The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1963, Qupperneq 30

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1963, Qupperneq 30
28 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1963 IS CIVILIZATION SPREADING? Thrain, Hrapp and Kari by SHAUN HERRON I wonder how many Icelanders in the west know what these three odd names are? I hope they are more familiar to them than Niall of the Nine Hostages, Cuohulain or the Men of the Red Branch are to the Irishmen away from their own place. The three names are, of course, from what Ice- landers know with affection as Njala and we know as the Story of Burnt Njal. But these are not my subject. I see from a report by an American journal- ist in Iceland that American influence is winning and the islanders are be- ginning to teach English in the schools. Our little national assumptions are among the things we ought to find un- endingly amusing about ourselves. Our national pride when Mr. Green returns from another international conference with a report about yet another pro- position that “was practically proposed by Canada”, and this American re- porter who with innocent unawaxeness assumes that English in Icelandic schools is a sign of the spread of Amer- ican civilization: they are among the little vanities of belonging. As far back as 1941—when there wasn’t a decent book store from Hal- ifax to Victoria—Reykjavik, the Ice- landic capital, had an English language bookstore that had no superior in Bri- tain—and I suspect no equal—outside London, Glasgow and Edinburgh. It was owned by Mr. Peterson who was also at the time minister of education in the Icelandic government. It may be that I met only the right people, but they were an assorted lot of right people: for example, a laundry girl, a minister of education, farmers, clergy, neighbors, business men, child- ren, and they all spoke English. They spoke it variously, I admit, but most of them spoke it well, some excellently and all of them could make themselves easily understood. The Icelanders com- municated easily with Scandinavians in their native Old Norse, and with Germans and Englishmen in German and English. Some of our Englishmen on the is- land at this time could scarcely be called the reading ipublic and their difficulties with their mother tongue were not less than those of the Ice- landers. .They certainly read a great deal less than their reluctant hosts; they would in fact have been astonish- ed to see what the Icelanders did read in English, if they had ever visited Peterson’s bookstore and been able to read the titles. This did not prevent them having firm views on the peculiar backward- ness of the natives. “Out in the coun- try they drink human blood,” I was often assured by flat-footed Pioneers building Alabaster Airport. It may have been the human blood habit that confused a confident young lieutenant when he and his men were storm bound in a farmhouse. The lieut- enant was some kind of junior chess champion and his condescension to- wards the farmer was exquisite. They played four games in three hours. The farmer won them all. “Where did you get these beautiful chessmen?” asked the humbled lieut- enant.
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The Icelandic Canadian

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