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a i& _ a a ti MUnMtMM 4 H I March of the Peasant ftHlflHfft theFlnnishCoiisul Rebel Army and Co-0p-er atioa Messrs Vapaa Sana Press 260 Spadlna Avenue Toronto Dear Slrs:— You have been klnd enough to suggest that I mtgbt wrlte a brlef artlcle for your tenth Annlversary number and that I mlght perhaps reralnlsce a little in connectlon Uh the Finnish Consular work at Toronto during the lat ten years I was appointed Consul in 1933 and at that tlme the appolnt-men- t ot a Canadian as unueual but as part of a deflnite policy hlch the Government or Finland had decided on ith the object I believe of maklng their country better known to the people of Canada and the United States The appointment was an honour hlch I deeply appreciated Some of the steps hlch the Consulate asslsted in ere as folio ws: — Hecognlzlng that there ere may unlts of churches and ocieties e formed a loose body havlng represent-atlve- s from these organlzatlons and Uh thelr asglstance e lmmedlately undertook as an experiment the pre-entatl- on of an exhlblt at the Cana-dian National Exhibition 'Ihls be-ca- me the Finnish Advancement Atso-ciatlo-n under the tlrst president Air KS Parviainen and now under the Presldency of Mr August Kaplas 1 as gratlfylng to feel that this -- ork as done for several years volunUrl-l- y by Finnish orkmen and that a commendable exhlblt as glveii to the Canadian people Later tne Fin-nish Government recognized the lm-portan- ce of the ork and asslsted us Uh a small ftnancial grant from year to year 1 belteve this unlnter-rupte- d exhlblt beteen the years 1934 untll 1910 gave to Canadian people an llluminatlng picture ot that little Republlc'8 accomplishmenls ana Us anvanced clMllzation I endeavoured also to bring as peakers to the various Independente Day Functlons Kale ala Cclebni-tlon- s and the other pubiic occaslons promlnent Canadian and outstand-in- g Flnns on the Comment orking on the assumption that wnile Can-adla- ns ere partlculariy intcreated In eelng Finnish costumes and cus-to- m and hearlng Flnnsh music Fin-nlsh-Canadl- ans ere eiually tnterest-- 1 In seelng Canadlans and hearlng thelr addresses and their music lt as an opportunity ot creatlng u bond of frlendship beteen old Can-adlans and new Canadlans and I am snre that lt as appreciated enuall) by both At the tlme of the World s Falr in New York a shlpment was recclved of splendld books on Finland and these ere dlstrlbuted to every pub-11- c and hl?h school in the city ot Toronto and to environs and the volume of replles e receivcrt from prlnclples of these scnoois oetokened the extreme tnterest the educatlonal-ist- s had for Finland Ve must also remember the assUt-nnc- e hlch the Finnish Government gave us In another -- ay of advancing knoledbe of Finland to mnadlans In 1938 they ent out nt a suosiantiai cost that onderrul group ot young men knon as the iU Choir Their ojourn as brlef In 'loronto but the publlcUy attained and tne tncndsmp hlch they made among canadlans nceompllshed much they cie so uccesful that In the tollo Ing year the Finlandia Choir nn outer group came to this city in the courso of I thelr American tour Uh the same uccess as their prertecessors lt Is no exaggeration thcrcrore to ay that In Canadian hcarts es-teeni for Finnish people and lor Finland has been ollcliy tostered and hen the Itrst war Uh Flnlind nnd Ilula broke out in 1939 the af-ftvtion- ate rcgard ot Canadlans for the Flnns as armly demonstrated At the present tlme one ould assume that Flnns unin Canada ould be In an embarrasin? Itua-tlo- n by reason of the tact that ha Is at ar Uh Itussla and tnat llussla is ah ally of Great Uritaln Such however lias not been the rae the Canadian Government has regaulcd Finland together ith ltumanla nnA Hungary as being piaced m her present position by torce ot rtrcums-tance- s and therefore peclal and aluable concessions have been glven to Finnlsh-National- s tn Canada Finnlsh- -Nationals as xvell as naturalized Fians are vrorklng in Canada' ar Industries and haTe volunteered for servlng In Canada'8 anny and haTe been carrying on thelr orK wlth the ame Industry and integnty hkh characterlzed thelr --wort 1 Pace times and they wlll contlnue thelr work In this democracy untll Finland Itself Is afe from dictatorship U Is tili very much in our mlnds and we remember Uh gratltude the concerted eftort put forard by Cana- - LbbbbbbbbbbC ''' Laal ra 2 BIIIIIIIk ii__ H A Klngsley Graham ilians and Finns allke during 1939 and the sprlng of 1940 hen Finland as In dlre perii for her very exiat- - ence Not only in Toronto but thioughout Ontario and the whole Dominion of Canada a pirit ot unlon preailed among Finnish people and unlty between Flnns and Canadlans In thelr hour of need I eli remember golng to the Church of AU Nation and seelng the cascs of goods plled up and ready for chip-me- nt to( Finland from the Canadian Hed Cross The Tastor the Ileverend August I-ap-pala had gUen thera the use of one of thelr largest rooms In the church for this purpose From the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Kmplre alone came glfts of new clothlng valued at several thoujand dollars hlch ere