Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2019, Side 12

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2019, Side 12
VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA 12 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • March 1 2019 FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS OBITUARIES Donovan Carl Einarson September 16, 1935 – January 13, 2019 (Age 83) Donovan Einarson (Don, husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather) passed away quietly at home on Sunday, January 13 with the family he loved around him. His last wish was to remain in his own home. He had spent many days in hospitals in his last years and home was his comfort corner. Don studied Pharmacy at the University of Saskatchewan and his pharmacy career spanned many decades. Don met and married Beverly Harman, a young nurse and they lived and worked in Melfort. It was a faithful and loving marriage. Their daughter, Brenda Einarson, was born in Melfort. Sons Eric and Jon were born after the move to Luseland. The family explored the west many summers before settling in a summer getaway cottage at Turtle Lake. Family life was very important to him. His great capacity to love was extended with the birth of six granddaughters: Katherine Starling (Brice), Michelle Kuntz (Brice), Alexandra Brice, Virginia Brice, Dalynn McKay and Danae McKay. Great- grandchildren joined the chain of love as years passed – Theo and Isla Kuntz, Stella and Kit Starling and these little people all came to his bedside in his last days. Don had one sister, Carol Burns, who lives in London, Ontario. He was a volunteer in many fields in his younger years – Kinsmen, school board, church board, Credit Union board, food bank, community choir. In 1997 he received the distinctive provincial Bowl of Hygeia Award for community service in pharmacy. He was a multi faceted man of many talents – scholar, artist, poet, music and many interests but he was a modest human being who seldom spoke of this but quietly enjoyed them. Heart felt thanks must go to the extended health care teams who treated him with skill and kindness – his doctor-friend Dr. Wentzel, the hospital team and the blessed Home Care team who helped me (the bossy wife-nurse) care for him in our home. Don was a long-term subscriber to Lögberg-Heimskringla and was interested in his Icelandic heritage. He was a unique and caring man loved by all his family and we shall miss him forever. At his request he will have a private family service. Gudrun Stefanie Hudson Renowned for her expressive eyes, her warm smiles, her quick wit and her contagious laughter, Gudrun Stefanie Hudson is greatly missed by those who knew her. Born in Wynyard, Saskatchewan on November 10, 1929, she grew up on a farm and was a graduate of the University of Saskatchewan. She served as a lab technician in two Saskatoon hospitals – St. Paul's and DVA – before moving to Westminster Hospital in London, Ontario and then to the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto. She was an excellent skater, golfer and curler. A proud and inspiring mother of three sons, a devoted wife, full of personal strength, she had a selfless concern for others. Her generosity and kindness were boundless. One of the many accomplishments in her life was the vital assistance she gave her husband, Godfrey, as he fought the ramifications of cancer which had caused the amputation of his right leg, hip and half of his pelvis in 1964. At that time he had a three percent chance of living up to five years. So effective was her help that they were able to celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary shortly before her passing. Gudrun Stefanie Hudson, is greatly missed by her husband and three sons – Kenneth, Richard and Timothy. They were at her bedside in North York General Hospital when she passed away on August 3, 2016. Also greatly missing her is her sister, Sylvia Sanders, in Maryland. She was predeceased by sister Olga Albone, brother Fred and her parents – Olgier and Kristin Gunnlaugson. “Like” Lögberg-Heimskringla on Facebook for instant updates, event listings, & everything Icelandic! www.facebook.com/LogbergHeimskringla “Like” Lögberg-Heimskringla on Facebook for instant updates, event listings, & everything Icelandic! www.facebook.com/LogbergHeimskringla Last December, the University of Iceland hosted a symposium on “Icelandic Canadian Relations, Past and Present,” at Veröld – The House of Vigdís. The symposium brought together several distinguished speakers in the Veröld theatre. The symposium was hosted by Dr. Birna Arnbjörnsdóttir, director of the Vigdís Finnbogadóttir Institute, who was the Beck Lecturer at the University of Victoria during the fall on 2017. Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir was on hand to open the event and bring greetings from the government of Iceland. She reminisced about her visit to Canada and the United States last summer and her words indicated that it had been an inspiring and transformative experience for her and her understanding of the Icelandic diaspora. Jón Atli Benediktsson, rector of the University of Iceland, spoke about the university’s relationships with post-secondary institutions overseas with a special emphasis on Canadian universities and opportunities for collaboration. “Throughout its history, the University of Iceland has enjoyed invaluable support from members of the Icelandic community in Canada,” he said. “The support has manifested itself time and again, for example in the development of our doctoral program. The support has also created the circumstances for us to both establish and cultivate significant ties with universities in Canada; circumstances which are currently enhanced by the growing demand for collaboration with the University of Iceland from universities worldwide. According to international parameters, the University of Iceland is one of the top 2 percent of universities in the world.” He observed that, “we have witnessed a growing number of Canadian students at our university. In and by itself, this development is embraced by all.” This growth in Canadian enrolment led to the university’s successful application for charitable status in Canada. The rector spoke about the fruits of his visit to the Icelandic communities in Alberta last summer and the invaluable contacts he made with the leaders of universities in the province as well as the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. Jón Atli drew attention to the 2016 establishment of “an endowment fund in the name of Stephan G. Stephansson, (1853-1927), the legendary author of Icelandic literature in North America, in honour of his life and work and the profundity of his artistic expression of the experience of immigration. His grandson, Stephan Vilberg Benediktson, and his wife Adriana, contributed to the founding endowment in his memory,” which aims to “ promote scholarly research in Iceland and Canada in the field of migrant and comparative literature.” This work will be accomplished through the establishment of the Stephan G. Stephansson Professorship in Literature at the University of Iceland. The rector closed by reminding everyone of the university’s strong relations with the University of Manitoba and he announced that the universities’ next Partnership Conference will be held at Veröld from August 29‒30, 2019. The theme will be migration, past and present, and presentations are anticipated from a range of fields, including literature, language, history, museology, agriculture, engineering, and earth sciences. Dr. Birna Bjarnadóttir, project manager of the Vigdís Finnbogadóttir Institute and former chair of Icelandic language and literature at the University of Manitoba, spoke about the importance of research relationships between the two countries and the fertile ground for those interested in undertaking research about Icelandic topics in North America. Ambassador Hjálmar W. Hannesson, president of Þjóðræknisfélag Íslendinga (INL Iceland) and former ambassador to Canada and consul general in Winnipeg, spoke about the work of the Icelandic National League in Iceland and its efforts to cultivate strong relations between Iceland and North America. Stefan Jonasson, editor of Lögberg- Heimskringla, was the guest of honour at the symposium. He offered the keynote address for that day: “Lögberg-Heimskringla: A Mirror of Icelandic Life Among North Americans.” The substance of his remarks will be reprised at the Icelandic National League of North America convention in Winnipeg this coming May. The event concluded with a reception sponsored by the Embassy of Canada in Iceland, which was represented by Sæmundur Finnbogason, Canada’s trade commissioner in Reykjavík, who also spoke briefly during the symposium. Icelanders enthusiastic about Canada, along with a few homesick people from Canada and the U.S., lingered over refreshments and conversation. ICELANDIC CANADIAN RELATIONS WAS THE THEME OF UNIVERSITY OF ICELAND SYMPOSIUM Inside Veröld – The House of Vigdís PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON

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