Lögberg-Heimskringla - 19.04.1991, Síða 4

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 19.04.1991, Síða 4
4 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 19. apríl 1991 Gimli women set the pace lcelandic Suffragettes were right in the frent lines by Roger Newman While they are less famous than Nellie McClung, four Gimli residents laid the groundwork for Manitoba women to obtain the right to vote, a landmark event whose 75th anniver- sary is being celebrated across the province this year. The names of Margaret Benedicts- son, Kristjana Thordarson, Thorbjorg Sigurdson and Steina Stefanson will be prominently mentioned May 12 when the provincial government marks Manitoba Day with a tribute to the suffragettes who won the parliamentry franchise for Manitoba women. During celebrations atThe Forks in Winnipeg, govemment officials will re- call that Manitoba was the fírst Cana- dian province to grant women the right to vote and hold office. The historic bill was passedjanuary28,1916, butmore than 25 years before that Gimli women of Icelandic descent had begun the fight for suffrage which is defined by Webster as “one’s voice given the right to vote”. The most prominent of the Gimli four was Margaret Benedictsson who was born in Iceland in 1866andorgan- ized the fírst women’s suffrage associa- tion in Manitoba in the 1890s. She was also the editor and principal writer for Freyja, the only women’s suffrage magazine in Canada, which appeared monthly in Manitoba from 1898 to 1910. Benedictsson and her printer hus- band Sigfus lived at various times at Hecla Island, Gimli, Selkirk and Win- nipeg, all places where the erstwhile editor organized groups of Icelandic women to lobby for the right to vote. One of these groups — Sigurvon — was founded in 1910 in Gimli where Benedictsson teamed up with Thorbjorg Sigurdson whose husband Johannes was the town’s first mayor. Benedictsson ultimately moved to Blaine, Washington, and out of Mani- toba history, but Sigurdson only went as far as Winnipeg where she died at 99 in 1971. HerdaughterStefania“Bunny” Sigurdson, 89, is still a Winnipeg resi- dent and vividly recalls her mother’s battle for women’s equality. “The Icelandic women were in the forefront of the suffrage movement be- cause they were very independent by nature,” Bunny Sigurdson said in an interview. “They were the first into the fray and I think they inspired others who later won the vote for Manitoba women.” Attitudes toward women at the turn of the century were far different than theyare today. As late as 1914, Manito- ba’s Conservative Premier Sir Rodmond Roblin was saying that he did not be- lieve women should dirty themselves in the political arena. Men of the time thought this view was chivalrous. They argued that female suffrage would be a waste of time because most women would vote the same as their husbands. And they worried that if an independ- ent-minded woman voted differently, it would be a cause of dissension in the home. Warped logic of this kind did not appeal to Kristjana Thordarson and Steina Stefanson who are featured along with Benedictsson and Sigurdson on a current Manitoba Govemment poster marking the 75th anniversary of women obtaining the vote. Stefanson was co-sponsor of a 1910 petition for women’s suffrage which was widely circulated in Manitoba’s Icelandic communities. Later, she moved from Gimli to Winnipeg where she married Dr. N. J. Sommerville and enjoyed a successful career as a re- porter for the Winnipeg Free Press. Kristjana Thordarson fought her battle for equality by being the first woman elected to the Gimli School Board and one of the first female trus- tees in Manitoba. She was married to Bergthor Thordarson, Gimli’s mayor from 1916 to 1919, andthefamilylived at 83 First Avenue in a home that is still occupied today. Her grand-daughter Kristjana Stefanson, 68, of Gimli retains many happy memories of childhood visits to the Thordarson home. “My grand- mother was a very decided lady whose beliefs and thinking were much ahead of her time, ” Stefanson said in an inter- view. “Realizing that women should have as much right to vote as men, she worked hard toward that goal. But whatever she might have pursued if she had lived at a later time, I know that her home and family would have always come first.” Stefanson says that as children, she and her sister Lara were frequently on the doorstep of their “loving and un- derstanding” grandmother. “It was a happy home where games were played and sweets were enjoyed,” she says. “I relive those times whenever I pass the house on First Avenue.” Kristjana Thordarson has a legacy in Gimli in the form of Stefanson and her two children, Gordon Stefanson and Sharon Tenbrinke, and six great- great grandchildren. Bunny Sigurdson still has a cottage on Third Avenue and nephew Johannes Sigurdson, who works for Air Canada in Winnipeg, has a summer home at Loni Beach. But most of the other descendents of the Gimli suffragettes seem to have severed their ties with their roots. Still, they must be proud of the four Gimli women who paved the way for the 1912 founding of the Manitoba Political Equality League which made the final push to obtain the vote for women. “Icelandic women played an active and, for a time, a prominent role in the fight for equal voting rights,” says an offícial Manitoba history. The political equality league was led by such prominent Winnipeg women as Agnes Munro, author Nellie McClung and joumalists Cora Hind and Lillian Beynon Thomas. With McClung at the head, a delegation of 60 men and women from the league

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