The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Qupperneq 26

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1968, Qupperneq 26
24 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Autumn 1968 Sesselja Eldjarn Miss Sesselja Eldjarn, an aunt of Kristjan Eldjarn, the President of Ice- land, spent about a month last summer risking in Manitoba. She was the guest of Mr. Gudjon and Petrina Arnason of Gimli, and Mr. Theodor, son of Gudjon, and Marjorie Arnason, form- erly of Gimli and now of Winnipeg. Sesselja is related to the Arnasons and to Marjorie. While in Manitoba she more or less commuted -between the two homes. Sesselja Eldjarn was born at Tjorn in SvarfaSadal in EyjafjarSarsysla in the north of Iceland. For many years she has resided in Akureyri. It was in Akureyri, where, with her sister Ingi- bjorg, she maintained what may be termed a combination of a boarding- house and a home of culture. When Kristjan Eldjarn was attending school in Akureyri he stayed at his aunt’s boardinghouse and breathed in his full share of the atmosphere of that humble yet cultural home. Miss Eldjarn could give the names of several of Iceland’s men of stature who shared that same nourishment in their boyhood years. Sesselja has inherited her full share of Icelandic stoicism and courage. The day before she left Iceland she broke her left arm close to the wrist. The following day was her seventy-fifth birthday. But neither accident nor age stopped this modern Bergjmra. She had her arm put in a caste and left for Canada, arriving in Winnipeg on Sat- urday the third of August. The follow- ing day her brother, borarinn Eldjarn, the President’s father, died suddenly. The President cabled Sesselja the sad news and urged her to complete the trip as planned. The Icelandic Day annual celebra- tion took place in Gimli the follow- ing day. Miss Sesselja Eldjarn, in her stately Icelandic costume, sat in the audience close to the front during the afternoon programme. The mingling of national pride and sudden personal bereavement in her countenance was as the sun, as it, at times, penetrates an opening in thunder clouds. Sesselja carried on her planned trip and, as invitations for visits crowded in, she extended it, and on September 6, in company with Mrs. Marjorie Arnason, started her return air jour- ney, stopping off at Toronto in order to see Niagara Falls, and then proceed- ed with Marjorie to New York where she boarded a LoftleiSir plane for Ice- land. The visit of Sesselja Eldjarn to Can- ada has all the appearances of some- thing which has been fated. Actually the original plan had been to go to the Scandinavian countries and not to Canada. In Iceland, as might be expected, there is a very active society called “Slysavarnarfelag”—an “Accident Prev- ention Society’’, largely engaged in rescue work at sea and in the moun- tains. It has a number of branches and there are women’s auxiliaries. Sesselja Eldjarn founded the auxiliary in Ak- ureyri and has been its president ever since. This year 'the rescue society is celebrating its fortieth anniversary and in recognition of Sesselja’s long and conscientious service it offered her

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