packed and sent over nt this crlttcal perlod The Itev K) osti Toppila ns indefatlzable in his ork as 1'adre of the Finnish Volunteers and lookcd after their comforts The Finnish people also ralsed a Commlttee for endlng funds dlroaly to Finland Ith Mr Uno Salonen as President and Mr Matti Pennanen as Treasurer This as a dlrect cubs-crlptlo- n by Finnish people and ai-thou- gh I have not the exact amount approxlmately $10000 as ralsed la addltlon to other sums aforementlon-e- d for Finnish Ilellef This ork as belng done in dozens of centres throughout Canada and I am happy to thlnk tliat although e are not able to forard nld to Fin-land the groups are tili orklns for the beneIt of Canada and the Canadian soldlers allors and air men and hen tho opportunity arlei they 111 be able to play once morc the Good Samarltan to thelr kln in Finland Ali Canadian reallze that Flnns are better citizens of Canada because they were true and loyal to the lanJ of thelr blrth Ali Finns reallze that they are bet-ter representatives of Finland b:ue they are true and loyal to the land of their adoption It has been my pnvilese to sen e under three Consul Generais Mr Jal-kanen Mr Aitio and Mr Kuusarro the last for a tery bner pertotl nnd thelr asslstance and guidance a tlmulatlng and ise unout excep- - tlon they tressed their desire that Finnish Nationals unin tne bouud-arle- s of Canada should be loyal useful resldents In the land rnicn they adopted and that Finns rithln Canada hould be recognized as out-tandln- g and delrable retdent of this country and that by being such resldents they rere pertormlng In effect a contlnuous useful enrice as to the quality of citizens Finland ent from her hores Not only In Toronto out throngh-ou- t the Provlnce and the Dominion ha a pirit ot harmony and acconl prevalled among Finnish people and small dlfferences ha e been adjusied and a toleration typical ot boih the democracy of thelr homeiand and the democracy of this country nas been By V A Koskennierpi (This poem as rltten In memory of the Finnish peasants unsuccessful armed revolt In 1596 againsti the oppressive Swedish autocratic rule of Klaus Fleming) Around us is the snow and ice the frost and the hate and severe commandments from Fate Who is struck by our club he never again stands up The gales have chosen us The night has confidcd her secrets the wolf has lent his teeth and the lynx his sharp eyes to us Around us is the snov and ice the frost and the night Tremble! Tremblel Our love and hate are blazing like flames Who could hold out on our ways! VVhen once is struck our zero hour — Hait the victory is ours! VVe don't care for charities of strangers we carry on the torcli of the North VVhosoever ia born on the Northland's gate he knovs his vay and fatc He must go straight not step aside Tremble! Tremblo! evldenced 'Ihere ere nard ana i dltricult jears during tne uepresaion and there ere harder years aheau during the ar but durliig ali these troublesomc tlmes the finnish lesi-dent- s I am proud to ay havt shouldered their burden ithuui grumtling and have made thelr cont-ributlo- n lojally to this country During the tlrst Mnnish-KusMa- n War the Finnish resldents nnd Canad-lans too gae unqualtliea support to FInland'8 effort under tlie tlmulat-lng leadershlp of Colonel Fraser-Hunte- r and thelr Organizer Mr Kino Lackstrom Today e are unaote to do tor Finland as much as e -- ould like to do Dlfflcult and adverse circums-tance- s have made her an enemy ot this country but one 1 may use the term ho is a "tnendiy enemy' llefore the second innisn-KusÄla- u ar a commlttee ralsed some $20000 for graln to be shlpped to rinland The purchase as not accomplished because of the clrcumstances above rererred to ibut through tlme 1 promlse jou the object of this :a-a- m collectlon III be accomplished and it III be done at the earnest poäMble moment To the memoers of tho commlttee and to the contributors to this fund Mnland Hl ome day glve thank It has been a very real pieasure lor me lo nsslst in these various orks nnd ihe frlendshtp nich l have ma de and the ords of nppreciatiou hlch I have recelved trom the Fin nlsh people from tlme to time has more than repald me tor natever matl results have been accompllsheo Scandinavian Solidaiity haslcountries had likeulse to by "see hands" t„f nl the Scandinavian natlons Not that tho a new far But the and durcss of the ar hlch outvardly hxs eparated countrles more ever has come into full bloom lt vouM bo to quotc publit leaders cspeclallv in Sweden to that no hov var or hov the future Is to be shaped countnei oufht to have pooltd interests more closely in the and slm?ly try to do In the future In the Interval betvvecn the to orid wars many steps verc taken that There vvtre for instance the special trcatles signed in the "tvi-enti- es niaking war among for any vvhatever iiixrat nnt vrn cxceptlng the honor" and terests" which ho in instances In the early the j-cal-led pacts were a promisiru beginnlng ot closer economic coope-ratio- n were included small Europan states such as and The Nethertanda of states already practised a certain amount of cooperatlon as the so-call- el vitml Uie I-ea-pn on behalf of Finland l