Mayor of town where Munro lived would ‘consider’ amending monument honouring her
CENTRAL HURON, ONT. — For the mayor of the municipality where Alice Munro spent much of her adult life, the monument honouring her outside the local library should be left unchanged – an affirmation that for Clinton, Ont., the Nobel laureate will always be considered a cherished member of the community.
But Jim Ginn, the mayor of Central Huron, conceded that he would consider amending the installation if public outcry mounted following recent stunning revelations that Munro chose to remain married to her second husband after learning he had sexually abused her daughter.
“It was shocking,” said Ginn, when asked about the disclosures made on Sunday by Andrea Robin Skinner, Munro’s daughter with her first husband, James Munro.
Writing in the Toronto Star, Skinner said her stepfather Gerald Fremlin sexually assaulted her in the mid-1970s — when she was nine — and continued to harass and abuse her until she became a teenager. Skinner wrote that in her 20s she told her mother, who died earlier this year, about Fremlin’s abuse but that it stayed a secret for decades.