The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Síða 26

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1961, Síða 26
24 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1961 when he was offered the post of ethn- ologist on an expedition which pro- posed to operate in the Canadian North. While at Herschel Island waiting for the expedition’s ship to arrive, he was told by sailors from a whaler of Eskimos they had seen in Victoria Is- land who resembled people of Europ- ean ancestry. The possibility that these strange people might be descendants of the “lost” Norse colonists of Green- land fired his desire to see them at first hand. The ship was wrecked and Stefans- son found himself footloose on the Arctic coast. With little money and no knowledge of the ways of the country, he decided to learn how to become self-supporting by living with Eski- mos and, nearly as possible, becoming one of them. During the winter of 1906-1907, he was a member of two successive Eskimo households. Young and inexperienced when he arrived, his head was filled with the myths upon which the popular view of the Arctic is based; but approach- ing it as an anthropologist, he soon saw that a land in which children are born and live happy lives through to old age cannot be the terrible place of popular imagination. Elis success in the Arctic is not due as many believe to exceptional endurance, but to his intelligence. By spring the Arctic had already claimed Stefansson for its own and the desire to visit the people who re- sembled Europeans had become a fix- ation wth him. In order to do so he must organize his own expedition, and this took him to New York where he quickly gained the backing of the American Museum of Natural History. He proposed to go alone to the Arctic, living mainly “off the country”, and especially to spend some time with the Eskimos in the vicinity of Victoria Island. A University of Iowa classmate, R. M. Anderson, a naturalist, wrote suggesting that without greatly increas- ing the cost two could secure much more information than one, and asked if he might join the expedition. Ste- fansson agreed and had no difficulty in securing the Museum’s consent. Owing to various delays, it was not until the spring of 1910 that Stefansson came into contact with people (at Cape Bexley) who had never seen white men, and a few days later, on the south shore of Victoria Island, he encounter- ed the first of the Eskimos he had most wished to meet. His impression of that event is given in My Life With the Eskimo (1913): When I saw before me these men who looked like Europeans in spite of their garb of furs, I knew that I had come upon either the last chapter and solution of one of the historical tragedies of the past, or else that we had here a new mystery for the future to solve: the mystery of why these men looked so much more Euro- pean-like than other Eskimos if they are not of European descent. In the fall of 1912, the expedition re- turned to the United States, and Ste- fansson was front-page news; magazines requested articles and he was in de- mand as a lecturer. The discovery of the “Blond Eskimos” as an imaginative reporter dubbed them, greatly over- shadowed in public interest the other accomplishments of the expedition. In spite of his many activities, Ste- fansson was promoting a new expedi- tion — one that would differ from any of its predecessors. At that time the Arctic Ocean, except in the vicinity

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The Icelandic Canadian

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