The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1964, Qupperneq 43

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1964, Qupperneq 43
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 41 the tiny island of the north to form their new home here, and to send forth their sons to enrich Canada and indeed all of America. Some of them have sug- gested that a library and museum lo- cated in the largest centre of New Ice- land, but shared in every way by all other communities of the area, would be a most fitting centennial. A combi- nation of all the centennial money for this purpose would result in something really memorable, and give all Ice- landers a place of which they could be proud, as well as providing a beautiful library for all residents of the area. Naturally, if such a building were decided upon, and the regional library comes to be a reality, part of the money Would be used to build branch librar- ies in other centres, to which books Would be circulated. Can we in the eastern Interlake work together to such an extent? Or does one community endanger a good cause by asking the others to co- operate? Icelandic people are known for their individuality, their strong- minded singleness of purpose, and their basic honesty. They are a people of whom Canada can be justly proud, and a memorial of such a nature and size would preserve their heritage here. Can a non-Icelander who has made herself aware of their basic nature, and who has adopted this area as home, persuade them to forget their strong desires to remain apart as individual committees, and work together to pro- duce something really momentous for 1967? We have been told that we were thinking too small—we have been told of Steinbach Mennonite village, the Ukrainian village. Can we hope for a similar great project for the Icelandic settlements? Vilhjalmur Stefansson, though he only lived here a few short months, brings our area to the atten- tion of all who read about him in the Encyclopedias of the world. He was a typical Icelandic Canadian, and to quote a review on his autobiography in the Saturday Free Press, “it is for one quality alone that he shall be re- in embere cl: his ardent and in- extinguishable desire for the truth”. This alone makes him the most typical of Icelanders, who cherish truth and accuracy above all else. He showed the world the Eskimo- and the Arctic as it really is, and in so doing, performed a most valuable task for his native Canada, whose future lies in the great North. This man is of us—by using his name and perpetuating his story, we can share his glory. Shall we do it?
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The Icelandic Canadian

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