Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1950, Qupperneq 149

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1950, Qupperneq 149
ÞINGTIÐINDI 131 worthy wife who lost her life in the small-pox epidemic and is buried at Sandy Bar. At the second meeting Nov. 17, we studied about the 3 original village sites in the Icel. colony: Gimli, Sandvík (Sandy Bar) and Lun- dar, changed to Riverton in 1914 with the ccming of the railroad. This was intensely int- eresting and we concluded by reading G. J. G ’s immortal poem ‘Sandy Bar’. During this lesson many stories about the Indians, never printed, were brought up and the name, White Mud River, now Icelandic River, brought to mind. There is not scope in this report to let you know how we apreciated, the interesting and informative discussions about our own community. Next we studied about the Icel. pioneers in L'tah. At one of our meetings we had a guest a social welfare worker, who seemed most interested in our work. We were telling her about the Sacred Temple of the Mormons in Salt Lake City. While taking her holidays this lady went to Salt Lake City, and saw this famous Temple, and she gave us a fine account ot it. At this stage we used certain issues of the Icelandic Canadian a great deal, as it con- tained a large number of excellent articles on the Utah pioneers, and especially on their descendants; and we certainly feel a lot closer to our kinsmen across the border in Utah, who would be completely lost to us if it were not for those articles. We studied the Icelandic pioneers of Brazil. As we had 2 non-Icelandic members, three of our group undertook to summarize and translate interesting facts from the available material (Saga Islendinga í Vesturheimi, and Tfintýri frá Islandi til Brasilíu, by Þ. Þ. Þ.). First we studied the reasons for choosing Brazil, and the conditions in Iceland which •od to this emigration. At one of our meetings Wc used the National Almanac, 1916, and are * grateful to the publishers for the loan of it. IVe really enjoyed our ‘venture into Brazil’ but felt sorry that the few families from Ice- land were so soon engulfed in the mixed Pnpulation of Brazil. We studied Washington Island next, and here again we were helped out by the publish- ers of the National Almanac (1900). This article was stimmarized and enjoyed at the last meeting of the second year. The course for the next year was left un- decided, but a resolution was adopted to try to memorize and recite some Icelandis poetry ai. some of the meetings. We would be most happy to get an Icelandic film, as Riverton has its own projector. Third Year, 1949—50 The first meeting was held Nov. 2, and this time the members voted in favor of studying poetry and short stories by Icel. Canadian writers: J. M. Bjarnason, Dr. S. J. Johannesson, G. J. Guttormsson and Jón Runolfson. We wcre fortunate in getting ‘Sextíu Æfintýri’ by J. M. B. and later his first book of poetry. •At the December meeting we read all the Christmas stories in this book. Poems of J. M. B. were also read, and “Halley’s Hala- stjarna” by ‘Þorskbítur’, which is very well written and took us back to the star-gazing of 1911-12. At thc Jan. meeting the life story of J. M. E., by Dr. J. P. Palsson as read and discussed, and some of us added incidents from our own store of niemory. At the February meeting (Feb. 1.), we had a very ftdl program. Eleven members were present, in spite of the ladies’ curling. Two of the members arrived a little late and out of breath as they came from a curling match. We touchcd on the possibility of re-organiz- ing the “deild Isafold”, and later an attempt was made to call a meeting, but without much success. Then there was some discussion of the possibility of the study group taking over the ‘deild', but we were not clear on whether that could be accomplished without injury to either organization, and there the matter rests. At this meeting two stories from ‘Sextíu Æf- intýri’ by J. M. B. were read. ‘Ari litli fer A skóla’, and ‘Drengurinn sem var altaf að gráta’ The author upholds the Icel. nationality and heritage in all his stories, and we are proud of this. Several of the author’s poems were also read, all very good and with an element of kindness running through them. The real highlight of the evening was a travelogue by Miss Skúlason, on her trip to Miami, Florida, at the beginning of the year. This was very interesting and many of us wished we had been in the sunny south for at least two wecks of this coldest January in 75
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