nordstjernan issue 20, 2012

24
Published by Swedish News . Volume 140 No. 20, November 30, 2012. Price per copy $2.00 Swedish News – from Sweden & America NORDSTJERNAN This Week, Page 4 Bibi Andersson in a filmatization for TV of Strindberg’s Fröken Julie. Directed by Keve Hjelm, 1969. Review of recent SATC productions: Page 13 Christmas Bazaar in NY What’s red, merry and full of “tomtar”? The Christmas Bazaar at the Swedish Church in New York of course! Read why volunteers come back year after year to keep the tradition going. Each and every year we ask the same thing: “Already?” Yes, folks, it was already time for the annual Christmas Bazaar at the Swedish Church in New York City. This year we wanted to honor the volunteers, who really make the entire enterprise soar ... and walking into the church building on 48th Street was like walking into an Advent Calendar: Everything was red and merry with all you could ever wish for When Hans Christian Andersen left Copenhagen for a visit to Sweden in 1837, his mind was set on two things: traveling on the Göta Canal and meeting with Fredrika Bremer, a Swedish writer for whom he had great admiration. That the then obscure writer of fairy tales should be interested in Göta Canal is not surprising. It was the ultimate engineering feat of the day - a system of canals and locks connecting rivers and lakes all the way from Gothenburg in the west to Stockholm in the east, covering 372 miles, and uniting the North Sea with the Baltic. To make it a continuous waterway, sixty miles of rock and soil had had to be cleared away. It featured fifty-eight locks and thirty-five bridges. Meant to be an important trade route, the Göta Canal was quickly made obsolete by the railroads. In consequence, it has remained largely unchanged, making travel on it something of a 19th-century experience or, as most will say, similar in ambience to travel with the Orient Express. Many of the hand-operated locks are still in use and the pace has not quickened. As in Andersen’s day, traversing the country in one of the three passenger boats The ‘Swedish Orient Express on water’ Göta Canal’s Juno at the locks at Berg just outside of Linköping, between Lake Vättern and the Baltic ‘SuperSwede’ Page 3 On fathers and sons, celebrating life and the spirit of imagination. SWEA San Francisco firar 30 år. Sid 4 Andre Myhrer skis towards his first WC gold. Page 19 Meandering The ‘Göta Kanal’ Page 6 Photo: SVT Continues on page 12 Continues on page 7 ‘Bastards of Strindberg’ by Bo Zaunders [email protected] Sports, Page 19 Jaerbyn retires, Andre Myhrer took home first WC gold, Halmstad back in Allsvens- kan, Zlatan excels on the national team. Hedge your bets with Nordic this Christmas, with köttbullsmörgås (meatball sandwich) Norwegian Lefse and, above, Danish aeble- skiver—where else but at the Nordic Museum. Dashboard, Page 10, 11 Sill or strömming? It’s now been scientifi- cally proven—there are differences! An- other observation of Strindberg, this one of the culinary kind (Kanye West must have missed this on the menu while visiting the restaurant in Stockholm recently) and what happens in Sweden in December? Sweden, Page 2 It used to be that there was no “real” Christ- mas in Sweden, unless Arne Weise was the TV host on Christmas Eve. Well, he left the job in 2002 and since then there’s been a new name every year—this year’s host is a talented Swedish American. Also, Swed- ish actor Mikael Persbrandt cut out of Peter Jackson’s first film about the “Hobbit.” News in Brief, Page 3 Reports indicate while salaries in Sweden are increasing more than the EU average a grow- ing number of Swedes live in risk of poverty.

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Page 1: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

Published by Swedish News . Volume 140 No. 20, November 30, 2012. Price per copy $2.00

Swedish News – from Sweden & AmericaNORDSTJERNAN

This Week, Page 4

Bibi Andersson in a filmatization for TV of Strindberg’s Fröken Julie. Directed by Keve Hjelm, 1969. Review of recent SATC productions: Page 13

Christmas Bazaar in NYWhat’s red, merry and full of “tomtar”? The Christmas Bazaar at

the Swedish Church in New York of course! Read why volunteers come back year after year to keep the tradition going.

