Henriette Rasmussen
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Henriette Rasmussen | |
|---|---|
Henriette Rasmussen (2009) | |
| Born | June 8, 1950 Qasigiannguit, Greenland |
| Died | March 3, 2017 (aged 66) Nuuk, Greenland |
Henriette Ellen Kathrine Vilhelmine Rasmussen née Jeremiassen (8 June 1950 – 2017) was a Greenlandic educator, journalist, women's rights activist and politician. In 1992, she provided support for the adoption of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and in 1996, was appointed principal advisor to the ILO in connection with the 1989 Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention. As a member of Inuit Ataqatigiit from the early 1980s, she strove for Greenlandic independence from Denmark and served as Greenland's Minister of Culture and Education (2003–2005).[1][2][3]
Born in Qasigiannguit in western Greenland on 8 June 1950, Henriette Ellen Kathrine Vilhelmine Jeremiassen was the daughter of Jens Emil Axel Jeremiassen (1919–93), a skipper, and Birthe Marie Margrethe Møller (born 1924), a factory worker. The eldest daughter in a family of eight children, she was brought up to recognize the equality of the sexes and to appreciate the importance of education. As a teenager, she spent a year in Denmark before completing her high-school education in Nuuk, matriculating in 1970. In 1975, she qualified as a teacher from N. Zahle's School in Copenhagen. During her studies, she became interested in the new women's movement, making it known in the sidelines of the Arctic Peoples Conference in 1973 that she regretted the poor representation of women.[1]