“It felt like a sisterhood”: Toronto woman on being in D.C.
See the video on CTV news.
“It felt like a sisterhood”: Toronto woman on being in D.C.
See the video on CTV news.
McTasney arranged for a fleet of buses to carry Canadians over the border to participate in the Women’s March on Washington. The National talks to Marissa.
Americans seemed equally pleased by the Canadian contingent. Trip organizer Marissa McTasney says she even saw some women “cry when they saw we showed up in such numbers. It was very moving.”
“Canadians are coming together to say loud and clear that discrimination will not be tolerated, and that we stand in support of all those who have been the targets of hatred within Canada and abroad,” said Marissa McTasney, from the National Committee of the Canadian Women’s March. “This is a show of equality, solidarity, diversity and inclusivity. We are marching in support of indigenous peoples, people of colour, Muslims, immigrants, LGBTQI+, people with disabilities, women and others.”
“Canadians are coming together to say loud and clear that discrimination will not be tolerated, and that we stand in support of all those who have been the targets of hatred within Canada and abroad,” said Marissa McTasney, from the National Committee of the Canadian Women’s March.
Marissa McTasney in the News:
Vivienne Mayer writes, “When I urged women of the world to join the fast growing Women’s March on Washington (WMW) in my Nov 15 blog – a week after the U.S. election – I could not have foreseen the scale of international support or the newly galvanized women’s movement that would evolve by the start of 2017.”
Before this year’s American election, Tina Woodland had never protested anything in her life. But when she heard that thousands of women were planning to march on the U.S. capital the day after Donald Trump’s inauguration, the Yukon resident knew she had to join in.