Each and every year we ask the same thing: “Already?” Yes, folks, it was already time for the annual Christmas Bazaar

at the Swedish Church in New York City. This year we wanted to honor the volunteers, who really make the entire enterprise soar ... and walking into the church building on 48th Street was like walking into an Advent Calendar: Everything was red and merry with all you could ever wish for

When Hans Christian Andersen left Copenhagen for a visit to Sweden in 1837, his mind was set on two things: traveling on the Göta Canal and meeting with Fredrika Bremer, a Swedish writer for whom he had great admiration.

That the then obscure writer of fairy tales should be interested in Göta Canal is not surprising. It was the ultimate engineering feat of the day - a system of canals and locks connecting rivers and lakes all the way from Gothenburg in the west to Stockholm in the east, covering 372 miles, and uniting the North Sea with the Baltic. To make it a continuous waterway, sixty miles of rock and soil had had to be cleared away. It featured fifty-eight locks and thirty-five bridges.

Meant to be an important trade route, the Göta Canal was quickly made obsolete by the railroads. In consequence, it has remained largely unchanged, making travel on it something of a 19th-century experience or, as most will say, similar in ambience to travel with

the Orient Express. Many of the hand-operated locks are still in use and the pace has not quickened. As in Andersen’s day, traversing the country in one of the three passenger boats

The ‘Swedish Orient Express on water’ Göta Canal’s Juno at the locks at Berg just outside of Linköping, between Lake Vättern and the Baltic

‘SuperSwede’ Page 3On fathers and sons, celebrating life and the spirit of imagination.

SWEA San Francisco firar 30 år. Sid 4

Andre Myhrer skis towards his first WC gold.

Page 19

Meandering The ‘Göta Kanal’

Page 6

Ph

oto:

SV

T

Continues on page 12

Continues on page 7

‘Bastards of Strindberg’

by Bo [email protected]

Sports, Page 19Jaerbyn retires, Andre Myhrer took home first WC gold, Halmstad back in Allsvens-kan, Zlatan excels on the national team.

Hedge your bets with Nordic this Christmas, with köttbullsmörgås (meatball sandwich)Norwegian Lefse and, above, Danish aeble-skiver—where else but at the Nordic Museum.

Dashboard, Page 10, 11Sill or strömming? It’s now been scientifi-cally proven—there are differences! An-other observation of Strindberg, this one of the culinary kind (Kanye West must have missed this on the menu while visiting the restaurant in Stockholm recently) and what happens in Sweden in December?

Sweden, Page 2It used to be that there was no “real” Christ-mas in Sweden, unless Arne Weise was the TV host on Christmas Eve. Well, he left the job in 2002 and since then there’s been a new name every year—this year’s host is a talented Swedish American. Also, Swed-ish actor Mikael Persbrandt cut out of Peter Jackson’s first film about the “Hobbit.”

News in Brief, Page 3Reports indicate while salaries in Sweden are increasing more than the EU average a grow-ing number of Swedes live in risk of poverty.

Page 2: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 2

Swedish News

Editor & PublishEr: Ulf E. Mårtensson ([email protected]) – www.nordstjernan.comManaging Editor: Everett Martin sEnior Editor: Eva Stenskär MEtro Editor: Hanna Aqvilin

sPorts Editor: Chipp Reid CoPy Editor: Amanda Robison

Contributors: Valorie Arrowsmith - Terry Lee Blunk - Julie Lindahl - Claes Magnusson - Ulf Nilson -

Kristina Hall - Margit Wevang - Jeanne Eriksson Widman - Olle Wijkström

PubliCations dirECtor: Mette Barslund Mårtensson ([email protected]; 800.827.9333 x12)

Nordstjernan (ISSN 1059-7670) is published by Swedish News, Inc., 391 Broadway-3rd floor, New York, NY 10013 • Connecticut -268 Fillow Street, Norwalk, CT 06850 Office in Sweden: Scandinavian News AB, St. Nygatan 13, SE-201 24 Malmö, Sweden Tel. (int+46) 40-330630 Fax (int+46) 40-973589 Periodicals Postage paid at New

York, NY, and additional mailing offices. Nordstjernan is published semi-monthly, except for the month of October.