express tne that in to come the orK of the multltude of rinmsn indiia-ual- s ho hae so unseiiisnty cont-- ributed to these unuertakings of real alue to nniand It has been a pmilege recelve from tiine to time various members of and otltceis of the Government in Toronto and to have extended to the of our local city and also our provincial authoiltles I believe that they have bacic to Finland ith them tne impression that Canada also is a demociacy un idea is and aims very simllar to of nniand I express also a vord my colleague Sven Madius tie untiringiy and uneuishly on behalf of the Finnish people uunng the entlre nlne of his asso-ciation Ith the Consulate Vice-Cons- uI and his enthusiasm anu service as invaiuame to tne Hn-nls- h people In closln? this rambling narrative may l ay tnat during the nlne of my ervice our pui-lt-utlo- n — Vapaa Sana — has evtremely helptul In ork -- hlch i consider valuable to tne consulate has always tood tor good Citizen-shl- p and harmony betcen old and new Canadlans and 1 express the that this tlrst ten ot your publlcatlon is but the beginnm of of successtul journal-ls-m on the part of our nespaper for the beneflt of ali ery Klngsley If Is one idea been Ibeen vlndicated the var lt is that let each other their — tv for unltv nmonc" that Is exchange ndvancu tnfonra- - idea Is one fiom it under stress these than lt easy frem show their convlction matter tne ends these their past must lt tovvard goal earlv cause "national hnve rt minv 'thlrtles came Oslo hlch these also other Belgium Most these had poU tlcal Bloc" ithin hope years lii pioe great to parliament Finnish them elcome taKen progiessive those May special to orked yeais as ratner years beeu It close hope years many years Yours truly Graham there vhkh wont them tion But whlle much prosress was undoubtcdly mad toward greater unity the kestono in the arch namely full political merer or even a system of mutual mlMtary defense was novcr sllppcd Into place The common danger was not realized untll too late ImvanTy too much progress toward unlty was made after thf first World var New contacts vtre established and new coordinatlon achleved In such various fields as business leglslatlon cooperatives (retail and wholeja!e as vell as manufacturlng enterprlses) labor unirn organlzatlon social welfarc promotlon sclentific rcscarch and university cducatlon and flnally— certainly of no lcss Importance— competltive iports hen "forelgn" Mtal in teams can be tlcomed and treated sened as fatrly by the "fans" as well as by In the players there is hope for Inter-national cooperatlon In the promotlon of such frlendly relatlons between the Scandinavian countries much useful ork has been done steadily and persistently by a oclety called "Norden" havlnz branchei In each country It has arranged -- frequent conferencei especl&Uy among teachers who are im nc wst iv'"wi v -- - of Nstlons In the negotlations of future mind It has sponsored ex-post- -ar trade trcatles vtth thj!Changes of lecturers It has arranged larger powers the Scandinavian joint art exhibits and translationj Canadian Finru ccnstitute one of the smaller lmmlgrant groups thelt total number betn? approlnately 40000 They are scattered across our vast country although Uie largest Finnish centres are in tlic Port Arthur district the t1n cities la the Porcuplne Gold Belt in the north in central Ontario around Sudbury and Oirult Ste Marie and in the south in Toronto Nevertheless the Finns tertalnly lead overwhelmingly in one partl-(ul- ar sphere desplte their minority namely: In co-cpcratl- ve enlerprises According to Information in the the possession of the wnter the Finns In Canada own and op-iht- e the follolng co-opcrat- ive conccras: in British Columbia the Solntula and Vebster's Corner Consumor co-operat- ive stores In Ontario: tvo co-opera- ties at Pcrt Arihur the People's Co-opcratl- ve stcres and the International Co-operatl- ve Coticern Nipigon Co-cpcrat- lve Concrn Sault Ste Marie Co-optrat- lve Conccrn the Sudbury co-operat- ive Dairy tvo concerns at Timmins The Con&UTjers Co-operat- lve Society and the Vorkers Co-opcrat- lve Concern and the Wanup Farmers Co-opcratl- ve Concern Hence ten fairly succcssful co-operat- ive concern3 No statlstics are to hind of the total annual busincs3 tuiToer but for eample the Tiiainin3 Cu-opera-t- ive Concerns tar exceed the nilllon mark Alco In the others busness transactlons amount to con3iderable ums so that allos-the- r their annual business Is worth milllons of dollars And this not ali These concerns have brarch stores elsehere thu3 Increaslng the number of Finnish co-operat- lve enterp ie3 in Canada nearly to thlrty Furthermore the Flnns ha"c other co-operat- lve enterprlses such as co-cperat- lve boardln? hourei restau-rant- s and bakeries Besidcs some co-operat- lve con-cerns established by Finns have fallcd The reason for thld was not of books as ved as stimuated a more vvidespread readmg kiuledgo of ali the Northern langiages lt has publlshed "year books" Even after the war be?an lt managed to stage a "Danlsh Week" in Stockholm and a "Swedish Week" in Copen-hagen Literary men exchanged vlslts and gave lectures or reaa theit orks A book about