Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.02.1993, Blaðsíða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.02.1993, Blaðsíða 1
( Lögberg 1 eimskringia The lcelandic Weekly Lögberg Stofnaö 14. januar 1888 Heimskringla Stofnaö 9. september 1886 Inside this week: ------------------------------------------------- C*3 Woman of the New World.........................4-5 ^ <2 M Raising a curtain on success....................5 Children's drawings..............................6 1-1 C»3 t— An lcelandic Lumberman...........................7 ^ w as c a>« > x h-9 se *-* D W w 5K ta ■ a>* CD O O tr^ W . o W tfc H—1 Jj> OO •W SÍ=CI ad to i—i ►< co o **3 532 HH O C*3 £ 107. Árgangur 107th Year Publications Mail Registration No. 1667 Föstudagur 5. febrúar 1993 Friday, 5 February 1993 Númer 4 Number 4 lcelandic News TmARcmEcrtmM. BWy/ Reykjavík City Hall ■ The Architectural Review, published in England, features the Reykjavik City Hall (Ráðhúsið) on its front cover. The píctures with the article are stunningly beautiful and the remarks by the author, Raymund Ryan, are quite com- plimentary. The unique setting by the Eond in Reykjavík and the architectural style created by the architects Margrét Harðardóttir and Steve Christer, make the long awaited Ráðhús worth waiting for. 100 tons in five days • After a slow start, due to extremely bad weather conditions, the wínter fishing season ís well under way. Boats físhing from the south westem penin- sula have brought in reasonably good catches lately. Happascell KE 94, (Lucky) during a five day period brought in no less than 100 tons (220 thous. Lbs). fianlagahalli hins opinbera inokkrumlöndum, sem% af landsframleiðslu 1992 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 iSLAND írtand Danmöfk Frakkland Þýskaland HoOand Spánn Portúgal Delgía Bredand ftalia Grikkland Svfþjöð Eœnomist, pjóðhagsstolnun published figures based on OECD reveal that lceland has the lowest deficit of European countries only 2.2% of GNP. In comparison the deficit in Sweden is 13.8%. This is an impressive achievement considering that lceland is to a great extent dependent on a single industry (fishing). k Birgir Defidt lowest in leeland The Tragedy of He i • ' H I I For more than twenty years, since the government of Manitoba tumed Hecla Island into a provincial park, it has been in the news on a fairly regular basis, particularly in Manitoba. It was in the news again last month — it may become a national park under feder- al authority — and will almost cer- tainly be in the news in the future. The island has always been news, of course, in the Western Icelandic community, in such newspapers as Framfari, Heimskringla, Lögberg and — today — Lögberg-Heimskringla. Hecla, along with Gimli, is a kind of spiritual centre for Western Icelanders, a focal point on which the whole culture, the traditions and the determination to preserve them could centre. Hecla remained the most Icelandic of North American Icelandic communities, partly, no doubt, due to its island isolation. When Iceland’s president, Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, visited Canada a few years ago, she stayed at Hecla. It had changed mightily by that time, thanks to the attentions of a succes- sion of provincial governments, but she was still deeply moved by the experience. One of the things that touched her most was the graveyard. On the tombstones of that small cemetery is written the history of a small and isolated Icelandic community. Anyone who walks through it and reads them for the first time without being moved almost to tears will have either a hard heart or very little imagination. President Vigdís suffers from neither failing. Another aspect of the visit that she commented on enthusiastically was her visit to the house of Helgi and Helga Tomasson, two islanders who managed to sur- vive the purge of the community that was conducted — more on that later. President Vigdís was originally scheduled to spend only about half an hour there. She stayed for almost two hours, a fact that I know better than anyone, since I was sitting in Gull Harbor twiddling my thumbs and waiting for the interview with the president that was to have imme- diately followed the visit to the Tomasson home. The interview was well worth the wait and one of the more memorable comments she made directly concerned the delay. When she walked into the Tomassons’ kitchen, she said, she felt as if she had stepped back into Iceland. She sat at the kitchen table and drank coffee with Helgi and Helga and talked to them and simply didn’t want to leave. Hecla is Icelandic in its rock, in its earth, in its grass — it is Icelandic in its bones. But outside of the Tomasson home, there are few visible signs of that today. When the provincial government proposed turning it into a park, many islanders welcomed the idea. There was not much money in fish- ing anymore and the farming had never been much more than subsis- tence level. Most of them would regret their co-operation. Most of them were evicted — or to put it more politely, their homes and their land were expropriated to make ■ » ■ By Tom Oleson room for the park. Families that had lived on the island for generations, that had fed, clothed, housed and educated their children on fishing and hard-dirt farming, were forced out, some with barely enough com- pensation to buy a lot in Gimli. /t appears that someone in the government bureaucracy had decided that what the new park on Hecla needed was an “authentic Icelandic fishing village.” It never occurred to any of the bright lights involved in planning this tragedy that they already had one right there, probably because the Hecla islanders did not look quaint enough. They looked much like you and me, hon- est working people who dressed for work and relaxed at home; when they were dressed in their Sunday best, they looked much like the then premier of the time, although not quite so plump, pretentious and pompous. They had to go. And go they did. There is now no Icelandic fishing village on Hecla since the government’s plans fell through. There are only the remnants of what used to be, a few survivors, a lot of boarded up, decaying houses and the resort and golf course at Gull Harbour, run by the govemment and losing a potfull of money every year. If the government cannot unload it on some private investor soon, it may also be boarded up and decaying before long. Continued on page 3

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