National Post

MEMORIES OF 1977: TRUDEAU, AGA KHAN TAKE A WALK DOWN MADISON AVENUE

- Joe O’Connor

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s longtime family friendship with the Aga Khan may have begun with his mother during an infamous trip to New York that caused an uproar at home 40 years ago.

The Aga Khan’s half- sister, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, is a jet- setting philanthro­pist who, in 1977, featured prominentl­y in the political mini- drama involving the Trudeaus, a New York City apartment, a Rus- sian ballet dancer and an iconic photograph of a princess and a prime minister’s wife, strolling armin-arm along Madison Avenue.

Justin Trudeau’s family getaway by private helicopter to the Aga Khan’s 141- hectare private island in the Bahamas over the Christmas holidays is now under investigat­ion by Mary Dawson, the conflict of interest and ethics commission­er.

The billionair­e religious l eader’s f oundation has received hundreds of millions of dollars in Canadian foreign aid money and is a registered lobbyist with the government.

In his explanatio­n for the holiday, the prime minister said the Aga Khan was a family friend whom he has known since he was a “toddler.”

Justin Trudeau was fiveyears- old when his mother, Margaret, a self- described free- spirit decades younger than her husband, thenPrime Minister Pierre Trudeau, spent their sixth wedding anniversar­y partying with the Rolling Stones at a Toronto nightclub. She then boarded a plane for New York — where the Stones were headed next — and became the focus of intense gossip. ( Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood addressed the Trudeau- fling- rumours in his 2007 memoir, Ronnie, saying of Margaret: “We had a wonderful time and her husband’s name never came up.”)

Trudeau later described her New York escape as her “ultimate freedom trip.” But her freedom had its limits.

Photograph­ers caught Margaret on Madison Avenue, in a fur coat, smiling broadly and strolling arm-inarm with an equally glamorous-looking Princess Yasmin Aga Khan. The princess was the daughter of actress Rita Hayworth and Prince Aly Khan, a royal who died in a fiery motor crash in France in 1960.

Robin Leach, the celebrity columnist, revealed Trudeau’s New York hideaway as Princess Yasmin’s sevenroom apartment in a March 28, 1977, article for People magazine.

Trudeau spoke at length, providing several sensationa­l quotes, including a descriptio­n of her 58- yearold husband as having “the body of a 25- year- old,” and her preference for wearing garter-belts and stockings.

Her time with the princess featured a trip to the ballet to watch Mikhail Baryshniko­v, and a trip to the toy store, presumably to buy gifts for Justin and his two younger brothers, Sacha and Michel.

Trudeau told Leach that she wanted to move to New York, part- time, to begin an apprentice­ship with the famous photograph­er Richard Avedon. She was 28 and weary of being viewed as a prime minister’s wife and nothing more.

“I pray that people will not judge Pierre by my wanting to be a woman,” she told Leach.

“I am a free spirit that must survive in a free world. I am not a weirdo, a wacko or an eccentric for wanting to do good, honest work on a day-to-day basis.

“I just want to find my individual­ity. I am tired of being public property.”

Trudeau eventually flew home to Ottawa. The prime minister’s limousine met her at the airport.

The couple divorced in 1984. Margaret Trudeau was later diagnosed with bipolar disorder and is now a wellknown author and mental health advocate living in Ottawa.

Attempts to reach her for comment were unsuccessf­ul Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada