The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Side 36

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Side 36
34 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1955 BOOK REVIEWS THE SASKATCHEWAN ICELANDERS, A Strand of the Canadian Fabric by Walter (Valdimar) Jacobson Lindal The Columbia Press Ltd., pp. 365, $4.00 Walter (Valdimar) Jacobson Lindal was born in Iceland in 1887 and was a tiny infant when his parents emigrated to western Canada. As a young man he earned title to a homestead near Leslie, Saskatchewan, by cultivating the land with plough and oxen. By arduous labours he earned the money to attend college, graduating from Wesley College in 1911 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and from the Uni- versity of Saskatchewan in 1915 with the degree of Bachelor of Laws. He left his law practice in Saskatchewan to enlist in the Canadian army over- seas, serving with distinction in France and Belgium. He was invalided home, and following his recovery in health, he practised law in Winnipeg and for five years lectured in the Mani- toba Law School. In January, 194?, he was appointed Judge in the County and Surrogate Courts for one of the Judicial Districts of Manitoba. W. J. Lindal’s “The Saskatchewan Icelanders, a Strand of the Canadian Fabric” is a fascinating and extremely detailed study of the fine contribution of one of the ethnic groups to the growth and development of a great Canadian Province. He shows that the Icelandic strand which has been woven into the Canadian fabric has helped to give colour and strength to the whole structure. Judge Lindal had established him- self as a man of letters with the publication of two previous books; “Two Ways of Life: Freedom or Tyranny?”, The Ryerson Press, Tor- onto, 1940; and “Canadian Citizen- ship and Our Wider Loyalties”, publ- ished by Canada Press Club and print- ed by Canadian Publishers Ltd., Win nipeg, 1946. The present volume “The Saskatchewan Icelanders”, however, places him in the forefront of con- temporary Canadian authors. Only a scholar with Judge Lindal’s background and command of both the English and Icelandic languages, to gether with his knowledge of the Sask- atchewan locale and of many of the settlers and their descendants, could have attempted such a work and brought it to such a successful con- clusion. “The Saskatchewan Icelanders” will prove of inestimable value to future historians, since much of the information contained within its covers has been obtained at first hand as a result of painstaking work and has been chronicled with great care. The migration of Icelanders to the unknown west in the last quarter of the nineteenth century was the result of the reaction of the adventurous viking spirit to the oppression of for- eign monopolies and controls in their native land, as well as to the terrible hardships resulting from volcanic action and unusually severe weather, producing widespread poverty and want. Those Icelanders who remained to fight and overcome these trials pos- sessed great courage, but those who migrated possessed in addition that venturesome spirit which enabled them to face “those evils which they knew not of”. The aims of these migrants were to

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