POST MASTER: Please send address changes to Nordstjernan, P.O. Box 1710, New Canaan, CT 06840 Subscription rates: 1 yr. - $41, - Two yr. - $75 - Outside US 1 yr. $200.

Contact us at 1.800.827.9333 — ext 10 for Reader services, ext 12 for advertisingURL: www.nordstjernan.com email: [email protected]

East coast local numbers: 212.490.3900; 203.299.0380West coast: 1.800.827.9333

Founded in New York City in September 1872

A tradition since 1872, covering three worlds:

Sweden, America, and Swedish America

order your own copy, $41.00 for a year (22 issues) at www.nordstjernan.com—choose

'subscribe' or call 1.800.827.9333 x10

The stories, the traditions, the people behind the news — NORDSTJERNAN

Swedish Christmas host 2012It used to be that there was no “real” Christmas in Sweden, unless Arne Weise was the TV host on Christmas Eve. Well, Weise broke this 30-year tradition in 2002, when he left his job. Ever since, there’s been a slew of Christmas TV hosts, and SVT (Swedish Television) has created a bit of excite-ment by choosing a new host every year. And this year it will be Sarah Dawn Finer, the Swedish-American singer we’ve earlier covered in Nordstjernan. Finer was asked when she was in London en route from Singapore to Swe-den. “It felt almost surreal. I got scared, a bit shocked, and enormously honored,” she said. Her ambition, she explains, is to make everyone welcome even those who have nobody to celebrate Christmas with. She also promises to sing. Ever since Weise left, there have been voices calling for a female Christmas host, and this year many speculated it might be TV-personality Ebba von Sydow. But it was Finer who snatched the job. Photo: Carl-Johan Söder/SVT Earlier Christmas hosts on Swedish TV:1959-1971 Bengt Feldreich1972-2002 Arne Weise2003 Lotta Bromé2004 Ernst Kirchsteiger2005 Blossom Tainton2006 Ingvar Oldsberg2007 Anne Lundberg2008 Lasse Kronér2009 Lisbeth Åkerman2010 André Pops 2011 Kalle MoraeusThese days, you can watch Swedish TV all over the world,

through http://www.svt.se/svtworld/

Persbrandt cut outDon’t expect to see Mikael Pers-brandt in the first of Peter Jackson’s new films “Hobbit: An unexpected journey,” which will soon premiere. The Swedish actor has been cut out ... thus Persbrandt’s long awaited inter-national debut will have to wait a bit. This all due to Jackson’s late decision to make the story into a trilogy, rather than a two part movie. Persbrandt’s part as Beorn will make his entrance in the second part (“The Hobbit: The Desola-tion of Smaug”) and he will also be in the third part (“The Hobbit: There and Back Again”). This has been confirmed by Persbrandt’s agent Peter Jansson. For diehard Tolkien fans, Beorn’s delayed entrance will hardly come as a surprise. Tolkien enthusiast David Borgström, a buyer at Stockholm’s Science Fiction Bookstore, points out the rather weak base material; the novel “Bilbo” and the collected writings in “The Silmarillion” must be watered down to be able to last as a film. “Peter Jackson could have cut it differently, but now that he’ll do three films he’ll most certainly do the action scenes longer and richer than they appear in the book. And therefore it’s not logical that Beorn appears right away,” he says.

Sarah Dawn Finer will bring Swedes Christmas on TV this year.

Gästledare Sydsvenska Dagbladet16 november, 2012

Intressant att toppolitiker gör stan med metallrör i handen. Men viktigare än att diskutera detta är att fokusera på vardagsrasismen.

Soran Ismail är en sällsynt rolig komiker. Igår visade ståupparen att han dessutom är en klok person.

