The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Blaðsíða 33

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Blaðsíða 33
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 31 Can you describe a typical day? “It’s very ordinary. I’m in the office at nine to read the newspapers and discuss news with staff. Three mornings a week, from ten to twelve, I receive people. Every citizen can apply for an audience. Perhaps because I am a woman or conversations are confidential, many people confide many things. Sometimes they are individ- uals with private grievances, sometimes members of societies or organizations. They all leave, feeling they have unbur- dened themselves. In the early afternoon I write my speeches and articles . . . Yes, I always write my own addresses. Around five, there is usually a reception at the residence, usually the Althing (Parliament) or anniversaries. As an example, the Uni- versity of Iceland was 70 years old this year, and then the College of Surgeons asked me to host a reception. Things like that.” How do you manage all this activity? “Organization is my key. I like to organ- ize. Once I have a schedule thought out, it’s easy to follow it through.” “I enjoy people and am never put off by requests, but I am grateful for every evening I can spend at home. I like to read and I like to spend as much time as possible evenings and weekends with my daughter. This is very important. Although I want to keep her off display, I take her to exhibi- tions, which always open in Iceland on a Saturday, and we always attend the cinema and theatre together. I’ve been in office (she counts on her fingers), 17 months, but I’ve tried to keep my two roles separate. I think I have succeeded. At a children’s film premiere recently, the foreign news- man who took our photo didn’t know it was my daughter who stood beside me! Astridur goes to school near the residence with other children from the neighborhood. Both of us come to town on weekends to keep in touch with our old friends; many of hers are children of my schoolmates.” You made a stirring comment in your New Year’s address about drugs and young people. This seems to be a national problem now. “Yes. I am very afraid of drugs. I never realized the number of young people who, in an impulsive moment, smuggled in drugs and are now on a waiting list for a term in prison (not because there are so many of- fenders, but because our few prisons have hardly been filled in all the years till now). A young person gets six months for smug- gling, but in the time he waits for space, he may marry, have a child or get a good job. His whole life may have changed, yet he must still serve his time. It is great to have fun and to amuse oneself, but using alcohol or drugs to forget the moment, to forget the hour, to kill time! Why kill time? Time is precious. Under the influence of such drugs, one looks at interior illusions and becomes iso- lated. Society is for communication, for friendship and love, not isolation! If every- one did this, society would be paralyzed. The exchange of new ideas is inspiring. It takes time — and they want to kill time!” What are your pet concerns for Iceland? “To protect the country and the culture from erosion.” The President is an ardent conservation- ist. Wherever she goes in Iceland, it is part of her ceremony to plant three saplings: “one for the boys now growing up, one for the girls, and one for their brothers or sisters yet to be born.” This is her way of continuing the drive for reforestation, for since settlement in the year 1100, the 25 percent of forested land (much of Iceland is covered by glaciers and lava) has shrunk to a miniscule l/100th. The results of this casual devastation have influenced the living conditions, the economy, the cli-

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