Lögberg-Heimskringla - 22.04.2005, Blaðsíða 12

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 22.04.2005, Blaðsíða 12
12 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday 22 April 2005 Muriel St. John Lefebvre Winnipeg, MB We are celebrating the life of an altruistic and extraordinary woman, Lillian Vilborg Bjar- nason MacPherson. She was a daughter, a sister, a wife, a mother, a niece, an aunt, a grandmother, a friend, an intel- lectual, a professor, a lawyer, a librarian, a writer, a shaman, a drummef, a singer. Lillian was a member of the Saga Singers in Edmonton from 1969. She was a lover of jazz, folk, and classical music. She once described her tastes as “catholic.” She was also a lover of many cultural groups: the Winnipeg Art Gallery, the Winnipeg Chamber Music So- ciety, the Winnipeg Jazz Group, and the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, among many others. She was a great lover of the theatre and the plays of her son Ame, and daughter-in-law Deb, and also the films of her daughter Erika and those produced by her hus- band Lome. Lillian was so supportive of her family and greatly loved her grandchildren Gislina, Sol- mund, Eva, and Zonna, not to mention her nieces, nephews, and cousins. As a non-family member, I saw this love in how she spoke of her relatives. Lillian and I have been friends for over thirty years. I first met her in April 1971 at the University of Alberta Law Library in Edmonton. She had invited me to the Faculty Club as I was to be the new Law Research Librarian. I found Lillian in the Law Library sur- rounded by students all asking her research questions. I was awestruck by the sight: Lillian standing in the middle of a host of law students answering all their questions. She was cool, calm, and collected. This scene has never left me. I have seen similar scenes elsewhere: Lillian at CALL conferences surrounded by her colleagues soliciting her opinions about our profession; Lillian seated in a circle in a university classroom answer- ing questions about feminist legal theory; and Lillian with a group of Icelanders inquiring about her writings in the Ice- landic bi-weekly newspaper, Lögberg-Heimskringla. Lillian had a strong capac- ity for problem-solving and enormous wisdom. She had a bright mind and after having met her father, Hafsteinn, I realized she came by this trait honestly. Lillian was also a gentle and mild-mannered soul and after meeting her mother, Lillian Sr., it was apparent she came by this trait just as hon- estly. Lillian loved to travel. Over the years, we travelled many times together for business and for pleasure. We shared so many laughs on our travels. She loved to laugh. Even in her illness, she never lost her rich, warm, contagious sense of hu- mour. Over the course of her life- time, Lillian has received many honours and awards. She was an early Honoured member of CALL/ACBD, as she had been a longtime servant of our or- ganization: as Newsletter Edi- tor in 1978, Executive Board member from 1975 to 1983, including a term as President from 1979 to 1981, and as an active participant on a host of committees and groups too nu- merous to mention. There were a number of other honours of which Lillian and her family and friends were most proud: The University of Alberta Faculty of Law Build- ers’ Award and the Queen’s Ju- bilee Award. She was also very pleased to leam, just recently, of the decision to publish her editorials from Lögberg-Heim- skringla. She was also given the title Editor Emeritus. At the dinner in Lillian’s honour at the University of Alberta Faculty Club on Sep- tember 29, 1999, the following words were said of Lillian: “Lillian joined the Univer- sity of Alberta as the Assistant Law Librarian in 1970, and upon completion of her LL.B. she was appointed Law Librar- ian. She also taught Women and the Law during her ten- ure as Law Librarian. In 1990 she was named Assistant Dean (Alumni Affairs). Lillian was instrumental in developing the Weir Memorial Law Library into one of the best academic law libraries in Canada. Lil- lian was a mentor to librarians across the country and to young faculty members. She was very active in forging links between the Law Society of Alberta and the University of Alberta.” As a trained shaman, Lil- lian saw people suffering and wanted to help. She saw the souls of people and brought out the best in them. She had súch a strong capacity for com- passion and love. She is a role model for us all. Lillian, our lives have been enhanced by having had the honour, the privilege, and the good fortune to have known you. We will miss you so very much. Adieu - au revoir et avec beaucoup d’amour. Lillian Vilborg MacPher- son died at her home in Winni- peg on Sunday, April 3, 2005. Muriel St. John Lefebvre is Reference Librarian & Ses- sional Lecturer at the E.K. Wil- liams Law Library, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg. Jón Örn Jónsson Consul oflceland in Saskatchewan Lillian Vilborg Haf- steinsdóttir Bjarnason MacPherson, wife, moth- er, amma, writer, student, schol- ar, lawyer, librarian, editor, trav- eler, explorer, Icelander, friend. Lillian was all of these and I probably left something out. To all of us gathered here today to celebrate her life, she was a friend and ■ to the Icelandic North American community at large she was known, respected and appreciated as the editor of Lögberg-Heimskringla. The editing of L-H was the culmination of her travels and studies in Iceland to leam her mother tongue and explore her roots and heritage. I remember well her excitement when she was granted the Icelandic gov- emment scholarship to study Icelandic at the University of Iceland. Her editorship was a water- shed in the fortunes of L-H. For three years Lillian, with minimal remuneration, dedicated every effort to make L-H a paper that binds us together and preserves and promotes our heritage. It became paper worth reading with something of interest for everyone and has continued so with her successor Steinþór. I particularly looked for- ward to her “editorials.” They were actually not editorials in the traditional sense. To my mind I would describe them as “Reflections and Ripples Upon an Icelandic Pond.” As many of you may know Tjömin, or “the Pond,” is the centre and jewel of Reykjavík, and Lillian would walk along and across the Pond on her way to the Uni- versity. On these walks, I can well imagine her ruminating upon her roots and heritage and experiences and impressions of all things Icelandic. These she expressed elo- quently and often lyrically in some 100 plus editorials that in one way or another found an Icelandic context, whether it be world peace, the environment, health care, education, her child- hood in Winnipeg and Lundar, her grandchildren and so on. One way of describing her weekly postings is that they ex- pressed the sum and substance of her Icelandicness. And Icelandic she was and proud of it. It was Ulú’s and my good fortune to enjoy Lillian’s friend- ship and company over thirty years. That companionship has now come to a much too early and untimely end. We will miss her warmth, her infectious laughter and the wide ranging and lively conversations and discussions around the din- ner table or over kajfisopi. Her passing leaves a great void in our community. But she now resides with her father Hafsteinn in Gimli, the heaven- ly abode that our Viking ances- tors believed all good and de- serving Icelanders ascended to. Vertu bless, goodbye kœra Lillian Vilborg, we miss you and remember you always. Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca

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