The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Síða 14

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Síða 14
24 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING, 1994 lectures in the Icelandic commun- ities, and personal contact, the work progressed. Margret Benedictsson was a capable speaker and so she extended her campaign to the public lectern in Winnipeg and the rural districts of the province. By 1906 Icelandic Ladies Aids throughout the province had written the struggle for woman suffrage into their platforms. In 1907, Logberg officially stated sympathetic support of the struggle. Freyja was no longer alone in the field. As Freyja entered its tenth year of publication in 1908, Benedictsson greeted readers with the announce- ment that in January of that year “The First Icelandic Suffrage Assoc- iation in America” had been estab- lished in Winnipeg with herself as president. That same year this organization was invited to join the Canada Suffrage Association. The invitation was accepted and thereby automatically made the organization a member of The International Woman Suffrage Alliance as well. The following November, a group of Icelandic women gathered in Argyle for the purpose of seriously discussing the subject of women’s rights. The outcome of this gathering was establishment of a woman suffrage society in Argyle “Von,” as it was named, the first such organ- ization among Icelandic women in rural Manitoba. Suffrage organi- zations in the other Icelandic com- munities throughout the province soon followed. The Icelandic women at Gimli were the first to circulate a petition requesting that women be granted the franchise. In January 1910, members of Gimli’s Woman Suffrage Association, “Sigurvonin,” set about gathering signatures under such a petition within their constituency. The following month, a delegation from "Sigurvonin” presented “The Petition of Johanna Jonsdottir, et al., praying for the passing of an Act to enfranchise all women, whether married, widowed or spinster, on the same terms as men” before the Manitoba legislature. Other petitions by the Icelandic Women’s Suffrage Associations followed, but all to no avail. While they were waging this campaign, it became increasingly obvious to the members of the Ice- landic Woman Suffrage Associations that if positive results were to come of their efforts, they would have to begin working together with their English-speaking sisters in the pro- vince. In 1911, the Winnipeg Wom- en’s Labour league and the First Icelandic Suffrage Association in America held a joint meeting in the Winnipeg Trades Hall to discuss whether it was an opportune time to present another petition to the Legislature: they decided that the time was not right. During 1912 and 1913 the Ice- landic Suffrage Associations in Manitoba continued to work quietly in their respective communities. Freyja was no longer published, but the two Icelandic weekly newspapers, Logberg and Heimskringla (which threw its support behind the struggle for woman suffrage in 1910), kept the Icelandic community informed of the latest developments in the struggle for woman suffrage. In 1914 the First Icelandic Suffrage Association in America accepted the Manitoba Political Equality League’s invitation to join in a meeting with Premier Roblin. Again in 1915 the Association joined the League in a delegation to the Premier. Later that year, following the Liberal Party election victory, members of Gimli’s Woman Suffrage Association toiled industriously alongside their

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