Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 21.10.2005, Qupperneq 9

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 21.10.2005, Qupperneq 9
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 21. október 2005 • 9 “Being a dairy farmer, you’ve got a hobby all right. Those creatures take care of your time. They look after you. Afi started shipping milk to Winnipeg in 1915 so in another 10 years we’ll have shipped milk off the farm to Winnipeg for a century. “I tell you, during the First World War they did not think much of us Icelanders. Then it was usual to see signs in the windows: ‘Icelanders need not apply’ — but they needed us as more young fellows left for the war. The authorities were worried about agricultural pro- duction and I suppose the milk companies sent out people to see if we, the Icelanders, could ship milk by the train. About 90 per cent of the people in the Minerva district were Iceland- ers and the farms had Icelandic names like Breiðabólsstaður, Ölduland, Kelduland, Sóleyjar- land, Melstaður, Espihóll. “Guðjón at Espihóll was quite an entrepreneur. He had lot of helpers and they actually delivered milk into town in bot- tles from door to door. Twenty- one tickets for a dollar. That’s what it was. Twenty-one quarts for a dollar but it started to get a little bit better after the war as far as making a dollar. Yet, those were tough times and what did you do when you asked a blue poor baby man if he could pay and he said no, he could not pay this week but maybe next week. A lot of milk was given away. If anybody knew how much milk was given away they would be surprised. “I never had a lot of cattle. Anywhere from 125 to 175 heads, I suppose. We never milked more than 40 to 50. Be- fore it was pretty much hand la- bour. My dad and my uncle had machines pretty early but I was considered a full-fledged milker at the age of eight or nine.” Helping the community For many people being on a committee of one kind or an- other is considered a hobby. Oli calls it serving the community. During the years he has gotten involved in numerous organi- zations. He has been an active member of the Kinsmen Club in Gimli, President of the West- shore Community Foundation, an important voice of the local farmers’ organizations, breed- ers’ organizations, President of the Manitoba Dairy Associa- tion, President of the Manitoba Holstein Breeders Association, Director of Holstein Canada for 10 years, member of the Multi- cultural Organization in Ottawa and President of the Icelan- dic National League of North America, to name a few. Recently, he has started a new way of helping others by being a guide, maitily taking Icelandic dignitaries around the area. “I guess David Gislason first got me involved, asked me if I could go on a bus with peo- ple on a tour and I accepted,” he says. “Atli Ásmundsson has asked me a few titnes and some others. I don’t mind doing it at all. Usually I get a song or two out of it. That’s good. And the Icelanders seem to be quite in- terested. Generally speaking, I think that Europeans, and Ice- landers are no exceptions, are far more interested in the basics than North Americans. They seem to have more of a feel for what really matters. Most of us in North America are way too busy to look into the weight of agriculture or fishing. People only get interested if somebody comes along with a big crisis deal like the pollution of the lake. Then they think about it for a few minutes. Otherwise we just go to the store and buy Oli Narfason is a born musician and plays the piano whenever he can. His wife Marjorie is always close by. everything we need. “When I entered the Gimli Chapter of the INL they were having a hell of a time. The minutes were all in Icelandic and we realized that they had to be in English. The people who could write minutes in Icelan- dic were disappearing fast. Also younger people who could not read or write or understand Icelandic were not interested in coming out to a meeting where they would not understand what was going on. In a situa- tion like this you just have to do what you have to do. If you just keep on without changing you go into limbo and nothing re- ally happens. We changed into English and it helped a bit. “I was obliged to go to the INL annual conference in Win- nipeg and somehow I got elect- ed to that board and became the president. We had to strike out on new bases and getting an of- fice was one of the first things on the agenda. Up to that point everything was done out of Hólmfríður Danielson’s kitch- en or somebody else’s kitchen. Once we got the office we got Evelyn Thorvaldson to work for us and she made all the dif- ference. A terrific organizer. I think this made a little bit of a difference to the League. All this got me involved in the Multicultural Organization. I’m not in favour of multicultur- alism and have alwaysbeen a Joe Thorson’s fan. When Trudeau got two official languages going in Canada, Joe, who became the Chief Justice of the Executive Court of Canada, said that that “ would be a disaster. It would be the end of Canada. “On the other hand I’m pleased that I along with some other good people got the band or music program going in the High School in Gimli. We worked hard to get that estab- lished and I think it has proven to be a good thing. “I’m also very proud of my involvement in the Westshore Community Foundation which supports many worthwhile projects in the community to make our area a better place to live in. Actually, my main am- bition is to leave the world just a little better place than it was when I entered it. “Yet, if I had to choose to- day the time to live in and what era I wanted to be a part of I would not want to change it. I remember the pioneers even with ox-teams. We had to do everything by hand. You won- dered what the stars were all about. I have seen tremendous changes, but would not want to change the era. I have not put myself as nuinber one very of- ten. I feel very strongly that the common good has to come first and I strongly oppose the ‘me first attitude.’ ‘Me first and if there is anything left I want that too.’ “The North American soci- ety that I was bom into is the best society that has ever been on earth. We went through hard times and had to work together to accomplish things. You had to think of your neighbour and your community. “People were basically honest and hard-working. That is what created what we have. The pioneers created what we have.” Visit us on the web at http://www.ih-inc.ca

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