Iceland review - 2015, Side 40

Iceland review - 2015, Side 40
38 ICELAND REVIEW BY ZOË ROBERT. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON AND COURTESY OF HLÍN BALDVINSDÓTTIR. HELPING HAND At age 56 Hlín Baldvinsdóttir said goodbye to a job in the hotel industry and embarked on a career in humanitarian relief. She tells Iceland Review about working in some of the world’s most challenging spots. Sometimes it’s really hot and there’s no air conditioning, the camp or work area can be a six-hour-drive from the capital along a really bad road, there’s seldom hot water and it takes time to find things you need… but that’s all fine—I real- ly don’t mind,” Hlín Baldvinsdóttir says of the sparse living conditions she often finds herself in during overseas missions for the Red Cross. “I adjust really quickly. I may be working in a country from six months up to two years but during that time I travel a lot between countries and also come back to Iceland in between,” she adds. I meet Hlín at her house in Seltjarnarnes, located on the narrow peninsula bordering the west of Reykjavík, six months after returning home from her last mission. Souvenirs, like handmade wooden animal figurines from faraway places punctuate her home’s interior. “Often when I leave a place, people give me a gift. I also like to buy small things here and there. Not so much to have souvenirs but to support peo- ple. People often ask for money but instead of just giving cash, it’s much better to buy something from people who are working, creating something,” she explains. SEA CHANGE At 56 years old, Hlín made what many would consider a late career change from working in the hotel and travel industry to humanitarian work. After starting out in the hotel business at 17 years old, she went on to operate Hotel Esja, the hotel known today as Hilton Nordica Reykjavík, later moving to Denmark to work in a travel agency, and eventually expand her experi- ence in the hotel business. After 20 years in Denmark, she moved back to Iceland in 1998 on a whim. “I came to Iceland to look at my house I had inherited, to decide whether I would continue renting it out or sell it. I always tell people this when they first visit because people wonder why I’m living in such a huge house alone,” she explains, almost apologetically. “I was only planning to be in Iceland for ten days. I joke that those ten days must have had the best weather in Iceland in 200 years. It was so sunny, so warm! I hadn’t planned on moving back at all but I decided to stay!” But Hlín wasn’t planning on sticking around. Working in the hotel and tourism industry in Denmark she had experienced travel and an exciting life. During the economic crisis in the nineties, humani- tarian aid contributions from the world’s governments were reduced. For Hlín, it wasn’t so much a question of “helping people” per se, but rather improving the effectiveness of intervention among donors and NGOs. With years of experi- ence managing hotels’ finances, Hlín had valuable skills she wanted to put to use in the field, something she says she had been thinking about for a little while. “I thought: maybe the limited funds they had could be better used. I wanted to try to share my knowledge.” At an age when many are contemplat- ing retirement—and with no other job offer on the table—Hlín quit her job in Denmark and went looking for her next big challenge. “I approached the Danish Red Cross but they said it was for Danes,” she says laughing, before contin- uing: “They told me to try the Icelandic Red Cross. By coincidence the course necessary for new delegates, which is only held twice a year, was being offered. I applied, and shortly afterwards I was off on my first mission.” FH O TO B Y P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N .
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