I Expressen skrev Ismail om den händelse 2010 då han en sommarnatt på Kungsgatan i Stockholm hamnade i en dispyt med tre Sverigedemokrater på fyllan. I onsdags tvingades den ekonomiskpolitiske talespersonen Erik Almqvist lämna sina partiuppdrag. Igår valde den rättspolitiske talespersonen Kent Ekeroth att ta timeout.

Det är kanske logiskt att fokus nu ligger på SD:s inre liv. Att ett riksdag-spartis rättspolitiska talesperson dragit omkring på stan med ett metallrör i handen inger inte så stort förtroende. Milt uttryckt.

Men på längre sikt är det mer in-tressant att begrunda Soran Ismails huvudbudskap.Att riksdagsledamoten Almqvist

använt uttryck som ”blattelover” för-bleknar, skriver Ismail, i jämförelse

med att politikern också sade:”Du är inte svensk. Det här är inte ditt

land. Det är mitt land.”Attityden att vilja peka ut vem som

är svensk och vad som är svenskt be-teende handlar inte om ett isolerat parti.

Hundratusentals svenskar bär på liknande argument.

Om så varenda SD-politiker tvingas avgå i morgon skulle rasismen ändå finnas kvar, är komikern Ismails gravallvarliga – och välgrundade – slutsats.

Närbesläktade synpunkter hördes för en vecka sedan när regeringens utre-dare Bengt Westerberg, den tidigare Folkpartiledaren, presenterade sina förslag för ett effektivare arbete mot främlingsfientlighet.

Det stora problemet, förklarade Westerberg, är inte extrema grupper i Sverige – även om de finns och är obe-hagliga. Det som verkligen bekymrar är något annat:

De många människornas vardags-rasism.Vi och dom-tänkandet. Denna stän-

diga kategorisering där ”dom” i klump tillskrivs egenskaper, ofta negativa.

Både praktiken och laboratorieex-periment visar att ”när auktoriteter kräver eller legitimerar en omänsklig politik så ställer den stora majoriteten

upp”, sade Westerberg på sin pressträff.Resonemanget hänger ihop, men

hur verksamma skulle Westerbergs politiska ordinationer bli?

650 miljoner kronor till ett lärarlyft i mänskliga rättigheter. Forum för levande historia ska informera om islamofobi. Och så vidare.

Det är, med förlov sagt, svårt att tänka sig några omvälvande effekter. Men det är möjligt att Westerberg an-lägger ett realistiskt perspektiv.Ändå. Låt oss för ett ögonblick

skissera ett i grunden annorlunda Sverige.

Inom kort kommer en ny bok från den liberale debattören Adam Cwej-man, Välviljans rasism. Han menar att kvotering och andra välvilliga projekt för att lyfta fram grupper bara fokuserar på härkomst och etnicitet, och därmed institutionaliserar rasis-men.

Cwejman lanserar istället en indi-vidualistisk vision. Han vill se ”den postetniska meritokratin” förverkligad. Glöm grupper och kollektiv. Stat och medborgare borde alltid se och utgå ifrån individen och dess meriter. Se människan, kort sagt.

Visst är det en vacker vision.

Ett färgblint Sverige

Mikael Persbrandt

Page 3: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 3

Swedish News

The Exchange rate: $1.00 = SEK 6.7611.20.2012

Swedish salaries Swedish salaries are increasing more than the average salaries in the European Union. Meanwhile, there’s a risk that Swedes get under the EU limit of financial vulnerability, accord-ing to Statistiska Centralbyrån (Statistics Sweden). In 2005, Swedish households belonged to those with the lowest disposable incomes in the north-ern and western part of Europe. In 2010, the country had advanced to 8th place, with a growing rate faster than most other countries. Only in the eastern part of Europe has the increase in salaries, in percentage terms, been greater than in Swe-den. British household has had no increase in salaries, and in both Denmark and Germany the increase is only half as great as the one in Sweden. At the same time, a growing number of Swedes live in risk of poverty. The proportion at risk of poverty is still lower in Sweden compared to the rest of the European Union, but it’s rising faster in Swe-den than in most other EU countries. The groups that are falling behind in salaries are the unemployed and those with no more than a two-year high school education. In a five-year period, from 2005 to 2010, the risk for poverty in these groups has doubled.

