The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Blaðsíða 23

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Blaðsíða 23
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 21 this attitude, he must die, Illugi laughed and said, “Now you have chosen what is more to my liking.” Iceland is bigger than Ireland. It contains some 40,000 square miles but only about one fifth of this area is capable of sup- porting human life, the rest is covered with ice, rock, lava and volcanic ash. Thus Ice- land can sustain a very limited population. In 1875, one of her numerous volcanoes errupted, laying waste large areas of farm- ing and grazing lands. Many Icelanders had to seek new homes beyond the seas. Some came to Canada. With help from the federal government, a colony, named the Republic of New Ice- land, was established on the banks of Lake Winnipeg, beyond the northern boundary of the Province of Manitoba, which was then known as the postage stamp province. Late in the fall of 1875, 285 Icelanders, including seventy young children, arrived to take up residence in New Iceland. They named their principal settlement Gimli; which proved to be no paradise for those early settlers. They encountered sub-zero weather which they had never experienced in Iceland because the warm waters of the Gulf Stream keep Iceland’s temperature fairly moderate. Sub-zero weather holds no terrors for those who know how to meet it; but for those who are exposed to it for the first time, ill-housed, ill-clad and ill-fed, there is nothing that can match it for dis- comfort and misery. In her interesting book, Icelandic Settlers in America, Elva Simundsson quotes from a letter which a Gimli colonist wrote to a friend in Iceland, in 1876: “However suitable the name Gimli may be here or whether it was first named as a joke, or in earnest, I do not know, perhaps it is for the same reason that Erik the Red named Greenland, saying that more would seek to go there if the name were attractive.” In the spring of 1876, another group of settlers from Iceland, about 1200 in all, arrived to make their homes in the wilder- ness of New Iceland. Farming and fishing were the occupations at which they were hoping to make their livelihoods. Things seemed to be proceeding well, when tragedy struck. In the winter of 1876, smallpox raged through the community. One seventh of the settlers, most of them children, fell victims to this scourge. How did the inhabitants of Manitoba react to the misfortunes of the Icelandic settlers? By sending them medicines, warm clothes, good food, in a spirit of Christian charity. Not a bit of it. Their reaction was quite different. They quarantined them. They posted armed guards at the northern boundary of Manitoba to isolate the settlers in their own bailiwick. Next spring the settlers were not able to visit Winnipeg to buy seed for the crops they had hoped to grow. But the Icelandic settlers could not deny what destiny had in store for them in their new homeland. They were destined to triumph over all the odds that faced them, including a hostile attitude on the part of the older settlers. And it did not take them long. In explaining the rapid rise of Icelandic Canadians to eminence in every phase of life in Canada, Judge Walter J. Lindal once said that they did it by proving that they were just a little better than the next fellow, that they gave to every task which they undertook just an ounce or two more of extra effort. He was not speaking with a large chip of conceit on his shoulders. He stood upon firm ground. He was speaking the literal and the exact truth. In forging ahead on all the practical fronts of life, the Icelandic Canadians were not deaf to the claims of the spirit. The pens were always active. On this score, one who has earned the right to be heard, Dr. Watson Kirkconnell, has written: “The pioneer generations of the English and French in Canada were practically in-

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The Icelandic Canadian

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