Siden was publlshed In ooth Swedish and Danlsh But perhaps most sihrnlftcant of ali Joint commlttees of his-torta- ns have been appointed to revise the text books m htetory so as to eliminate lrritatlng errors ard unnecessary exprc3Ions of jmgoism Finslly there have been e:changs of old var trophies Just as between the Northern and Southern states to vlpe out the final traces of bltter-nes- s from the Civil War hen such things can be donp there Is good hope for "a morc perfect union" The war to be sure has put an end to many of these activies out on the other hand it has also hclght-ene- d the desire for greater unlty as lt has brought suffering vhether physical or mental or both to each country In a lecture at the Univer-sity of Gothenburg glven last Octo-be- r Professor Curt Welbull of Lund University as able to demonstrato that historically too the Scandina-vian countrles whlch orlglnilly had the same language and the same customs had alvvays sought greater unlty unen under Gcrman pressure As early as 1363 he sald a monk at Vadstena wrote in the clolster re-cor- ds "Birds of prey sat on the mountain tops: the Germans tyrän-nlie- d the country for many years" The Kalmar Union was formed on 1389 This movement of fraternizatlon in the European North dcspite the unequal fortunes of var can le aided by closer cooperatlon among the various nationality groups in Ame-rica whteh have Scandinavian back-groun- ds or afflliatlons Thl applies to rellgious bodies educatlonal ln-kytuö- ons culturrf socIeUcs fra-tern- al and social organlzatlons With the special tinäerstanding of Scandinavian problems xvhlch comes from blood relatlonshlps and more or less close contacts with the old countrles the members of such or-ganlzat-ions can help msterlally xvlth constructlve thinklng about a mo-vement of great slgnlflcance to the future of Europe K)3l- -i the lack of suoo' ort hn v_ "-- Jn inns pontical vie s cli Hn1pnt1v HtiHnr i H -- „ „6 ast lW(- - thn thla Irlll ' T-1- I „tu any a Jrrt MA HAt -- _ f m-vjÄTia- uve enierpiiSe TV thlng happend in Sudbary irB= w-uperau- ve cencerr XA uuinruji miu aiso in ToroU a communist controlleö :0fp concern as nuo rjbstn uiuiiiuuiam in Aorthcra O- - u iUi Anrur uie irisu aforesaid party resulted in th v" " -"- n_ woperauve contm w cC1c u ueniotraiic co-o- pe vonsumers ana irey hae bee3 successiui We of ten hear Canadians tn 1 wv-v1M- uä OTf- -J wonuenn5 ai me finns kea cv in it It is dif hcult to Imi t 1 eApianaiion as me nnns' lotertp the Co-operati- ve Movement & pan oi nts Kinnlsh tem?n un unmrormed person begu understand lt soon ho-ee- r mJ it-ani- 3 uiai in i-inia-nd the OhI uv e Muvemem nar cevelored toti penection hardly equalled eJ m the World Finland U poor couniry and iu Cooe-j-- J Movement ennnot be judged ca J basis of statlstic3 vr the exte- -t commercl! transactlons but n on tne great number of vudesfJ co-operat- ive institutlons u not one privately oned dajj creamery in the whole countr oeins co-opera- tle daires have their own Central organo vhich transact their mivm domestic trade Ali cheesc vip- - irom h inland Is produced and i directly by the co-opent- ive ia_J In addition farmtrs hae BuirtrJ co-operat- lve societies sucli a al ings and credit societiej kt i flour mill tlephone bus stoaniJ and farm machinc}' co-op- er rith their Central on?amzatfct a net work spread across the i nearly ali of the larger comMq havlng one or tvo co-optn- trl Co-operati- on has extended tvea J the field of Insurance in the njl Insurance associations end !j : large trade unions hica fr operauve in the unse that l members incltidirg their fr have sickness and unemplojrJ Insurance Apainst this background t j less acqualnted with Finri stands why thelr first tffofj ! are directed tovai '% the tfin ment of co-operati- es Thej! livcd in the co-ojera- tle at") and it has becone instilled ia : nature There Is still a 0eper miLnl Finn belleves in econonvc itrM and rtgards with suspicion yl ♦ Viof rnnloa fKrt rin fif xvealth at othor's expens? Finnish temperament doei approve of exploitatlon and i tlon therefore Inc Cc-cp- c Movement has made suA z? ahle nrorrpss In Finland £1 arrlving here the Finn Is rxs' organlzing a co-operat- He t-- store In order to avoid r hleh Drices for the nctt life and to makc P possible to c better ouality gocd t fur Co-operat- ion ar ig Finns ould be m political feuds such and peoples also hav regrettable disintogr which Co-oper_- iti has suffcred severl "f"afc otv 'öl the v ' Sudbury Finns Ve 100 Behind the Victory Loan The nwspaper Scanls- - published in Oct about the last Caa5' Loan campaign that the fc™ a brilliant succers and vr-1- 1 rnectations But shown to the Canadian by the Finn In the SudbuJ Jby purchasing these 1 ahlnlng exampie i "-- -- f it n bond wxJF- - per This is a 'J as It provea that uie — - Sudbury District percent behind the an™ a'di3l Lordon famUy „u ia a cornedT inc uit" = - ji who thlnk a tragedy w feel — Walpole Youth Is a struggle old sge Wundr' — _— ' lt- a p-
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaa Sana, March 28, 1942 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finland -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Finland; Finnish Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1942-03-28 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | VapaD7000979 |
