The Icelandic Canadian - 01.02.2007, Qupperneq 7

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.02.2007, Qupperneq 7
Vol. 60 #4 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 133 only a few had expressed those sentiments at the time and nobody thought so any- more. I knew in general terms the difficult conditions at the time, but it was not until the spring of 2006 when, after attending the Sixth Consular Conference in Reykjavk, I traveled with my brother Sigtryggur, yes the same name as our relative Sigtryggur Jonasson, around Iceland with a stop at the Hofsos Emigration Centre, that the true magnitude of the calamitous conditions was driven home to me. Iceland simply could not sustain one hundred thousand people, so if those twenty thousand had not left, how many thousands would have perished from starvation? Not least in my memory bank was meeting Guttormur Guttormsson. The four of us were invited to the home of the poet laureate where we spent a wonderful afternoon. I so much enjoyed him that the following afternoon, I excused myself from a planned excursion and went back to Guttormur with a flask, and we spent the afternoon, sipping and talking and from that visit I have a treasured memento, his Bondadomr book of poetry inscribed and dedicated to me. My second time in Canada was with my wife Gudrun Ulu, son Haukur Havar (four years-old) and my sister Margret, during the 1968 Islendingadagurinn in Gimli, where we pitched our tent at Halla kofi. I had met Harold F. Bjarnason, Halli to us, in the fall of 1964 when I returned to do graduate work in economics at the University of Wisconsin where he was doing graduate work in agricultural eco- nomics. The third time in Canada was in Saskatoon in 1970. Before settling back in Iceland, we thought we would like to work a couple of years and travel in Canada. At Halli’s suggestion I wrote to the Universities in Winnipeg, Brandon and Saskatoon. At that time the chairman of the Economics and Political Science Department in Saskatoon was Leo Kristjanson who had done his doctorate at the University of Wisconsin. He phoned me the same day he got my letter and that is how we ended up in this strange sound- ing city and province that we had never heard off, could barely pronounce and had no idea where this was. Like I said, we were going to be in Canada for two years, and here we are still thirty six years later. We soon found out there are Icelanders other than in Manitoba. In Saskatoon we were embraced and wel- comed, besides Leo and Jean Kristjanson, by Laxdals, Kolbinsons, Goodmans, Gudmundsons, Skaftfelds, Isfords, Gullets, Thorarinssons and so on. We spent four enjoyable years in Saskatoon where I taught economics under Leo’s chairman- ship. In 1974 we moved to Regina where I took the position of economist with the Saskatchewan Natural Products Marketing Council again under chairman Leo. It was with some trepidation that we moved to Regina where we did not know a soul. However, no sooner had we moved than we met Hafsteinn and Lillian Bjarnason, parents of Lillian Vilborg. Fortuitously we had bought a house two minutes drive away. They immediately adopted us and became our family and closest friends. In our early years in Regina, there was a goodly contingent of Vestur Islendingar in the city. Besides Hafsteinn and Lillian there were: Johannsons, Thorsteinsons, Isfords, Breckmans, Holms, Jullussons, Kristjansons, Fredricksons, Dean and Eleanor Oltean, the painter and a poet and granddaughter of Sveinbjorn Sveinbjornson, composer of the Icelandic national anthem. We did many things together, such as celebrating 17th of June at the Olteans farm with up to 80 people enjoying games and barbecued lamb on a spit. If we had not been to Gimli for visits and stays with Brian Larus Jakobson and family and Fred and Rosemary Isford, we would have concluded that Lundar was the fountainhead of Vestur Islendingar, as an inordinately large portion of our friends hail from Lundar. One bright and sunny summer day in the late seventies we count- ed twenty five or so Lundarites on our backyard deck. One of the more memorable Gimli vis- its was in 1987 when our friend Halli gave

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