The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Side 13

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Side 13
SPRIMQ, 1994 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 123 quently discussed on the pages of Freyja. Translated news reports concerning new or revised divorce laws were included. In an early article, entitled “A philosophical divorce”, an ideal way of divorce is described: “My wife and have lived together for fifteen years and have been as compatible as most married couples... But now we have dis- covered that we have so many differences that we have decided to separate without bothering the Court of Justice... and depart as friends.” A few years later Sigfus argued for a more liberal divorce law in Canada. He described the situation of a couple unable to divorce and forced to live together: “He to support her forever, regardless of how loathsome she became, she to give him complete authority over freedom of her body and soul.” Not to be outdone, in a subsequent article Freyja disputed Sigfus’ portrayal of married women as mere dependants. The article argued that marriage was like a company, which “has two depart- ments. Both are of equal value to the company. The money earned by the foreman of the provisions department does not belong to him only, but to the company. In running the house- hold, cooking his meals, mending his clothes, serving him and performing all the other jobs that are necessary to make a house a home, and of course raising the children as well, the woman is doing her share for the company.” Sigfus’ interest in divorce was indicative of the state of the domestic relations of the Benedictssons which had become increasingly strained over the years. When Freyja ceased publication in 1910, it was because Sigfus put a hold on all mail addressed to the paper and refused his wife access to the printing press which he owned. She then left him, and in 1913 moved to the state of Washington where she resided until her death. Women in the Icelandic com- munity were not confined to the home, but participated actively in local community work. With this in mind, Benedictsson in an early article offered her view of how the Ladies Aid Societies, based in the local Icelandic churches, should function. She felt that the Ladies Aids should be less associations of a charitable nature, and more akin to life or health insurance organi- zations. Life insurance was essen- tially the domain of wealthy men; few women at all held life insurance. Furthermore, the executive members of such a society would benefit from the responsibilities of financial administration. Although Benedictsson never dismissed woman’s role as wife and mother, she wanted to see the woman in the family accorded equal partnership as in a company. She also wished to see woman’s role expand out of the home and into public life. In support of her view that woman’s role expand out of the home and into public life, Benedictsson included articles on women in non- traditional roles and reported on the activities of women’s rights org- anizations, locally, nationally and internationally (in particular, her reading audience was kept up-to- date on progress being made in Iceland). Benedictsson was interested in more than increased opportunities for bourgeois women. Freyja stressed the need to improve conditions for working class women, including domestic servants. Freyja was published from 1898 to 1910 (from 1902 to 1910 in Win- nipeg). The need was to convert as many women as well as men to the Cause, and through Freyja, public

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