The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 89

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 89
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 87 heaven, or threat of hell, because good is good to do. What was it that finally caused the Icelanders to sheath their swords for- ever? My belief is, and there are many hints in the saga of Burnt Njal, to justify this belief, that deep in their innermost souls, they had a quality, a quality which they shared with the English — the quality of law-abiding- ness. Their sense of justice came from their own natures. Even when they were indulging in their blood feuds, they knew that force is never the ulti- mate solution to any problem. They knew that they could not live on an intellectual level in an atmosphere of violence. They knew that peace is the great blessing, but not a peace that is bought at too great a price — the price of chains and slavery, — whether of body or mind. Bishop Jon Arason, the last Catholic bishop of Iceland, was speaking as a true Icelander when he said, shortly before he bent his neck to the axe of the executioner: “Every man should be true to his convictions, even though as a harvest he reap death.” In 1930, the Icelanders celebrate;' the millennial anniversary of th° Althing. In our centennial year, we are celebrating, among other things, the hundredth birthday of our Can- adian Parliament, a child of the Mother of Parliaments. We have a long way to go. In comparison with the Icelanders, in Emerson’s words, we are only at the cock-crowing and the morn- ing star. What have Canadians of Icelandic origin contributed to Manitoba? I shall answer this question in borrow- ed words. In her book, Manitoba Mile- stones, published in 1928, Margaret McWilliams, offered a tentative answer: .......“of all the peoples who have come to Manitoba,” she wrote, “(they) have most quickly become identified with the British population, and have made most progress in the general life of the province. One of their number who came as a small boy, Hon. Thomas Johnson, became Attorney-General of Manitoba. Their most famous repre- sentative is the explorer, Stefansson, who was born on the shores of Lake Winnipeg in 1879. At the time of the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of their coming they claimed in the west 18 members of the legislatures, 2 Rhodes Scholars, 19 professors, 40 lawyers and 40 doctors, a remarkable percentage out of the 16,000 who now live in Canada, of whom 12,000 are in Manitoba.” A more recent answer has been given by Arthur R. M. Lower, in his Can adians in the Making, published in 1958: “Scandinavians, who are numer- ous in Canada”, said Dr. Lower, “but rather scattered, are usually thought of as solid citizens, quickly becoming integrated into the general community, yet, Icelanders apart, they have con- tributed no one of prominence to the Canadian political and judicial world, and only half of Frederick Philip Grove to the literary. The Icelanders rate high on any count — literary fig- ures, public men, judges, professors, have proceeded from this small con- centrated people.” Just a word in passing about one of their literary figures. When his grand- daughter, Heather Sigurdson (now Mrs. William Ireland) was chosen Miss Manitoba for 1958, Guttormur J. Gut- tormsson was a very proud man. He went about saying to his friends, “I guess this makes me the grandfather of Manitoba.” Had he written his poetry in English, one fact is certain: he would have been the grandfather of Manitoba’s men of the pen — and that
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