Less meat on Swedish platesThe Swedish consumption of meat is decreasing. During the first seven months of 2012, it went down with two per-cent according to Sveriges Radio’s “Ekot” program. And the prognosis of the rest of the year points to a continuation of that trend. One reason is that prices of meat are getting steeper, which in turn has to do with that it’s getting more expensive for the farmers to raise animals. “Meat is a prod-uct where we are very price sensitive,” says Åsa Lannhard Öhberg, administrator at Jordbruksverket (the Swedish Board of Agriculture). “When the price goes up, people cut their meat consumption or choose cheaper meats.” This is hardly a new pattern; the last time the meat consumption decreased in Sweden was during the financial crisis in 2009.

Know someone with alcohol problems?50 percent of all Swedes do—and they worry about it, too. In fact, one out of every fourth Swede worries over a rela-tive or friend who consumes too much alcohol. A study is being presented by Novus, commissioned by IQ, an independent company affiliated to Systembolaget, which shows 51 percent of all Swedes know someone they be-lieve drinks too much. However, to take the step and actu-ally confront those friends is something many find difficult to do, especially younger Swedes. According to the study, less than half of Swedes aged 18-35 confront friends they suspect have alcohol problems. Something alcohol re-searcher Sven Andréasson, professor in social medicine, bemoans: “When you ask people what it was that made them quit drinking, it is generally social factors, social pressure. In some cases, it is treatment, but in most cases it’s about someone they know who has taken action. If a person you feel confident in approaches you and addresses the issue, if that person tells you they’ve seen something or that they are worried, well it usually hits home,” he says.

How to subscribe? It’s easy, call 1.800.827.9333 ext.10

My father was an absent man and perhaps that is why his presence ap-pears more often now, once I have opened my memory bank. When my brother and I were growing up, he was gone most of the time, traveling and making a living for his family. But before his travels grew to Gulliver proportions and we started school, my father spent Saturday mornings with us.

For some reason my mother left on Saturday mornings, whether to shop or just have some time for herself, but what mattered was that my brother Björn and I got to climb up on our parents’ bed, where my father, not a morning person, spun the most mar-velous yarns.

Of course we did not know he was a fiction maker or fabulist. And I don’t think later in life, when he was firmly entrenched in remaining hon-est in a business world that was not, those who came into contact with him knew about this part of his inner life. And by then we, too, had forgotten, the chasm or gulf had closed. Not as if by magic but by the hard life of a business man in sales on the road.

Saturday mornings in Stora Harrie, Sweden, were a wonderful world. We learned of Mats and Olle, two boys who were outside playing and fell asleep atop a small hill that had comfortable grass to lie on. Mats

and Olle then were able to observe and understand adventures involving ekorhissen, which for some strange reason was used by the squirrels to travel up to a nest of birds. Into this nest a magpie dropped a silver spoon. Logic was out the window, the animals never brutally interacting, and everything made sense. Then, in-evitably, the two boys, Mats and Olle, woke up after yet another adventure.

It never occurred to us, certainly not consciously, that Mats and Olle were us, and we did not yet know that my father was drawing from his vast knowledge of mythology to tailor a story finer than any gift someone could have bought us with money.

What saddens me now is that I do not remember the stories my father told us. But, strangely, I experience a kind of warmth when I write about these mornings my father the story-teller spent with my brother and me. It was also one of the few times we did not feud, I bite him or he chase me with a feather, pick your sibling rivalry antics of the moment.

What saddens me more than not remembering the stories is that my father never wrote these stories down. Perhaps he was too tired when he finally set down his suitcase in hotel room after hotel room. I know that he read a great deal, perhaps he needed someone to tell him a story, and that

I understand.My father would have made such

a great story teller if he could have done so “for a living.” Instead he had to march to the drumbeat of a captain of industry, and while I never heard him complain (he never complained about anything), his silence became protracted as the years went by. I wonder if he was telling stories inside of his head.

