Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 23.07.1964, Qupperneq 22

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 23.07.1964, Qupperneq 22
22 LÖGBERG-HEIMSKRINGLA, FIMMTUDAGINN 23. JÚLÍ 1964 and Logberg (The Law Rock), January 1888. After these weeklies had been published separately for over 70 years they merged in 1959 to become Logberg-Heimskringla, which has fully maintained the high standards set by its prede- cessors. In 1919, the Icelandic National League was organ- ized. Its objectives were: to help develop the qualities of good citizenship among per- sons of Icelandic origin on this mainland; to preserve the cultural heritage of the Ice- landers; and to maintain and strengthen ties with Iceland. With the assistance of its many chapters in North America, the League has carried out its worthy aims and objectives in a most efficient manner. In the nineteen-thirties an Icelandic Canadian Society was established by some of the younger people of that period and became an af- filiate of the Icelandic Nation- al League. In the Fall of 1942 it adopted the name Icelandic Canadian Club and launched a quarerly called The Icelandic Canadian. The journal, published in English, has an enviable record. To- gether with the publications printed in Icelandic, it serves to keep us informed on events of common interest. In 1951 the Chair of Ice- landic Language and Litera- ture in the University of Manitoba was established by the creation of a substantial Endowment Fund to which many Icelandic people of three nations contributed. This Department is a per- manent memorial to the Ice- landic pioneers and will be a perpetual source of inform- ation and a centre of re- search in Icelandic language and literature and in com- parative philology. The most recent ambitious venture into the field of cultural interests has been the formation of the Canada-Ice- land Foundation. This organ- ization has had a modest but significant beginning. Eventually it could become a great rallying point for all those organizations and indi- viduals who aim to foster an interest in the great cultural heritage which belongs to the people of Iceland and which will, for an unpredictable period, continue to make its contribution to Canadian life. The Icelandic language Why should Icelandic be taught in our universities? The Icelandic language is the classical language of Nor- thern Europe. For one thousand years this small island nation has preserved this “Old Norse” language which was spoken in 50% of the British Isles and over large areas of Northern Eur- MEÐ INNILEGUM KVEÐJUM í tilefni af íslendingadeginum 3. ágúst 1964. GIMLI MEDICAL CENTRE A. B. INGIMUNDSON, D.D.S. C. R. SCRIBNER, M.D. J. G. L. JOHNSON, M.D. F. E. SCRIBNER, M.D. GIMLI MANITOBA Greetings to our lcelandic Friends and Customers GIMLI HOTEL GIMLI, MAN. THIS IS A "COMMUNITY" HOTEL CONGRATULATIONS . . . to the lcelandic People on the Occasion of the 75th Anniversary of their Annual Celebration Day at Gimli, Manitoba, August 3rd, 1964. HOOKER'S LUMBER YARD Phone 482-3631 "The Lumber Number" SELKIRK, MANITOBA COMPLIMENTS OF SALISBURY HOUSE COFFEE SHOPS - DRIVE-INS OPEN 24 HOURS PER DAY WINNIPEG, KENORA, BRANDON ope in the early centuries. Much of this “Old Norse” or Icelandic language has been carried forward into the modern languages of these of the known history of t h.e early countries A great deal era of exploration and discovery is recorded in the Icelandic Sagas. The language has a close kinship with Anglo- Saxon which forms the basis of the most forceful and ef- fective speech in modern English. Icelandic is a re- quired subject in advanced studies in the English lang- uage in the universities of Great Britain and in the older universities of America. Its study is being emphasized more today in centres of learning than ever before, and it is on the curriculum in seventy to eighty universities of the world today. For many years the Ice- landic Government has had a commission which is respon- sible for maintaining the pur- ity of the language and de- vising and constructing new words to describe modern inventions and terms in in- dustry and commerce, all based on original word roots. Lord Tweedsmuir Unlike Latin and Greek, Ice- landic is still a living spoken language. In support of these state- ments we have the authorit- ative opinions of many great scholars including the late Lord Tweedsmuir, former Governor General of Canada, himself a keen an interested student of Icelandic language and literature. In his address to the people of Gimli in 1936, he said: “I wish I could address you in your own ancient lang- uage. Long ago when I was a very young man I fell in love with the Icelandic Sagas, and I learned enough Ice- landic to read them with some difficulty in the original. Alas! since then I have for- gotten what little of the language I knew. But I have always been deeply interested in your race. The Scandinavian peoples are the close kinsfolk of the British. In my own country of Scotland there is a great deal of Norse blood. The Buchan region of Aber- deenshire, from which I take my name, was settled by Norsemen, for there the Vik- ings used to land to salt down the wild cattle for victuals on their long voyages. My own family is Norse in origin . . . You have become in the fullest sense good Canadians, and have shared in all the enterprises and struggles of this new nation, and at the same time I rejoice to think that you have never forgotten the traditions of your home- land. That is the way in which a strong people is made — by accepting willingly the duties and loyalties of your adopted country, but also by bringing your own native traditions as a contribution to the making of Canada. "...we bought it through TO 3 MILLION CANADIANS Many families are launching themselves into a summer of fun by financing the boat of their choice through the Bank of Montreal Family Finance Plan. This low-cost, life-insured plan is the sensible way to finance major purchases of many ■> kinds for all the family. Ask for full details at any branch of “MY BANK”. There are 29 B of M OFFICES in METROPOLITAN WINNIPEG to serve you WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817

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