The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Page 15

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Page 15
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 13 Universities of Copenhagen, Denmark, and Uppsala, Sweden. Since that time he has held the following positions: secretary to the Bishop of Iceland, secretary of the National Bank of Ice- land, teacher at the Icelandic Teachers’ College, National Director of Educa- tion, manager of the Icelandic Fisher- ies Bank, member of Althing (Parli- ament) for twenty-eight years, speaker of Althing, Minister of Finance, mem- ber of the Foreign Affairs Committee, delegate to the Bretton Woods Econ- omic and Monetary Conference, Gov- ernor of the International Monetary Fund, and Prime Minister (1932-4) Truly a versatile man! He was elected to the office of Pres- ident of Iceland in 1952; re-elected in 1956 and again in 1960, each time for a four-year term. In 1917 he married Dora horhalls- clottir, daughter of borhallur Bjarna- son, Bishop of Iceland. They have one son and two daughters. Your Excellency, President of Ice- land! Welcome to Manitoba! Yours is a gracious gesture of good-will! Ours the pleasure and profit! Ours the honor! —A. Vopnfjord TARAS SHEVCHENKO THE TRULY INTERNATIONAL POET AND HERO OF THE UKRAINIANS The late Dr. A. Hunter of Teulon, Man., translated a number of select poems of TARAS SHEVCHENKO, which were published in a book called The Kobzar of the Ukraine. On the page before the Introduction, Dr. Hunter sets out the life of the Ukrainian poet and hero in these epic lines, written as if hewn out of granite: LIFE Born 1814, February 25. 24 years a serf, 9 years a freeman, 10 years a prisoner in Siberia, .3 1-2 years under police supervision. Died 1861, February 26. George W. Simpson, retired Profes- sor of History at the University of Saskatchewan and a student of Slavic history and literature has said: “Shevchenko was a national patriot and no single factor has been more potent in the rallying of Ukrainian opinion around the national ideal than his poetry. The Emancipation Decree of 1861 was a concession to the rising tidal wave of public opinion in the Western World which demanded per- sonal freedom and fuller opportun- ities for the great mass of people liv- ing in ignorance and poverty. Shev- chenko was born a serf. Tie knew intimately the sufferings and tragedies of his people and his poetry is suffused with a feeling of glowing sympathy for the oppressed and deep indignation directed against the oppressor”. In 1914, on the centenary of the birth of Taras Shevchenko, Ivan Franko wrote: “He was a peasant’s son and has become a prince in the realm of the spirit. “He was a serf, and has become a Great Power in the commonwealth of human culture.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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