Description
Title | 0115a |
OCR text | a i& _ a a ti MUnMtMM 4 H I March of the Peasant ftHlflHfft theFlnnishCoiisul Rebel Army and Co-0p-er atioa Messrs Vapaa Sana Press 260 Spadlna Avenue Toronto Dear Slrs:— You have been klnd enough to suggest that I mtgbt wrlte a brlef artlcle for your tenth Annlversary number and that I mlght perhaps reralnlsce a little in connectlon Uh the Finnish Consular work at Toronto during the lat ten years I was appointed Consul in 1933 and at that tlme the appolnt-men- t ot a Canadian as unueual but as part of a deflnite policy hlch the Government or Finland had decided on ith the object I believe of maklng their country better known to the people of Canada and the United States The appointment was an honour hlch I deeply appreciated Some of the steps hlch the Consulate asslsted in ere as folio ws: — Hecognlzlng that there ere may unlts of churches and ocieties e formed a loose body havlng represent-atlve- s from these organlzatlons and Uh thelr asglstance e lmmedlately undertook as an experiment the pre-entatl- on of an exhlblt at the Cana-dian National Exhibition 'Ihls be-ca- me the Finnish Advancement Atso-ciatlo-n under the tlrst president Air KS Parviainen and now under the Presldency of Mr August Kaplas 1 as gratlfylng to feel that this -- ork as done for several years volunUrl-l- y by Finnish orkmen and that a commendable exhlblt as glveii to the Canadian people Later tne Fin-nish Government recognized the lm-portan- ce of the ork and asslsted us Uh a small ftnancial grant from year to year 1 belteve this unlnter-rupte- d exhlblt beteen the years 1934 untll 1910 gave to Canadian people an llluminatlng picture ot that little Republlc'8 accomplishmenls ana Us anvanced clMllzation I endeavoured also to bring as peakers to the various Independente Day Functlons Kale ala Cclebni-tlon- s and the other pubiic occaslons promlnent Canadian and outstand-in- g Flnns on the Comment orking on the assumption that wnile Can-adla- ns ere partlculariy intcreated In eelng Finnish costumes and cus-to- m and hearlng Flnnsh music Fin-nlsh-Canadl- ans ere eiually tnterest-- 1 In seelng Canadlans and hearlng thelr addresses and their music lt as an opportunity ot creatlng u bond of frlendship beteen old Can-adlans and new Canadlans and I am snre that lt as appreciated enuall) by both At the tlme of the World s Falr in New York a shlpment was recclved of splendld books on Finland and these ere dlstrlbuted to every pub-11- c and hl?h school in the city ot Toronto and to environs and the volume of replles e receivcrt from prlnclples of these scnoois oetokened the extreme tnterest the educatlonal-ist- s had for Finland Ve must also remember the assUt-nnc- e hlch the Finnish Government gave us In another -- ay of advancing knoledbe of Finland to mnadlans In 1938 they ent out nt a suosiantiai cost that onderrul group ot young men knon as the iU Choir Their ojourn as brlef In 'loronto but the publlcUy attained and tne tncndsmp hlch they made among canadlans nceompllshed much they cie so uccesful that In the tollo Ing year the Finlandia Choir nn outer group came to this city in the courso of I thelr American tour Uh the same uccess as their prertecessors lt Is no exaggeration thcrcrore to ay that In Canadian hcarts es-teeni for Finnish people and lor Finland has been ollcliy tostered and hen the Itrst war Uh Flnlind nnd Ilula broke out in 1939 the af-ftvtion- ate rcgard ot Canadlans for the Flnns as armly demonstrated At the present tlme one ould assume that Flnns unin Canada ould be In an embarrasin? Itua-tlo- n by reason of the tact that ha Is at ar Uh Itussla and tnat llussla is ah ally of Great Uritaln Such however lias not been the rae the Canadian Government has regaulcd Finland together ith ltumanla nnA Hungary as being piaced m her present position by torce ot rtrcums-tance- s and therefore peclal and aluable concessions have been glven to Finnlsh-National- s tn Canada Finnlsh- -Nationals as xvell as naturalized Fians are vrorklng in Canada' ar Industries and haTe volunteered for servlng In Canada'8 anny and haTe been carrying on thelr orK wlth the ame Industry and integnty hkh characterlzed thelr --wort 1 Pace times and they wlll contlnue thelr work In this democracy untll Finland Itself Is afe from dictatorship U Is tili very much in our mlnds and we remember Uh gratltude the concerted eftort put forard by Cana- - LbbbbbbbbbbC ''' Laal ra 2 BIIIIIIIk ii__ H A Klngsley Graham ilians and Finns allke during 1939 and the sprlng of 1940 hen Finland as In dlre perii for her very exiat- - ence Not only in Toronto but thioughout Ontario and the whole Dominion of Canada a pirit ot unlon preailed among Finnish people and unlty between Flnns and Canadlans In thelr hour of need I eli remember golng to the Church of AU Nation and seelng the cascs of goods plled up and ready for chip-me- nt to( Finland from the Canadian Hed Cross The Tastor the Ileverend August I-ap-pala had gUen thera the use of one of thelr largest rooms In the church for this purpose From