From the CBC:
“Aline Chrétien, wife of
former PM Jean Chrétien, has died at age 84”
By all accounts, Aline Chrétien was
the quiet strength behind her husband, Jean. An astute political partner — the
former prime minister called her his most trusted adviser and his "rock of
Gibraltar"— Aline Chrétien died peacefully Saturday morning at the age of
84. "She was surrounded by family
as the sun rose at her Lac des Piles residence, near Shawinigan," said
Bruce Hartley, a former executive assistant and long-time adviser to Jean
Chrétien. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday that Canadians "owe
a great debt" to Aline Chrétien for her honesty, perseverance and work
championing multiculturalism and bilingualism. "As one of Mr. Chrétien's
most influential advisers, Aline was known for her tenacity, sharp intellect
and acute sense of observation," his statement read. "The life that
she and Jean shared together, including their service to Canadians, was built
on a foundation of trust, hard work and equal partnership." The couple met
on a bus in the summer of 1951, when Jean Chrétien was 17 and Aline was
15. The two married in 1957 in a
ceremony that was squeezed in between Jean's shifts working at the local mill
and his university classes. From the very beginning, Aline Chrétien said she
knew the man who would go on to serve as prime minister for a decade was the
one for her. The couple had three children together.
Shied away from the spotlight Aline
dropped out of school at 16 to help support her family through secretarial
work, but her dreams were much grander. She longed to travel overseas and learn
multiple languages. Those aspirations became possible in part because of
her husband's political success — but Aline never felt entirely comfortable in
the spotlight. "If I hadn't
married Jean, no one would have seen me, ever," she told Maclean's
magazine in 1994. "I like people, but I don't like to be out in
front." Aline wanted to keep her family life private and out of the
public eye, especially when her children were young. In Jean Chrétien's
best-selling 1985 memoir, Straight from the Heart, their daughter France was
mentioned only briefly and their son Hubert and adopted son Michel were not
mentioned at all.
Frequent adviser to former PM Throughout his time in office, Aline
remained close to her husband's work and frequently offered him advice. "We
are always talking, when I have lunch, breakfast, at night, sometimes I sit in
his office and he says, 'You know what, today I have a cabinet meeting to
do,'" she said. "It's like I'm a part of the team too and sometimes
the team is there and I'm there so he will say, 'Well what do you think about
that?' And I give him my advice. But since a long time it's always been like
that." Former prime minister Brian Mulroney and his wife Mila
remembered Aline as a "formidable contributor" to the country. "She
was a wise counsel and able defender of her family and of the former prime
minister," their statement read. "An elegant, eloquent and loyal
friend to many, she was also a highly trusted adviser, inside politics and
beyond."
When Aline Chrétien discovered
an intruder at 24 Sussex Drive In 1995, André Dallaire — who had been
diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and was upset over the result of the 1992
referendum on the Charlottetown constitutional accord — broke into the prime
minister's official residence at 24 Sussex Drive in Ottawa and came face to
face with Aline just outside her bedroom. Aline went back into the
bedroom, locked the door and woke her husband, who grabbed an Inuit carving of
a loon to defend the couple as they waited behind the locked door for the RCMP
to respond. Dallaire was arrested by the RCMP — he never entered the
Chrétiens' bedroom. He was later convicted of attempted murder but found not to
be criminally responsible due to diminished mental capacity. "He
had a jackknife, open, right at the door of our room. And I would like to say
that my wife did not panic. She just locked the door and rushed to lock the
other door and called the police and I think that I'm lucky that she was there
and I'm grateful," Chrétien told reporters afterward.
Known for treating staffers
and volunteers like family Aline dedicated herself to a number of causes,
especially music. A pianist, Aline enjoyed playing for herself as much as she
did for family and friends. "She was an incredible person, not just
as a political ally to the prime minister, but also as a friend of women,"
recalled former deputy prime minister Sheila Copps. "Mr. Chrétien was the first prime
minister to name a woman to the head of the Supreme Court, to name a woman
deputy prime minister," Copps told CBC News. "The influence behind
that was actually Aline Chrétien." ormer interim Liberal Party
leader Bob Rae — now Canada's ambassador to the United Nations — called Aline a
"very important anchor" in Jean Chrétien's life. "I don't
think he would have become prime minister without her by his side," said
Rae, who has known the pair since 1966. Known for her kind and welcoming
nature, she treated Liberal staffers and volunteers as members of her own
family and supported her husband through difficult times. After
internecine squabbling in the Liberal Party between supporters of Chrétien and
his finance minister, Paul Martin, culminated in Chrétien stepping down sooner
than he had planned, Aline told the CBC's Peter Mansbridge in 2003 how she
approaches conflict. "If somebody has a chip on their shoulder, who
has something against somebody, it shows," she told Mansbridge. "Life
is too short and I forgive, and in politics there's a lot to forgive so I would
be very miserable. I see people who don't forgive and it's not nice. "Jean
is the guy [who] forgives easily and I like him for that, too, because in life,
if you are just a thing about the past, it's no good. You just go forward and
you're happy." As much as Jean Chrétien was gregarious and
hot-tempered, Aline was the calm and collected political partner who was happy
to stick to the sidelines. But she took great pride in what they accomplished
together in public life and believed Canadians would come to miss her husband
and value his legacy when he left office. "I would be just happy if
they say he was working hard for his people and he was a good prime
minister," she told Mansbridge in 2003. The success of their
political partnership was surpassed only by their personal one. Aline and Jean
Chrétien celebrated their 63rd wedding anniversary on Sept. 10.
^ While I knew a lot about her
husband (studying him in my Canadian Studies College Class) I know that behind
a good politician is a good spouse. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/aline-chretien-jean-died-1.5722401
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