Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.11.1993, Síða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.11.1993, Síða 1
( Lögberg 1 eimskringla The lcelandic Weekly Lögberg Stofnnö 14. janúar 1888 Heimskringla Stofnaö 9. september 188G Inside this week: An introduction to 'technology...................2 Remembrance, Respect, Responsibility.............3 Danes balk at new rescue.........................4 Letters to the editor............................5 Childrea's corner................................7 107. Árgangur 107th Year Publications Mail Registration No. 1667 Föstudagur 5. nóvember 1993 Friday, 5 November 1993 Númer 38 Number 38 lcelandic News Sftting Horse: ■ This horse has been getting a lot of attention lately in Kópavogur, lceland. The way the animal rests, more like a dog than a horse, is what has caught people's attention. Usually horses lie down to rest, but this one has found its unique way. foreign-born people living in lceland: ■ Never ín the hístory of the coun- try have there been SO many people living in lceland that are born out- side the country, and enjoying life there very much. Their stories vary, of course, but on the whole they seem to be satisfied with their iot. What they seem to agree on as a whole is that lcelanders are a help- ful lot and would go out of their way to assist. Another thing they seem to enjoy is the informal rela- tionship between management and' staff, On the negative side they seem to find lcelanders somewhat undisciplined and extravagant. The people shown in the plcture above are; Hope Knutsson from USA, £lisabeth Csilla from Hungary and jon Sui from Vietnam. Of the 10,000 only 207 are refugees from Hungary, Czechoslovakía, Poland and Vietnam. Adjustment is easier for Caucasian people rather than people of colour. V Bir9'r v There are a few people, said Oli Narfason, who have both a broad vision and an eye for detail. The former president of the Icelandic National League commented that these were the people who not only saw the roses but stopped to smell them and to think about what they meant. They are the people who can create poetry and our community, both in Iceland and North America, seems to have been blessed with more than its share of them. Oli was speaking at a tribute to one of North America’s greatest poets, Guttormour Guttormsson that was held in October at Winnipeg’s Scandinavian Centre. Put on by the INL, the event was meant not only to honor and remem- ber the poet, but to raise money for a memorial that is to be erected in Riverton. As the current president of the INL, which is organizing it, Helgi Austman remarked,. it is a project that is long overdue and hopes that peo- ple of Icelandic descent from all over North America will contribute to it. Gutt- ormur, after all, wrote for all of us. In fact, he wrote for posterity and it is ironic that he may be remembered bet- ter in Iceland now than he is the North American Icelandic Community of . which he was part. Magnus Eliason, who has had a long and distin- guished career in politics both as a political activist and Winnipeg city council- lor, recalled some childhood memories of Guttormur. Then, with the eloquence we have come to expect from him, he recited three of his poems, including Winni- peg Icelander and Paul Bjarnason’s translation of the immortal Sandy Bar. Magnus also, as is his wont, spiced up the after- rioori in a typically Icelandic way by injecting a note of controversy. Plans for the memorial call for it to be erected in the Riverton town park. Magnus thinks it should be built at the site of Guttormur’s farm where he lived and wrote. A third school of thought thinks that it should be set up at Sandy Bar itself. In response, Helgi Austman explained the reasons for the INL decision, which are straightforward.and practi- cal. The town of Riverton will maintain the Tnemorial but at the farm or at Sandy Bar there is no one who can commit to looking after it. It is more poetic, in a sense, to erect the monument at the farm or Sandy Bar, but in a practical sense, it is difficult to quarrel with the INL’s decision to build it in Riverton, where it will be properly cared for and more people will see it anyway. The highlight of the afternoon was the beautiful voice of Heather Ireland, singing the poems of her grandfather that have been set to music. Accompanied by TheJma Wilson on the piano, she began with Áróra, by Helgi Helgason, and continued with Icelandic Maiden, Island — a tribute to Iceland which Guttormur wrote after a visit there — and Góða Nótt before bringing the concert to a climax with her rendition of Sandy Bar. She was to be followed by poet and novelist David Arnason’s tribute to Guttormur, but, because David was unable to attend, the difficult task of present- ing somebody else’s talk fell to Jon Mathiason, an anthroplogist and author from the University of Manitoba, who accom- plished it with both wit and grace. Afterwards the audience that packed the hall in the Heather Ireland Scandinavian Centre was treated to a buffet of Icelandic delicacies and dainties preþared by the supporters of the project, which afforded people the chance to chat, gossip, talk, discuss or argue, according to their inclination. Again in the best Icelandic tradition, there appeared to be a lot of each going on. The size of turnout underlined the impor- tance this valuable pro- ject by the INL. Guttormur Guttormsson is not just one of the best Icelandic Canadian poets. Along with Stephan G. Stephanson, he is one of the best poets to come out of North America in any language, including English. An anecdote told by Heather Ireland, an experi- ence from a recent trip to Iceland, highlights the esteem in which he is still held there. She took a taxi in Reykjavík, and when the driver learned she was Guttormur’s granddaughter, he refused to accept any fare. When she insisted on paying, he said forcefully: “Look, it’s my taxi, and I’ll decide who pays and who doesn’t” and Guttormur’s granddaughter was not going to pay any fare in his cab. The memorial in Riverton will help to prove that wé in the West have not forgotten him either, and your donations will help to make it a reality. T.O. Bill Holm to speak ill Holm, one of the Westem Icelandic communi- ty’s best writers, will give a lecture at the University of Manitoba on November 19 as part of the Department of Icelandic’s continuing series of lec- tures oiganized by Kirsten Wolf and Viöar Hreinsson. The last two lectures, by Daisy Neijmann and Böðvar Guðmundsson were fascinating and were serialized in Lögberg-Heimskringla (Böðvar’s concludes this week) and L-H hopes to be able to do the same with Bill Holm. Watch for a feature in our next issue of the paper and, if you can, attend the lecture. It will be well worth your tixne and effort.

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