the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Kmplre alone came glfts of new clothlng valued at several thoujand dollars hlch ere packed and sent over nt this crlttcal perlod The Itev K) osti Toppila ns indefatlzable in his ork as 1'adre of the Finnish Volunteers and lookcd after their comforts The Finnish people also ralsed a Commlttee for endlng funds dlroaly to Finland Ith Mr Uno Salonen as President and Mr Matti Pennanen as Treasurer This as a dlrect cubs-crlptlo- n by Finnish people and ai-thou- gh I have not the exact amount approxlmately $10000 as ralsed la addltlon to other sums aforementlon-e- d for Finnish Ilellef This ork as belng done in dozens of centres throughout Canada and I am happy to thlnk tliat although e are not able to forard nld to Fin-land the groups are tili orklns for the beneIt of Canada and the Canadian soldlers allors and air men and hen tho opportunity arlei they 111 be able to play once morc the Good Samarltan to thelr kln in Finland Ali Canadian reallze that Flnns are better citizens of Canada because they were true and loyal to the lanJ of thelr blrth Ali Finns reallze that they are bet-ter representatives of Finland b:ue they are true and loyal to the land of their adoption It has been my pnvilese to sen e under three Consul Generais Mr Jal-kanen Mr Aitio and Mr Kuusarro the last for a tery bner pertotl nnd thelr asslstance and guidance a tlmulatlng and ise unout excep- - tlon they tressed their desire that Finnish Nationals unin tne bouud-arle- s of Canada should be loyal useful resldents In the land rnicn they adopted and that Finns rithln Canada hould be recognized as out-tandln- g and delrable retdent of this country and that by being such resldents they rere pertormlng In effect a contlnuous useful enrice as to the quality of citizens Finland ent from her hores Not only In Toronto out throngh-ou- t the Provlnce and the Dominion ha a pirit ot harmony and acconl prevalled among Finnish people and small dlfferences ha e been adjusied and a toleration typical ot boih the democracy of thelr homeiand and the democracy of this country nas been By V A Koskennierpi (This poem as rltten In memory of the Finnish peasants unsuccessful armed revolt In 1596 againsti the oppressive Swedish autocratic rule of Klaus Fleming) Around us is the snow and ice the frost and the hate and severe commandments from Fate Who is struck by our club he never again stands up The gales have chosen us The night has confidcd her secrets the wolf has lent his teeth and the lynx his sharp eyes to us Around us is the snov and ice the frost and the night Tremble! Tremblel Our love and hate are blazing like flames Who could hold out on our ways! VVhen once is struck our zero hour — Hait the victory is ours! VVe don't care for charities of strangers we carry on the torcli of the North VVhosoever ia born on the Northland's gate he knovs his vay and fatc He must go straight not step aside Tremble! Tremblo! evldenced 'Ihere ere nard ana i dltricult jears during tne uepresaion and there ere harder years aheau during the ar but durliig ali these troublesomc tlmes the finnish lesi-dent- s I am proud to ay havt shouldered their burden ithuui grumtling and have made thelr cont-ributlo- n lojally to this country During the tlrst Mnnish-KusMa- n War the Finnish resldents nnd Canad-lans too gae unqualtliea support to FInland'8 effort under tlie tlmulat-lng leadershlp of Colonel Fraser-Hunte- r and thelr Organizer Mr Kino Lackstrom Today e are unaote to do tor Finland as much as e -- ould like to do Dlfflcult and adverse circums-tance- s have made her an enemy ot this country but one 1 may use the term ho is a "tnendiy enemy' llefore the second innisn-KusÄla- u ar a commlttee ralsed some $20000 for graln to be shlpped to rinland The purchase as not accomplished because of the clrcumstances above rererred to ibut through tlme 1 promlse jou the object of this :a-a- m collectlon III be accomplished and it III be done at the earnest poäMble moment To the memoers of tho commlttee and to the contributors to this fund Mnland Hl ome day glve thank It has been a very real pieasure lor me lo nsslst in these various orks nnd ihe frlendshtp nich l have ma de and the ords of nppreciatiou hlch I have recelved trom the Fin nlsh people from tlme to time has more than repald me tor natever matl results have been accompllsheo Scandinavian Solidaiity haslcountries had likeulse to by "see hands" t„f nl the Scandinavian natlons Not that tho a new far But the and durcss of the ar hlch outvardly hxs eparated countrles more ever has come into full bloom lt vouM bo to quotc publit leaders cspeclallv in Sweden to that no hov var or hov the future Is to be shaped countnei oufht to have pooltd interests more closely in the and slm?ly try to do In the future In the Interval betvvecn the to orid wars many steps verc taken that There vvtre for instance the special trcatles signed in the "tvi-enti- es niaking war among for any vvhatever iiixrat nnt vrn cxceptlng the honor" and terests" which ho in instances In the early the j-cal-led pacts were a promisiru beginnlng ot closer economic coope-ratio- n were included small Europan states such as and The