These are the types of questions one asks when one approaches or reaches middle age; realizes the sacrifices one makes even if one likes going to work. I also realize that the older I get, the fewer choices are available, or the paths narrow, as my father used to tell me when I was a clueless teenager.

I hope the inner story-teller, sculptor, painter, patio-brick layer, gardener, knitter, singer, chef lives in and out-side of you, and you take the steps necessary to practice what you love besides work. And if you can, leave something tangible behind of your adventures outside of work for your children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews, friends.

This has been Super Swede celebrat-ing life and eulo-gizing his father, hoping the spirit of imagination lives in you.

Fathers and Sons

November 2012Hej!Skickar en kopia av Kung

Gustav V framför min farfar Anders Ringborgs hotell, Thor i Ängelholm. Det var manöver någonstans utanför staden och kungen kom för att närvara. Än-gelholm är känt för Lergökarna och Lergöksorkestern.

Ulla Ringborg IavelloCalifornia

[email protected]

InBox

Page 4: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

THE PACIFIC STATES. page 4

2012 har varit ett år i jubileumets och firandets tecken för SWEA San Francisco. I år är det nämligen 30 år sedan föreningen bildades en februarikväll 1982. Djungeltele-grafen hade gått varm när nyfikna svenskor samlades i Norska sjömanskyrkan för ett informationsmöte som sammankallats av Barbro Osher. Mötet följdes upp med ännu ett möte i mars, och så var SWEA-avdelningen SWEA San Francisco född. Föreningen fick en rivstart med 70 medlem-mar på direkten och växte snabbt till 120 medlemmar inom ett par månader. Idag har SWEA San Francisco över 400 med-lemmar och många aktiviteter varje månad samt bokklubbar, mammagrupper, balett-, opera-, symfoni- och teaterträffar, SWEA Professional och trevliga tjejträffar, samt ett alldeles eget bibliotek!

Firandet av denna fantastiska 30-åring har

SWEA San Franciscofirar 30 år!

Lisa Wiborg, som var med när SWEA San Francsico grundades, här tillsammans med Irene Tegelvik och Bridget Brink

SWEA San Francsico är en förening i föryngring! Anna Hansson-Shea, Maria Philip och Katarina Bennich. Anna och Katarina, hade tillsammans med Inger Skogström arbetat hårt med planeringen och genomförandet av jubileumsfesten.

Firande Sweor; Annette Åsberg, Birgitta Garde, Gun Bolin, Siv Hood, Anita Benson och Carin Bergman-Hayashida.

Teatro Zinzanni

Spelmännen

på röda mattan där gästerna välkomnades med champagne och fotografering. Sen blev det mingel till tonerna av svenska visor, samtidigt som artister från Teatro Zinzanni vandrade runt bland publiken och framförde olika konster och tricks.

Ordförande Gun Bolin hälsade välkommen och talade gjorde också kvällens speciella gäster Barbro Osher och VAMEs ordförande Annette Åsberg. SWEAs grundare Agneta Nilsson kunde inte närvara, men skickade en gratulationshälsning som lästes upp. Middagen kröntes av en underbar svensk dessert - prinsesstårta! Teatro Zinzanni underhöll samtidigt med en show speciellt komponerad för SWEA. Artisterna visade bevis på sin världsklass då de, iförda blågul mundering, framförde fascinerande och hu-moristiska nummer, bland annat till tonerna av ABBA.

SWEA San Francsicos första 30 år som SWEA-avdelning firades så rejält. Nu arbetar Sweorna vidare med den årliga julmarknaden, styrelseuppdrag, stipendieutdelning, stöd till nytillkom-na och trevliga träffar. Som Barbro Osher säger i SWEA- Magasinet: “... framförallt handlar SWEA om att vara en stor värmande famn för alla oss svenskor i förskingringen. Med tillför-sikt ser jag föryngringen och framåtan-dan i vårt gemensamma systerskap. Vi ”gamlingar” kan med förtröstan börja planera för halvsekeldagen.”

