
I finally admitted that I had to invest in some new outdoor clothes. Now I feel immune from the whims of the weather gods.
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The annual celebration Kærleikar (“Love Games”) takes place today at Austurvöllur square in central Reykjavík, starting at 2 pm. Its goal is to encourage a feeling of companionship, show support for one another and emit a positive vibe.
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The Iceland Touring Association (FÍ) organizes various hiking trips across Iceland throughout the year, including a project called ‘one peak per week’ where people sign up to join FÍ on hikes to 52 mountains in one year. In mid-January the group hiked two mountains called Helgafell in the capital region.
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Fjallabyggd (“Mountain Settlement”) is a skier’s dream. Its slopes are perfect for slaloming and there are also tracks for telemark skiing. Winter sporting enthusiasts can also go ice skating or rent snowmobiles. In summer, Fjallabyggd turns into a paradise for hikers. Read this special promotion about one of Iceland’s best hidden gems.
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Palestinian born Amal Tamimi is the first foreign-born woman to be elected to the Icelandic Parliament. Mica Allan met with her to learn why politics is in her blood and about the challenges and breakthroughs she has experienced.
Published in the 2011 winter issue of Iceland Review – IR 04.11. By Mica Allan, photo by Páll Stefánsson.
Amal Tamimi at Parliament, November 30 2011, the day it recognized her native Palestine as an independent and sovereign state, the first western European country to do so.
Mica Allan: What inspired you to become a politician?
Amal Tamimi: To start with I’m Palestinian, and in Palestine you breathe politics, it is part of your life. I think it is important to find out what is going on around you politically, both nationally and internationally, and I’ve held that belief for a long time. When I came to Iceland 16 years ago in 1995, there were no regulations about integration, you simply came here and started working. I started to work officially with immigrants in 2002. I have been a part of many committees and am one of the women who established the Women of Multicultural Ethnicity Network (W.O.M.E.N.). One of the aims of this organization is to increase the visibility of immigrants in society. So, I started being political before I officially entered politics.
MA: Is entering politics something that flowed quite organically after the formation of this committee, or was it a calling that you received from other people?
AT: Both. I gave a speech in 2005 on Women’s Day and in that speech I spoke about women’s issues in Iceland and immigrants’ issues. After that you have to keep on speaking and keep on fighting.
MA: What, in your opinion, has changed over the last sixteen years for female immigrants?
AT: Today, we have more women who know about the women’s shelter, more women who are taking Icelandic lessons and taking courses on self-esteem. Also, more immigrant women are active in society. Now you see and hear many immigrant women; we have lawyers, nurses, all kinds of working women, and they are starting to be more visible in Icelandic society.
You can read the remainder of this article in the 2011 winter issue of Iceland Review – IR 04.11. Four times a year the print edition of Iceland Review brings you a wealth of articles on all aspects of life in Iceland including Páll Stefánsson's latest images of the country's majestic landscape. Click here to subscribe and here to browse through a selection of pages from the current issue.
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The current issue of the quarterly magazine Iceland Review includes for example an interview with world-renowned fashion designer Steinunn Sigurðardóttir as well as features on the successful biotech company ORF Genetics and the hot debate regarding the EU. If you subscribe now, you will receive a photo book by IR editor, photographer Páll Stefánsson of the eruptions in Eyjafjallajökull as a gift. Click here to subscribe to the magazine and here to buy a gift subscription.
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Sweet, honest music from troubadour Svavar Knútur.
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Does an image say more than a thousand words? Sometimes it does. It is interesting to see Iceland through travelers’ eyes. Some visiting for the twentieth time, others for the first time, but almost all of them focus their lenses on nature; the tiniest details or the greatest panorama of lava fields and mountains.
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The painter Karen Agnete (1903-1992) was one of many Danish women who married an Icelander and moved with their husbands to Iceland from Copenhagen in the first half of the 20th century. She was fascinated by Iceland and Icelanders; the current exhibition at Kjarvalsstaðir highlights the types of paintings she concentrated on.
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