Nethertanda of states already practised a certain amount of cooperatlon as the so-call- el vitml Uie I-ea-pn on behalf of Finland l express tne that in to come the orK of the multltude of rinmsn indiia-ual- s ho hae so unseiiisnty cont-- ributed to these unuertakings of real alue to nniand It has been a pmilege recelve from tiine to time various members of and otltceis of the Government in Toronto and to have extended to the of our local city and also our provincial authoiltles I believe that they have bacic to Finland ith them tne impression that Canada also is a demociacy un idea is and aims very simllar to of nniand I express also a vord my colleague Sven Madius tie untiringiy and uneuishly on behalf of the Finnish people uunng the entlre nlne of his asso-ciation Ith the Consulate Vice-Cons- uI and his enthusiasm anu service as invaiuame to tne Hn-nls- h people In closln? this rambling narrative may l ay tnat during the nlne of my ervice our pui-lt-utlo- n — Vapaa Sana — has evtremely helptul In ork -- hlch i consider valuable to tne consulate has always tood tor good Citizen-shl- p and harmony betcen old and new Canadlans and 1 express the that this tlrst ten ot your publlcatlon is but the beginnm of of successtul journal-ls-m on the part of our nespaper for the beneflt of ali ery Klngsley If Is one idea been Ibeen vlndicated the var lt is that let each other their — tv for unltv nmonc" that Is exchange ndvancu tnfonra- - idea Is one fiom it under stress these than lt easy frem show their convlction matter tne ends these their past must lt tovvard goal earlv cause "national hnve rt minv 'thlrtles came Oslo hlch these also other Belgium Most these had poU tlcal Bloc" ithin hope years lii pioe great to parliament Finnish them elcome taKen progiessive those May special to orked yeais as ratner years beeu It close hope years many years Yours truly Graham there vhkh wont them tion But whlle much prosress was undoubtcdly mad toward greater unity the kestono in the arch namely full political merer or even a system of mutual mlMtary defense was novcr sllppcd Into place The common danger was not realized untll too late ImvanTy too much progress toward unlty was made after thf first World var New contacts vtre established and new coordinatlon achleved In such various fields as business leglslatlon cooperatives (retail and wholeja!e as vell as manufacturlng enterprlses) labor unirn organlzatlon social welfarc promotlon sclentific rcscarch and university cducatlon and flnally— certainly of no lcss Importance— competltive iports hen "forelgn" Mtal in teams can be tlcomed and treated sened as fatrly by the "fans" as well as by In the players there is hope for Inter-national cooperatlon In the promotlon of such frlendly relatlons between the Scandinavian countries much useful ork has been done steadily and persistently by a oclety called "Norden" havlnz branchei In each country It has arranged -- frequent conferencei especl&Uy among teachers who are im nc wst iv'"wi v -- - of Nstlons In the negotlations of future mind It has sponsored ex-post- -ar trade trcatles vtth thj!Changes of lecturers It has arranged larger powers the Scandinavian joint art exhibits and translationj Canadian Finru ccnstitute one of the smaller lmmlgrant groups thelt total number betn? approlnately 40000 They are scattered across our vast country although Uie largest Finnish centres are in tlic Port Arthur district the t1n cities la the Porcuplne Gold Belt in the north in central Ontario around Sudbury and Oirult Ste Marie and in the south in Toronto Nevertheless the Finns tertalnly lead overwhelmingly in one partl-(ul- ar sphere desplte their minority namely: In co-cpcratl- ve enlerprises According to Information in the the possession of the wnter the Finns In Canada own and op-iht- e the follolng co-opcrat- ive conccras: in British Columbia the Solntula and Vebster's Corner Consumor co-operat- ive stores In Ontario: tvo co-opera- ties at Pcrt Arihur the People's Co-opcratl- ve stcres and the International Co-operatl- ve Coticern Nipigon Co-cpcrat- lve Concrn Sault Ste Marie Co-optrat- lve Conccrn the Sudbury co-operat- ive Dairy tvo concerns at Timmins The Con&UTjers Co-operat- lve Society and the Vorkers Co-opcrat- lve Concern and the Wanup Farmers Co-opcratl- ve Concern Hence ten fairly succcssful co-operat- ive concern3 No statlstics are to hind of the total annual busincs3 tuiToer but for eample the Tiiainin3 Cu-opera-t- ive Concerns tar exceed the nilllon mark Alco In the others busness transactlons amount to con3iderable ums so that allos-the- r their annual business Is worth milllons of dollars And this not ali These concerns have brarch stores elsehere thu3 Increaslng the number of Finnish co-operat- lve enterp ie3 in Canada nearly to thlrty Furthermore the Flnns ha"c other co-operat- lve enterprlses such as co-cperat- lve boardln? hourei restau-rant- s and bakeries Besidcs some co-operat- lve con-cerns established by Finns have fallcd The reason for thld was not of books as ved as stimuated a more vvidespread readmg kiuledgo of ali the Northern langiages lt has publlshed "year books" Even after the war be?an lt managed to stage a "Danlsh