The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Side 16

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Side 16
14 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1955 HOME IN A NEW LAND Thrill and Joy of Promise by G. F. GUDMUNDSSON Looking for some calves, and mak- ing my way through brush and under- growth to the east end of the coulee pasture, I came, for the first time in years, upon the site of our homestead hut, our first habitation in Saskat- chewan. It did not merit the appel- lation of a log cabin; it was simply a dugout in the coulee bank, the ends and the back bank forming the three walls, while the front and roof were made of poles and odd ends of used boards, shipped as part freight in a settler’s car from Winnipeg. The roof was topped with stripped sod. Now there remained only a slight depression in the bank, on which na- ture had laid a grass-thatched cover over the years. Coming to this selected place, I stopped and humbly stood in reverent remembrance. For me this was holy ground and the trespasser here should, “put off his shoes.” Here we had, desperately poor, spent our first winter and put in our first Christmas in a strange land, and here as if by magic, mother had made it a warm, glowing, candlelit Christmas. Somehow she found something new for each one of us six children, and for me as the first born, there was a brand-new, man-styled suit—that is new as mother had made it from left- over, handed-down garments, yet never was a young man prouder of his attire. There was no turkey with trimmings. Bush rabbits were our main meat ra- tion that winter. But on each end of the table were stacks of crisp thin-fried bread cakes, a national Yuletide food in the Old Country, artistically design- ed and cut out, mainly in leaf-like pat- tern, inside of the circled rim. And here my father, though an un- schooled layman, taught the catechism to seven or eight youngsters that win- ter, and prepared them for their con- firmation which would be conducted by the minister coming out from Win- nipeg in the spring. Recently I talked with a lady who had been one of the girls in that group. “As humans do,” she said, “I have fait ered, but since that winter I have never doubted what your father so persistently instilled in us: “There is a moral law controlling the uni- verse, which people and nations violate at their peril.” Father had managed to transport our books, so we had good reading, and for many an hour, in this lowl) hut, we sat at the feet of the masters of all ages. The following spring we were hosts to a large family of settlers, who in the homesteaders tradition, stayed with us until some shelter had been put up on their own holdings. In some strange way, arrangements were made for their accommodation in our cramped quar- ters and for their presence at our table, goodwill and generous hearts making

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