Iceland review - 2015, Síða 61

Iceland review - 2015, Síða 61
ICELAND REVIEW 59 tion, Hildur simply says, “When you’re young, everything’s exciting. Everyone was friendly to me.” Seated in her wheelchair, sipping coffee in the communal kitchen of the retirement home Hvammur in Húsavík, where Hildur now lives, her positive atti- tude obviously hasn’t faded. “I’m happy here. life couldn’t be better.” Both Hildur and Gisela arrived in Reykjavík along with 183 other Germans on the passenger ship Esja on June 8, 1949. “I don’t remember much about that day apart from that the sun was shining,” recalls Gisela. “and it was windy. all the time it was windy.” Walking through the capital, Gisela was surprised at how small the buildings were. “I thought austurvöllur was rather strange,” she says of the city’s cen- tral square by which the Reykjavík cathe- dral—tiny in comparison with German cathedrals—and alþingi parliament stand. “pósthússtræti was the only street where there were tall buildings, Hótel Borg and Reykjavíkurapótek.” Gisela was placed at Vífilsstaðir, a tuber- culosis hospital ten kilometers (6.4 miles) outside Reykjavík. To begin with, she worked at the on-site farm but didn’t feel she was of much use. “The housekeeper gave me a leg of lamb to cook. I had no idea what to do with it. When it came to gutting a huge haddock, I was also at a loss.” Gisela felt more comfortable at the hospi- tal. “I enjoyed helping the patients.” Five other German women lived and worked at Vífilsstaðir. “So we had a little com- munity there. We all came to Iceland in 1949 but none of us arrived at the same time. The others came with trawlers.” The friends used their spare time to explore the city’s cultural life. “There wasn’t much happening at the time but we went to art exhibitions.” Their Icelandic friends were eager to teach them the language. “anna Guðmundsdóttir, the actress, took us to the National Theater. We saw Íslandsklukkan and Fjalla-Eyvindur [classic plays] and I didn’t understand a thing,” laughs Gisela. “‘It’s good for you,’ anna insisted, and so we went again. The second time, I under- stood a little more and the third time, I was starting to get the hang of it. It helped listening to the language being spoken.” In the middle of summer, the friends bought bus tickets to travel the country. “In the highlands, there weren’t any roads, just rocks, mountains and wastelands. It was so alien. I don’t remember our destina- tions, only Ásbyrgi. It was the strangest place I’d ever been to. an enclave of cliffs,” Gisela says of the famous horseshoe-shaped nature reserve in Northeast Iceland, only 40 km south of Grjótnes. SUcceSSfUl integration Meanwhile, Hildur kept herself busy. “I helped out with the housework, haymak- ing and milking.” The houses at Grjótnes, where two families lived, were unusually tall and stately for the Icelandic countryside. In the farm’s heyday, it had 40 residents and people came there from neighboring farms and villages to dance. “That was before my time. Many people had moved to Reykjavík,” says Hildur. The language wasn’t a problem. “I was quick to learn Icelandic. My brother had given me a book before I left [Schatten über der Marshalde, originally I marsfjällets skugga (1937) by Swedish author Bernhard Nordh] and when I came to Grjótnes I noticed that the same story was being published as a serial in newspaper Tíminn. So I compared the two.” She never got homesick, she states. hiStorY gisela Schulze.
Síða 1
Síða 2
Síða 3
Síða 4
Síða 5
Síða 6
Síða 7
Síða 8
Síða 9
Síða 10
Síða 11
Síða 12
Síða 13
Síða 14
Síða 15
Síða 16
Síða 17
Síða 18
Síða 19
Síða 20
Síða 21
Síða 22
Síða 23
Síða 24
Síða 25
Síða 26
Síða 27
Síða 28
Síða 29
Síða 30
Síða 31
Síða 32
Síða 33
Síða 34
Síða 35
Síða 36
Síða 37
Síða 38
Síða 39
Síða 40
Síða 41
Síða 42
Síða 43
Síða 44
Síða 45
Síða 46
Síða 47
Síða 48
Síða 49
Síða 50
Síða 51
Síða 52
Síða 53
Síða 54
Síða 55
Síða 56
Síða 57
Síða 58
Síða 59
Síða 60
Síða 61
Síða 62
Síða 63
Síða 64
Síða 65
Síða 66
Síða 67
Síða 68
Síða 69
Síða 70
Síða 71
Síða 72
Síða 73
Síða 74
Síða 75
Síða 76
Síða 77
Síða 78
Síða 79
Síða 80
Síða 81
Síða 82
Síða 83
Síða 84
Síða 85
Síða 86
Síða 87
Síða 88
Síða 89
Síða 90
Síða 91
Síða 92
Síða 93
Síða 94
Síða 95
Síða 96
Síða 97
Síða 98
Síða 99
Síða 100
Síða 101
Síða 102
Síða 103
Síða 104
Síða 105
Síða 106
Síða 107
Síða 108
Síða 109
Síða 110
Síða 111
Síða 112
Síða 113
Síða 114
Síða 115
Síða 116

x

Iceland review

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Iceland review
https://timarit.is/publication/1842

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.