Princess Margriet and Professor Pieter van Vollenhoven to visit Canada - Canada
Princess Margriet and Professor Pieter van Vollenhoven to visit Canada
Her Royal Highness Princess Margriet of the Netherlands and Professor Pieter van Vollenhoven will visit Ottawa, Canada from Thursday 7 May to Monday 11 May. The visit is a reaffirmation of the Netherlands’ special relationship with Canada, where Princess Margriet was born during the Second World War.
On Thursday 7 May the couple will visit the Canadian War Museum. On arrival, Princess Margriet and Professor Van Vollenhoven will lay a wreath in the main entrance hall, in the presence of Jill McKnight, Minister of Veterans Affairs and Associate Minister of National Defence. They will then be given a tour of the museum and meet current members of the Canadian regiments that fought for our freedom in the Second World War.
On Friday the couple will visit Ottawa City Hall, where they will meet His Worship Mark Sutcliffe, Mayor of the City of Ottawa, and several city councillors. Here, a guard of honour will be inspected and the princess and her husband will sign the city’s official guest book.
On Saturday 9 May Princess Margriet will open the Canadian Tulip Festival, an annual festive event celebrating blooming tulips from the Netherlands across the city, commemorate Canada’s role in the liberation of the Netherlands during the Second World War and celebrating the friendship between Canada and the Netherlands.
There will also be a tree planting ceremony. Canada gifted a maple tree to Queen Wilhelmina shortly after the war, which was planted in the gardens of Het Loo Palace. Now, a sapling of that tree will return to its native soil.
On the morning of, Monday 11 May, Princess Margriet and Professor Van Vollenhoven, accompanied by H.E. Mary Simon, Governor General of Canada, will visit a special exhibition on the Arctic at the Canadian Museum of Nature. The exhibition highlights Inuit communities, their way of life and environmental stewardship, and how Arctic flora and fauna are adapting to a changing climate.
Princess Margriet and Professor Van Vollenhoven will then go to the Perley Health Centre, where they will meet with veterans and official representatives of the Royal Canadian Legion. This veterans’ organisation is celebrating its centenary in 2026.
In the afternoon the couple will visit the Special Care Nursery at The Ottawa Hospital, where the princess was born. They will present bouquets of tulips to some of the young mothers – and their babies – on the ward.
The ties between Canada and the Netherlands which took root in the
Second World War remain strong today, owing in part to the many Dutch
emigrants who settled in Canada after the war.
NOTE FOR JOURNALISTS AND MEDIA REPRESENTATIVES / NOT FOR PUBLICATION
Accreditation until April 29, 12.00 noon for media
representatives, including correspondents: rvd.pers@minaz.nl. Please
include your name(s), phone number, medium outlet and
position(s).
Contact Netherlands Embassy in Ottawa (Canada):
Anna Rijk, Sr. Advisor Communications and Public Diplomacy,
Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Ottawa
anna.rijk@minbuza.nl | + 1 613
809 7461
Rijksvoorlichtingsdienst (Netherlands
Government Information Service)
+ 1 31 70 356 4142
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