Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2010, Side 31

Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2010, Side 31
Welcome to Gimli, where the Icelandic f lag is as proudly raised at sunrise on the lawns of modest family homes as it is tattooed on the limbs of young men; where fishermen f lex their muscles hoisting hearty whitefish from the expansive lake; and where groups of elderly congregate at Amma’s Café to converse in Icelandic and indulge in kleinur and pönnukökur alongside their hot coffee. Such is life in the Ru- ral Municiplality of Gimli, in Manitoba, Canada. In the midst of some particularly harsh economic conditions and a nas- ty eruption from Mount Askja in the 1870’s roughly a quarter of Iceland’s population – which then totaled a mod- est 72,000 people – emigrated from their motherland in the North Atlantic to seek greener pastures abroad. After a group of roughly 300 Icelanders, who had set their collective sights on Cana- da, grew fed up with a couple years of unfavourable weather and housing con- ditions in northern Ontario their plight caught the eye of a generous mission- ary named John Taylor, who talked the government into doling out some land on the west bank of Lake Winnipeg. Thus, the Icelandic transplants picked up moved on to Gimli, officially claim- ing the land on October 11th, 1875. At the time of settlement the Gimli area was declared New Iceland and the settlers lived as though they were a sovereign nation within Canada. They kept order with their own laws and maintained their own government. They set up a fishing industry and lived their lives as they had in Iceland. Except there were lots of trees, lots of bugs and long, frigid winters. Fast-forward to modern day Gimli and what you still have is, essentially, New Iceland. There is a nostalgic patri- otism that reigns; a vibrant and ongo- ing pride in the f lag and the language and the heritage and the lineage that has thrived for 135 years. This speaks not only to the determination of the set- tlers but also to the genetically inher- ited stubborn pride of the Icelanders that hasn’t died out even thousands of kilometers away from the motherland, where a fjallkona presides over Íslend- ingadagurinn in the f lat prairie lands of central Canada. All the photos in this spread were generously provided by Reykjavík-based photographer Bal- dur Kristjánsson, who ventured to Gimli five months in to seven solid months of worldly travel and enjoyed the feeling of Iceland while still so far from home. Check out his video diary from Gimli at www.grapevine.is – CATHARINE FULTON 3 15 10 12 8 18 4 13 Fishermen of Icelandic descent in Hecla, Manitoba put in an honest days work. 14 A group of friends meet at Amma’s café on the ground floor of a home for the elderly. The group meets in vari- ous configurations each Wednesday to preserve the Icelandic language in Gimli. A punishment has recently been instated for those who dare speak English. 15 Nick, a local restaurateur, is not actually of Icelandic descent and has never been to Iceland but has a per- manent sign of his love of Iceland inked on this back. 16 Helga Malis, Gimli’s Fjallkona 2010, poses in her back- yard as cyclists pass by. 17 Motorcycle and Harley Davidson enthusiasts relax with the Icelandic flag and a beer after a day on the road. 18 Icelanders who recently relocated to Gimli for a change of scenery and now run a bakery stocked with traditional Icelandic goodies. 19 Every year on August 2nd the Icelandic Festival of Manitoba – Islendingadagurinn – celebrates Icelandic heritage. It has been held annually since 1890. 20 Teenagers enjoy some Eyjafjallajökull Ís, named such following the eruption. The photographer has missed the actual eruption due to travels, but says the ice cream made up for it. In the midst of some particularly harsh economic conditions and a nasty eruption from Mount Askja in the 1870’s roughly a quarter of Iceland’s population – which then totaled a modest 72,000 people – emigrated from their motherland in the North Atlantic to seek greener pastures abroad.

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