Week" in Stockholm and a "Swedish Week" in Copen-hagen Literary men exchanged vlslts and gave lectures or reaa theit orks A book about Siden was publlshed In ooth Swedish and Danlsh But perhaps most sihrnlftcant of ali Joint commlttees of his-torta- ns have been appointed to revise the text books m htetory so as to eliminate lrritatlng errors ard unnecessary exprc3Ions of jmgoism Finslly there have been e:changs of old var trophies Just as between the Northern and Southern states to vlpe out the final traces of bltter-nes- s from the Civil War hen such things can be donp there Is good hope for "a morc perfect union" The war to be sure has put an end to many of these activies out on the other hand it has also hclght-ene- d the desire for greater unlty as lt has brought suffering vhether physical or mental or both to each country In a lecture at the Univer-sity of Gothenburg glven last Octo-be- r Professor Curt Welbull of Lund University as able to demonstrato that historically too the Scandina-vian countrles whlch orlglnilly had the same language and the same customs had alvvays sought greater unlty unen under Gcrman pressure As early as 1363 he sald a monk at Vadstena wrote in the clolster re-cor- ds "Birds of prey sat on the mountain tops: the Germans tyrän-nlie- d the country for many years" The Kalmar Union was formed on 1389 This movement of fraternizatlon in the European North dcspite the unequal fortunes of var can le aided by closer cooperatlon among the various nationality groups in Ame-rica whteh have Scandinavian back-groun- ds or afflliatlons Thl applies to rellgious bodies educatlonal ln-kytuö- ons culturrf socIeUcs fra-tern- al and social organlzatlons With the special tinäerstanding of Scandinavian problems xvhlch comes from blood relatlonshlps and more or less close contacts with the old countrles the members of such or-ganlzat-ions can help msterlally xvlth constructlve thinklng about a mo-vement of great slgnlflcance to the future of Europe K)3l- -i the lack of suoo' ort hn v_ "-- Jn inns pontical vie s cli Hn1pnt1v HtiHnr i H -- „ „6 ast lW(- - thn thla Irlll ' T-1- I „tu any a Jrrt MA HAt -- _ f m-vjÄTia- uve enierpiiSe TV thlng happend in Sudbary irB= w-uperau- ve cencerr XA uuinruji miu aiso in ToroU a communist controlleö :0fp concern as nuo rjbstn uiuiiiuuiam in Aorthcra O- - u iUi Anrur uie irisu aforesaid party resulted in th v" " -"- n_ woperauve contm w cC1c u ueniotraiic co-o- pe vonsumers ana irey hae bee3 successiui We of ten hear Canadians tn 1 wv-v1M- uä OTf- -J wonuenn5 ai me finns kea cv in it It is dif hcult to Imi t 1 eApianaiion as me nnns' lotertp the Co-operati- ve Movement & pan oi nts Kinnlsh tem?n un unmrormed person begu understand lt soon ho-ee- r mJ it-ani- 3 uiai in i-inia-nd the OhI uv e Muvemem nar cevelored toti penection hardly equalled eJ m the World Finland U poor couniry and iu Cooe-j-- J Movement ennnot be judged ca J basis of statlstic3 vr the exte- -t commercl! transactlons but n on tne great number of vudesfJ co-operat- ive institutlons u not one privately oned dajj creamery in the whole countr oeins co-opera- tle daires have their own Central organo vhich transact their mivm domestic trade Ali cheesc vip- - irom h inland Is produced and i directly by the co-opent- ive ia_J In addition farmtrs hae BuirtrJ co-operat- lve societies sucli a al ings and credit societiej kt i flour mill tlephone bus stoaniJ and farm machinc}' co-op- er rith their Central on?amzatfct a net work spread across the i nearly ali of the larger comMq havlng one or tvo co-optn- trl Co-operati- on has extended tvea J the field of Insurance in the njl Insurance associations end !j : large trade unions hica fr operauve in the unse that l members incltidirg their fr have sickness and unemplojrJ Insurance Apainst this background t j less acqualnted with Finri stands why thelr first tffofj ! are directed tovai '% the tfin ment of co-operati- es Thej! livcd in the co-ojera- tle at") and it has becone instilled ia : nature There Is still a 0eper miLnl Finn belleves in econonvc itrM and rtgards with suspicion yl ♦ Viof rnnloa fKrt rin fif xvealth at othor's expens? Finnish temperament doei approve of exploitatlon and i tlon therefore Inc Cc-cp- c Movement has made suA z? ahle nrorrpss In Finland £1 arrlving here the Finn Is rxs' organlzing a co-operat- He t-- store In order to avoid r hleh Drices for the nctt life and to makc P possible to c better ouality gocd t fur Co-operat- ion ar ig Finns ould be m political feuds such and peoples also hav regrettable disintogr which Co-oper_- iti has suffcred severl "f"afc otv 'öl the v ' Sudbury Finns Ve 100 Behind the Victory Loan The nwspaper Scanls- - published in Oct about the last Caa5' Loan campaign that the fc™ a brilliant succers and vr-1- 1 rnectations But shown to the Canadian by the Finn In the SudbuJ Jby purchasing these 1 ahlnlng exampie i "-- -- f it n bond wxJF- - per This is a 'J as It provea that uie — - Sudbury District percent behind the an™ a'di3l Lordon famUy „u ia a cornedT inc uit" = - ji who thlnk a tragedy w feel — Walpole Youth Is a struggle old sge Wundr' — _— ' lt- a p- |
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