The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Síða 20

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Síða 20
18 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1964 ICELANDERS AND JEWS (A few comparisons) It is not infrequently that Iceland- ers and Jews are compared. When this is done it is most often in connection with the hope that Icelanders can keep their identity as Icelanders and pre- serve their native language, while scattered over the Western Hemi- sphere. It is remarkable that Jews, liv- ing all over the world, persecuted and homeless for nearly 2,000 years, have kept their identity, traditions, and religion. The Jews having done this, why cannot Icelanders do likewise? So goes the argument. I hope that a few contrasts and comparisons of these two peoples may throw some light upon this question. First let us say, that while the Jews have kept their racial stock remark- ably pure, also their religion and tra- ditions, they have not maintained He- brew as their living spoken language as Icelanders have kept itheir language. Only scholars and Rabbis have learned Hebrew for several centuries past. The O.T. is written for the most part in Hebrew, the original language of the Jews (Hebrews). By the time of the N.T. the language used was Aramaic. Both of these languages be- long to the Semitic family of languages. That the Hebrew language is lost to the common people today is plainly seen in the concerted effort made in Israel to teach it to the people. Are Ice- landers likely to maintain their lan- guage outside of Iceland, were Jews have failed. A FEW CONTRASTS Icelanders are a part of the larger group called Scandinavians, which in turn belongs to the still larger group, the Teutons or Germanics. We are well acquainted with the seafaring- activities of our forefathers. Of course they lived on land, yet they were quite as much at home on the sea. Their land discoveries—Iceland, Greenland and Vinland (America)—are an integral part of our proud heritage. They were Vikings. The word Viking is almost synonymous with the sea. To this day we are sea people. Today Iceland gets the larger part of its livelihood from the sea. It was no accident that the early immigrants from Iceland settled on the shores of Lake Winnipeg in Manitoba. The many Icelanders now living on the Pacific Coast may have chosen that locale because of the favor- able climate, -but they also chose it be- cause of the natural attraction that the sea has for all Icelanders. We do not feel at home far in :the interior of a large continent, for the stormy sea is a part of our being. The Vikings were sea-rovers; they were also sea-lovers. A new dimension is added to life when we are by the sea or a large body of water. The Jews on the other hand are land people with more than casual acquaintance with the desert, belong- ing to the Semitic group of people inhabiting a large part of the Middle East. They have never ventured out upon the sea. Being land people only, they have an awe if not a real fear of

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The Icelandic Canadian

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