openly Canada speaks about the mistakes it has made with human rights to make sure they aren’t made again.
CMHR spokeswoman Angela Cassie said Clinton was given a tour at a “leisurely” pace.
“We weren’t clearing spaces or anything along those lines. She wanted to visit and walk through. She had a lot of fantastic questions. It was a great tour,” she said.
It was even better for a young family from South Dakota, who was visiting the museum at the same time.
“They came up and asked for a photo. They had a nine-month-old baby, who smiled and gurgled at her,” Cassie said. “She was very hospitable. She said hello to some of our volunteers and staff and she met a few people in the galleries and took some pictures, too.”
After her museum tour was finished, Clinton was taken to the airport where she boarded a plane for Saskatoon.
geoff.kirbyson@freepress.mb.ca