Iceland
Faces of the Icelandic community
19 minute read Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Hans Petur TergesenHe was born in Iceland in 1863 and came to Canada as an adult to work in the tinsmithing trade in 1886. He moved to Gimli 12 years later and opened a general store, which became one of the best-stocked shops in the province by the 1920s, selling groceries, hardware and general merchandise. He was a town councillor and later served as Gimli’s mayor from 1911 to 1913, and again from 1919 to 1923. The store, which has been designated a provincial heritage site, is still there more than 100 years later and is managed by the same family. He died in 1954.
Arinbjorn Sigurgeirsson BardalHe was born in Iceland in 1866 and came to Canada as an adult to work on a construction crew with CP Rail. He started a transport business and branched out into taxicabs and ambulances. He sold that business and started a funeral home business, A.S. Bardal Funeral Directors, which still operates on Sherbrook Street. He was elected a councillor in the RM of North Kildonan in 1926. He died in 1951.
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Icelandic Canadians are in the arts because they’re artistic
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Leaving home, and going home
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Chess has linked Gimli and Reykjavik since 1880s
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Icelandic-Canadian literature as 21st-century sagas
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012A biased and snarky list of things Icelandic (and non-Icelandic)
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Golden boys
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Towering torte
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Icelandic ties still vibrant
4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Recently I stood on the shores of the Icelandic River to celebrate the unveiling of a statue to honour Sigtryggur Jónasson, the Father of New Iceland. It was a tremendous celebration held in conjunction with the federal government's recognition of Jónasson as a Person of National Historic Significance. It was a wonderful celebration for the community of Riverton, for Canadians of Icelandic decent and a recognition of a part of our history.
We celebrated a leader who embodied the pioneer spirit and established a community that, in its 137 years, would become active in all sectors, contributing much to the fabric of our society.
Like many pioneer communities, N�ja Ísland (New Iceland) endured hardships and overcame obstacles to thrive and grow. The pioneers built a fishery, which today contributes more than $60 million to the economy. They worked side by side with Ukrainian immigrants to farm in the challenging environs of the Interlake. They were builders of winter roads and pioneers in northern bulk transportation.
Icelanders have participated in all political parties, and have been successfully elected to all levels of government, first represented in the legislature by Jónasson. Though Nellie McClung is the most famous of suffragists, a group of seven Icelandic women had been strong advocates for enfranchisement and played an important role to that end. Icelanders were quick to answer the call in both the First and Second World Wars.
They also brought the rule of law
5 minute read Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012We all assume that rule-of-law is a good thing, but we need to remind ourselves that law is only a medium, never an end in itself. After all, rule-of-law can support the best or worst of government, including Nazi Germany. And what are alternatives to rule-of-law? Rule-of-religious-faith? Rule-of-economics/corporate-power? Rule-of-executive/royal-will? Rule-of-militia-or-maiosa? Many regimes combine all of these.
One such regime existed in Iceland one millennium ago. That huge mound of volcanic lava in the North Atlantic, known since earlier medieval times as Iceland, offers rich historical examples for all such varieties of rules and rulers.
Read any of their two-dozen-plus sagas, where the action begins in the ninth century. Their texts burst with stories of family loyalties and feuds, violent body mutilations and court awarded compensations, bargains and bullyings, inheritances and takings: all claiming rule-of-law for authority.
Then read any of the thousands of collected laws (the Grágás) from the 12th century. (An edited and translated version was published by the University of Manitoba Press). It is full of rules governing marriage, commerce, landholding, debt, homicide, theft, gossip, incest, piracy, even farming and livestock.
U of M strengthens historic bond
5 minute read Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012The subject of Icelandic language, literature and culture is taught in more than 100 universities worldwide. Of all the programs and centres of study and research, however, only one department of Icelandic language and literature exists outside of Iceland. Thanks to a group of Icelandic 19th-century immigrants and their descendants, the department's home is Winnipeg and fostered by the University of Manitoba. Encouraged by the continuous support of the Icelandic community across North America, and the old country's equally generous mindset, the department's task is to pursue and promote in North America a cultural heritage that crosses centuries, oceans and continents.
For those hunting after the origins of Icelandic culture, medieval Iceland becomes an unavoidable destination. In fact, it was Europe's smallest and most isolated nation that -- in the 12th and 13th centuries -- pursued and preserved the cultural heritage of Scandinavia at large. The results can be measured in the most significant sources available on Norse mythology -- namely, the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda -- along with several other important texts, including The Book of Settlements. The sagas of kings, saints, and bishops, which constitute no small collection in themselves, have not failed to impress. The same holds true of the so-called contemporary sagas, these reality-bites of Iceland's 13th century epic power struggle. On top of all of this, a group of anonymous writers reinforced this already solid foundation in committing to vellum Europe's first novels, the Sagas of Icelanders. Widely considered a unique literary genre within the context of world literature, the fictional sagas tell of the lives of the settlers and their descendants during the Age of Settlement (ca. 870-930) straight into the rise and fall of The Icelandic Commonwealth (ca. 930-1262).
People do wonder how the smallest and most isolated nation in Europe became the storehouse and creative centre of northern culture. Snorri Sturluson (1179-1241), the politician, lawspeaker, mythographer, historian and poet, may, in part, be held responsible. Considered one of the most important interpreters of medieval European culture and society, his Edda is a brimming source on the art of poetry that had been dying out in the newly Christianized Europe. Simultaneously, when approaching the Norse Olympus, Snorri's Prose Edda provides us with an earthbound sense of a mythic legacy." His key source, the poem Vluspá (The Seeresse's Prophecy), is the most sacred text originating from Northern paganism. Preserved in the 13th-century Codex Regius manuscript, (also known as the Poetic Edda), the poem reveals -- with its shattering description of the beginning and the end of the world -- the enigmatic remains of a pre-Christian world view.
By the sheer force of a poetic-mythic legacy, it seems, a certain cultural passage into the world had been created. In turn, the bridge leading from Iceland can be perceived as it crosses centuries, oceans and continents. This is not intended to suggest that the story of the Icelandic cultural heritage is a story of an unbroken victory march. What is sometimes referred to as "Iceland's golden age" did come to an end. Furthermore, during Iceland's long and, at times, bleak history, the country's inhabitants have experienced several major episodes of not only natural, but also man-made disasters.
Icelandic quiz
1 minute read Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Can you identify the following people of Icelandic descent?
1. He learned how to live like an Inuit.
2. He worked with J.S. Woodsworth and Tommy Douglas.
3. Canola would still be rapeseed without him.
Raised Icelandic
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012A Gimli landmark
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Icelandic settlers of the ruminant persuasion making inroads here
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012Our own Icelandic saga
22 minute read Preview Friday, Nov. 23, 2012LOAD MORE