The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Síða 24

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Síða 24
22 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Autumn 1968 he said in a visit to the settlement of Gimli in 1877: "Not only will your future .prove bright and prosperous, but it will be universally acknowledged that a more valuable accession to the intelligence, patriotism, loyalty, industry and strength of the country has never been introduced into the Dominion.” Icelandic-Canadians through suc- cessive generations, spawned from this noble seed, have lived up in full measure to this prophecy. Even the "Manitoba Free Press”, a paper not always famous for its ac- curacy of prophecy or unbiased wis- dom, particularly in political matters —displayed a rare streak of accuracy when it noted of the first settlers: “They are a smart-looking, intel- ligent and excellent people and a most valuable acquisition to the population of our province.” Who in looking over this impressive assembly today — and in particular who in noting the Icelandic-Canadian ladies — could deny the fidelity to truth of that comment. Almost a century separates us from those early exploits of the pioneer Ice- landic settlers — a century in which settlement has added a countless thousand fold to our numbers from a rich heritage of European and world races — a century in which Divine Providence has been extremely gener- ous to this land and its people. Today, while we pay homage to the past, it is equally an imperative that we take stock of the present and look to the future of this Canada of ours. We . are now 20 million in number — we have the second highest standard of living of any nation in the world- next to our great American neighbors. We live in a land of bountiful re- sources and one in which there is still the opportunity — rare in any coun- try — for personal achievement, gain and enrichment limited only by our ability and our toil. To hundreds of millions of souls on this earth who still scratch out a bare existence we must truly appear to be “God’s chosen people.” Certainly we have a unique heritage and enviable status among men — a nation vast in physical proportions — so thinly populated — occupying with- out fear the northern half of this continent in amicable relationship with the most powerful and affluent nation in world history. All of these global conditions im- pose their own imprint and demands on our national character and out- look. And as with all things in life, some of these characteristics are good and others bad and potentially harm- ful if allowed by drift or indecision or lack of purpose to propagate and be- come imbedded in our national life. What then would I wish for Can- ada, for my sons and daughters and yours as today I ask you to join in a toast to our homeland? I would wish first for a re-affirm- ation of spiritual faith among our people. National character and strength are largely a collective reflec- tion of the individual citizen’s moral and spiritual worth. Under wise leader- ship, this collective richness of char- acter can have a meaning beyond our imagination in a world so needful of moral strength today. Secondly, I would wish for a temper- ing of the permissive attitudes which today and in the future could lead to an undermining of the fundamentals of good national, character. An order- ly, decent and civilized society is not the product of-the “God is dead” phil- osophy — nor of the philosophy of any- thing goes, the hippie or beatnik at- titude of opting out of life. These are not the broad paths along which our people must travel to keep in sight

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The Icelandic Canadian

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