The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.2009, Qupperneq 22

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.2009, Qupperneq 22
64 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 62 #2 As wife of the pastor, Lara had an opportunity to become an influential force in the pioneer communities, and she embraced the role. She taught school in Gimli in 1878 and 1879 shortly after the new settlement began. Later in 1879, Rev. Bjarnason became the pastor of the First Lutheran Church in Winnipeg. There Lara became the music leader in the church, leading choirs and other musical activities. Their home became a place where people came to play, learn and enjoy music. The Bjarnasons had no children of their own, but adopted three children. Rev. Bjarnason struggled with health issues off and on dur- ing his 30 years as pastor of the First Lutheran Church. In addition to caring for their children, Lara also cared for her hus- band through his bouts of illness. Lara Bjarnason was also very involved in social issues. In 1881 she was active in the Icelandic Women’s Society, which was an organization that provided for the many needs of the Icelandic immigrants and taught them how to adapt to their new country. In 1884, she was on the executive of the Temperance Society in Winnipeg. In 1886, she provided strong leadership in the new formed Ladies’ Aid of the First Lutheran Church in Winnipeg. She led sev- eral fundraising efforts to raise money for the church and community. She is best remembered for being the first to voice the need for a home for aged and or homeless Icelanders. Her suggestion was the impetus for the fundraising of the Ladies’ Aid towards the creation of Betel Homes, which continues to exist today. The Rev. Bjarnason died from his illness in 1914. Lara Bjarnason passed away in 1921. (Kristjanson (1965) p. 63 121-122, 197; Thomas (1947) Thorvaldson (1995) Lara Bjarnason received her formal education in Iceland as a musician and learned informally to teach school in New Iceland’s education system. She must have also learned to speak English before com- ing to New Iceland because the Icelandic pioneers had insisted on English as the lan- guage of instruction in their schools from the outset. Informally, she probably expanded her musical abilities through the musical influence of her father. As wife of a pastor, she was able to influence the non formal and informal learning of Icelandic pioneer women pri- marily in Winnipeg, but also in New Iceland and Argyle. Non formally, she pro- vided choir and musical instruction in the First Lutheran Church in Winnipeg, and informally, she provided musical opportu- nities in her home. Her leadership in orga- nizations such as the Ladies’ Aid, Icelandic Women’s Society and Temperance Society contributed to the non formal learning of their members. The instruction she provid- ed to new immigrants in her home provid- ed informal lessons of assimilation. Lara Bjarnason took full advantage of her privi- leged position as the pastor’s wife to influ- ence the learning of the Icelandic pioneers. Kristrun (Petursdottir) Fridfinnson Kristrun Fridfinnson is described as a small woman with dark hair and striking blue eyes. She was born in Iceland in 1850 and came to Manitoba with her husband Sigurdur and two sons. They had faced many hardships while in Iceland, including the emotional hardship of losing two young daughters in one week. During her lifetime, Kristrun gave birth twelve times, with only five sons surviving to maturity. When she and Sigurdur arrived in the

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