The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1964, Síða 17

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1964, Síða 17
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 15 Extracts from address of Hon* Errick f* Willis The following are extracts from the speech by His Honour, the Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba, HONOURABLE ERRICK F. WILLIS, on the 75th Anniversary of the Icelandic Celebration at Gimli Park, Monday, August 3rd, 19S4 and excerpts from his remarks at the Banquet in the International Inn, Metro-Winnipeg, Wednesday, August 5th, 1964. We welcome today the Prime Min- ister of Iceland, Dr. Bjarni Benedikts- son, Mrs. Benediktsson and their son Bjarni. We are honoured they are stay- ing with us at Government House, and each day I learn more about Iceland. One half of those who left Iceland came to Canada and of those, more than fifty per cent came to the Prov- ince of Manitoba. We acknowledge, with thanks, the great contribution made by these cul- tured immigrants to Canada. 1 am happy to point out that persons of Icelandic descent have achieved many of the most important positions in Canada—in ifihe judiciary, field of medicine, as professionals in the other professions, and also in the field of politics. In Canada we are all immigrants, or sons or grandsons of immigrants. My people left Ireland at the time of the last potato famine and 1 think they made a wise choice. The girls from Iceland were beaut- iful and the men were aggressive and consequently they were soon assimilat- ed into the fabric of Canada, to the great benefit of our country. I have been asked today to speak on Canada. The first thing I should like to say is that our best Canadians are those who respect and honour their racial background. I feel that in the past we have failed to speak out in regard to the fine qualities of our country, and that as a result we are not as well informed as we should be, in reference to Canada. We are a member of the British Commonwealth of Nations, and as such we become not merely a nation of eighteen million people but, in ad- dition, we form an important part of the Commonwealth of Nations of some six hundred million people. We have the advantage of being a pioneer nation—for ithe people of Can- ada are either pioneers or sons or grandchildren of pioneers. We have not, therefore, gone soft in spite of the fact that we are reasonably well fed and constantly attending banquets. The ability of our people to withstand hardships was well exemplified in the difficult period of the 1930’s when our people successfully stood the test of that depression with courage and de- termination. Law and order are well maintained in Canada. Our courts, based upon tire British system, have the full respeot of the people. Our judges are carefully selected and are appointed for a period extending until they reach the age of seventy-five years. Our people have always been inter- nationalists, and not isolationists. Early in the life of our nation it was

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The Icelandic Canadian

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