The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 16

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 16
14 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1964 to other nations. Many nations have embassies in Iceland and Iceland has embassies in many other countries. There has been tremendous econom- ic and industrial expansion in Iceland, especially since the last war. Iceland has two modern airlines and a modern fishing fleet. The Icelandic Steamship Company, organized in 1914, is fin- ancially sound and expanding. Recent- ly a delegation from Canada visited Iceland to obtain information about the most modern fishing equipment and marketing of fish and fish by- products. Farms are being rapidly mechanized and more land brought under culti- vation. Through cooperative financial assistance, if required, and independ- ent of assistance, farm homes are be- ing equipped with electricity, tele- phones, radios, modern plumbing and other household needs. Then the hotsprings. They appear to be limitless. Almost all of Reykja- vik is heated from these springs and the system is being steadily widened. But there are current problems, one of which is the ever present danger of inflation. Strong measures have had to be taken to prevent spirals in prices and wages. Strange though it may appear to the outsider, the people of Iceland are concerned about the Icelandic lan- guage. There is the constant pressure of English, in commerce and commun- ications, and to some extent through the presence of American troops. Then there is the American television sta- tion in Keflavik. It is perhaps feared more than any other factor as it pro- jects English-language slang upon the youth of Iceland. Plans to establish an Icelandic TV system is under seri- ous consideration by the government. Now I return to the other Iceland. I should remind you that I grew up in a home where Icelandic was spoken and where Icelandic books and papers were in daily use. Like many of you, the earliest literature with which, as a child, I became familiar was the stirring sagas of Icelandic or Nordic chieftains and heroes. Much of this literature glorified the past and the great qualities of a people who had survived and developed their native talents despite difficulties and disasters inflicted on them by men and by na- ture. This literature taught that sur- vival and development of a people can be achieved only by constant vigilance, constant sacrifices and constant willing- ness to struggle—often against odds. The story of Iceland and the story of the sruggle to survive and develop, which her people have waged through centuries, is worth knowing. It is not a story of conquest, neither is it the story of an attempt to build an empire of subject people. It is rather the story of how a people strove to achieve in- ternal unity, to overcome handicaps of environment, and to earn the right to shape their own destiny without for- eign control or interference. As such it is a story worth knowing for its own sake. More important, however, it is a story worth knowing because the Ice- landic records are perhaps more com- plete or unbroken for a thousand-year period than similar stories of most other peoples. I say more complete be- cause the Icelandic records possess scope and detail, they cover not only kings and battles and conquests, but what is perhaps more important they cover the essential human story of a people striving forward to freedom and liberty. Knowing and understanding tire story of Iceland is therefore an im-
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The Icelandic Canadian

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