The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 18

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Qupperneq 18
16 Winter 1964 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN say the Viking tradition because I think the term Viking should be in- terpreted in the widest sense not only as discoverers and plunderers, if you will, but also as explorers and settlers, and as the progenitors of the thousand- year old Icelandic identity and culture. I had my first view of Iceland some twenty years ago from a military air- craft that circled the island. I saw snow-capped peaks and mountains, valleys and rivers with waterfalls along the coast, and a barren, bleak volcanic interior. Yet it was a scene of in- describable beauty bathed in colour- ing whose distinct clarity I have seen nowhere else. No wonder Icelandic poets have been granted tongues of eloquence in reciting the beauty of their country. I thought of a poem with the line: “A meSan glitrar gull a hverjum tindi”. But I recalled also a poem written by an Icelandic-Canadian poet, Stephan G. Stephansson, who on a farm in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains penned these lines of haunting senti- ment and beauty: f>6 Jur langforull legiSir serhvert land undir f6t, bera hugur og hjarta samt {tins heimalands mot, fraenka eldfjails of ishafs! sifji arfoss og livers! dottir langholts og lyngmos! sonur landvers og skers! A few month ago I stood for the first time on the hallowed ground of Thingvellir where more than a thou- sand years ago the world’s first parli- ament or Althing, as it was called, was assembled. It is a moving experi- ence to stand there and to recall even those few fragments of the Icelandic Sagas which still cling to one’s mem- ory. In these days when the conflict between law and disorder seems on the increase in many parts of the world, it is worth recalling that it was a great Icelandic chieftain, Njall, who nearly a thousand years ago and on that spot, exhorted his people that by law should the land be built—“MeS logum skal land byggja, enn me© ologum eySa”. I think that exhortation was taken to heart. The first independent Icelandic Republic or Commonwealth which lasted from 930 A.D. to 1262 was a period when law and justice as a way of life began to take root. Respect for law is therefore one of the great tra- ditions which has come to us from our forefathers and I think Icelandic people can be proud that throughout centuries they have remained true to that tradition. THE CANADIAN SCENE But we who are here are Canadians first even though we are proud of our Icelandic origin. We are proud of this origin because our Icelandic heritage has provided us with a background which we believe contributes a great deal to good Canadianism. At this point I should like to express a few thoughts as a Canadian whose privilege it has been to serve Canada for a num- ber of years in foreign countries. In these assignments it has been my responsibility to interpret Canada and the policies of the Government of Canada to the governments and peoples of the countries in which I have served, and at the same time to interpret their policies, their hopes and their ambitions to the Government of Canada. In the performance of their duties Canadian representatives have much to be thankful for. The image of Canada in the minds of foreign governments
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The Icelandic Canadian

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