Northern light - 01.07.1941, Blaðsíða 5

Northern light - 01.07.1941, Blaðsíða 5
NORTHERN LIGHT :í I will not weary the reader with de- tails of the difficulties in which we were involved in getting posession of the house. Premises are never easy to obtain during an acute housing shortage, and if I say that there were three separate tenants for whom fresh accomodation had to be found and a number of legal difficulties to be overcome — the rest can be left to thc imaginalion. However, with the exception of the two rooms and the kitchen which were still occupied by an Icelandic family, the house was ready early in December, and on the 9th of that month the Club was opened with a complete absence of ceremony. So many improvements and additions have been made since that date that those first weeks when we had nothing more than the bare necessities seem a long time ago. Then on December 17th. Alec Churcher arrived, and that meant that we could ex- tend our activities considerably. The can- teen was opened and various activities sueh as the Sunday Night Play-reading and Literary Circle, the Debating Society, and the Icelandic classes were commenc- ed. At the end of January the last of the original tenants departed, and the two extra rooms and the kitchen thus acquir- ed added a great deal to the scope and amenities of the house. That is the brief story of Toc H in Ice- land up to date. What the future holds for it is largely bound up with far wider issues, and we can do no more than ex- press the hope that whilst the British Force rcmains here Toc H will continue to render good service. G. S. Johnson. AROUND The Twenty-First Annual Report of Toc H recently received shows that Toc H has now established three hundred Services Clubs in Great Britain, while many more are being financed and oper- ated by Toc H in Africa, Australia, Can- ada, India, New Zealand and elsewhere. A recent visitor to the Club here told of a pleasant evening spent in the newly- opened Toc H Club in St. John, New- foundland. A Club was opened in Alex- andria at the end of last year, one in Cairo in February, and two new houses in Malta now supplement the work of our old-established house there. The first Ser- vices House for Women has been opened in Farnborough by the Toc H League of Women Helpers. The three Toc II Houses established with the B.E.F. in France in 1940 — at Lille, Rouen and Douai — have of course been lost, and of the nine Toc H Staff men serving with these Houses five are now prisoners of war in Germany. The remaining four, who were based on Rou- THE MAP en, were evacuated by the military author- ities and ultimately reached home safely. Toc II Houses at Gibraltar, Coventry and Portsmouth have been totally de- stroyed by enemy action, and those at Southampton and Plymouth severely dá- maged. All Hallows Church, by the Tower of London, the Guild Church of Toc H and since 1922 the spiritual centre of all its work, has been almost completely de- stroyed. Those who knew this lovely and historic church will find some consolation in the fact that while almost everything above the surface has been laid flat, the Undercroft and its contents were left un- touched. The silver Lamp of Maintenance — the parent lamp of Toc H, kept per- petually burning in the church itself — was extinguished but not harmed. The Toc H Journal, giving the latest news of the activities of Ihe movement round the world, continues to be publish- ed regularly each month. Copies may al- ways be seen in the Library of the House.

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Northern light

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