Árdís - 01.01.1951, Side 21

Árdís - 01.01.1951, Side 21
Ársrit Bandalags lúterskra kvenna 19 think of Canada as a very young country not having attained full maturity nor development. Naturally we see today diverse cultures marching cordially side by side, cooperating and making allowances. As they merge ideas they are still preserving ideals. They are attempting to weave the cultures and institutions of all these people into an orderly and attractive pattern of our national life. That is our Canadian nation of today and of the future. During this process of weaving, it is important that the spirit of tolerance and brotherly love may prevail, in order that the nation thus formed may pass all the tests that are facing it. Then the question arises. What are some of these tests? First I would mention the tests of Democracy; one of these is the freedom its people have from dependence on authority. Even if Canadians appreciate all the improved standards of living; all the social service work, public health, pensions, unemployment insurance, family allowances and many other things, they understand fully that these are merely incidentals on which they have no right to rest their oars or take undue advantage of. It has been said that Canadians do not wish to become dependent on their government. They look for adequate reward for initiative; they ask for the ability to work and a safeguard for those who cannot work. May that spirit always predominate as dependance brings fear and then follows this danger of following the line of least resistance to please the authorities rather than be cut off from their benefits even if the demands might go against the consciousness of what is right or wrong. Another test is that of freedom. What a challenge the freedom of our democracy brings to all its people! Canadians reject the suggestion that men should be made good citizens by compulsion or coercion. They know that more good is accomplished by inducting the Golden Rule into Canadian life than by government edicts. That test of recognizing the rights of our fellowman has been termed the touchstone of other virtues. May that virtue always stand out as one of the cardinal principles of Canadian life. Another phase of that freedom is that of religion. People of this country worship in many different ways, in many languages. But their belief in God, their emphasis upon trust, hope and love, work for the development of good citizenship. In this land of religious freedom the church, whatever its denomination, is the
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