The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Qupperneq 35

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Qupperneq 35
Vol. 57 #1 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 33 Icelandic Women by Lark Barker Walk down any street in present day Gimli, Manitoba, and you will be cog- nizant of the strong Icelandic heritage that exists. Gimli boasts one of the largest Icelandic communities, and Icelandic festi- vals in North America. Icelanders in Manitoba have maintained a strong tie with their Icelandic ancestral homeland. The Icelandic collection at the University of Manitoba Elizabeth Dafoe Library is the second largest in North America, with the government of Iceland contributing a substantial amount of money to fund its updating and mainte- nance. It is astounding that a small commu- nity founded by only 365 immigrants 125 years ago could foster a legacy as lively and strong as the one that exists today. The foundation that allowed for Gimli, and all Manitoban Icelanders, to maintain their heritage and thrive in a new land, was built by Icelandic immigrant women. The Icelanders sustained their culture, and thrived in their new nation, due to an individual determination and a series of integrated societies and community organi- zations. That women were in charge, or helped found many of these organizations is astounding—considering the heavy demands faced by new immigrants. More astounding is the trivialization of these organizations’ crucial role in their commu- nities in the writing of history, and the importance and impact of the immigrant women within them. Icelandic women were ominously left out of the writing of Icelandic history in Canada. If mentioned, they were only portrayed in their physical feminine boundaries. As anthropologist Maxine Seller notes, much has been written about men, much less has been written about women who emigrated to North America. Historians, regardless of ethnici- ty or gender, have overlooked the contri- butions of women to their communities. Fifty years ago, anthropologists had begun to examine the social roles of immi- grant women in their cultures. However, it was only when the women ventured out of their homes and became important partici- pants in organizations such as the labour strike, or suffrage movement, that their work was viewed important and influen- tial. That women’s roles were only being viewed in the context of gender specific roles in relation to the family sphere, and not on the broader text of society as a whole, greatly downplays the role and validity of the essential role of immigrant women in family survival and cultural transgression. A. Weinberg states, “The study of immigrant history has been dis- torted and impoverished by the omission of women’s roles.” This article hopes to recover an accu- rate account of the historiography of women’s immigration history, and to objectively detail a specific case of immi- gration history, that of the Icelandic immi- grations to New Iceland and Winnipeg. The article will also analyze the role and impact of Icelandic women on their fami- lies and communities. These objectives hope to be fulfilled by addressing the role and impact of the immigrant women that have been ignored, or overshadowed. Although there were families and sin- gle men who emigrated, single women were enticed by the prospect of their high commodity as domestic servants. In a speech given in 1890 to the Lutheran con- gregation, Fridrik Bergmann had stated, “Here to this country has come a whole group of Icelandic females. More females than men.” A lot of women that came were single and of best age. They had heard from immigration experiences and officers that they could make a lot of money as maids,

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