SWEA San Francsico är en växande förening i ständig föryngring som ser fram emot många, många roliga år till!

Text: Cecilia MasesPhotography: Jessica Armstrong

Teatro Zinzanni

pågått hela året med champangeutlottning på årsmötet, minnesartiklar i SWEA-Maga-sinet och en speciellt framtagen jubileums-logo. Höjdpunkten för allt firande blev den spektakulära fest som hölls den 21 oktober då över 100 finklädda Sweor samlades på det grönskande Marin Art & Garden Center. Festligheterna inleddes med en promenad

Page 5: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

THE PACIFIC STATES. page 5

Enjoy all that is truly good at

OLSON’SCelebrating 57 years of business

Stocking up at our Delicatessen and Gift Shop Is a Christmas tradition

HomemadePotato Sausage • FläskkorvMedisterpølse • Liverpate

Herring • Swedish MeatballsThe best of Scandinavian CheesesLingonberries • Fine Chocolates

JulglöggBe sure to order your special cured Swedish

Ham by December 2In our gift shop…

Great selection of Scandinavian gift items and Christmas decorations.

(323) 938-07425660 West Pico Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90019Store Hours—Nov. Tues. – Sat. 10am-4pm; Dec. (except

Mon. Dec 5) Mon.-Sat 10am-4pm, Sun. 12-4pm Closed Dec.25-26 Open 27-29

The Young Scandinavians Club presents

LuciaSunday, December 9 at 4:30 pm

Time: Glögg and lussekatter served at 4:30pm Lucia Program begins at 6 pm Dancing until 8:30 pm

Location: Swedish-American Hall 2174 Market Street, San Francisco

Tickets: $20 members, $23 guests, $13 children 5-16 children under 5 free. Last year Lucia completely sold out, so get your tickets early!

The Bay Area’s Young Scandinavians Club invites everyone to join us for our annual Lucia celebration. Join us for glögg, Christmas cookies,

our traditional Lucia procession, a visit from Santa (with goodie bags for the children),

and finally, traditional Swedish style dancing around the Christmas tree.

Purchase your tickets online at www.ysc.org Or, send payment to:

Y.S.C., c/o Reneé Hersson, 1696 Green St., San Francisco CA 94123make checks payable to Y.S.C.

For more information about the YSC and its events, see www.YSC.org

Golden Gate Swedes The Bay Area and Sveadal by Muriel Nelson Beroza

A history of the Swedish people of the San Francisco Bay Area, spanning 150 years and including the establishment of Sveadal.

Hardbound, 272 pages with 118 illustrations. $20. Available from Amazon.com

BilligastePriset

TillSverige.

Garanterat!

1204 Fifth Avenue

San Rafael, CA 94901

415-454-4932 Fax: 415-454-5783

www.skytours.com

Nestled in the heart of theSwedish Village of Kingsburg...

Svensk ButikSwedish Gifts

1465 Draper StreetKingsburg, California 93631

(559) 897-5119

Eva C. Eriksson DDSGeneral Dentistry for Adults and Children

662 Las Gallinas AvenueSan Rafael, CA 94903Phone: 415-479-6540

PreventionMinimally Invasive Dentistry

Svenska kyrkan i San Francisco avhåller

Svensk Adventsgudstjänst Söndagen den 9 december 2011 kl 11.00 f.m.

Sång av Zaida SingersKyrkkaffe serveras efter gudstjänsten

Lucia med andakt kl 15.00Predikan av kyrkoherde Pernilla Håkansdotter Olsson.

$5.00, barn och pensionärer $2.00

Julvesper Söndagen den 16 december 2011 kl 19.00

Arrangerad tillsammans med SWEA - San Francisco

NORWEGIAN SEAMEN’S CHURCH2454 Hyde Street, San Francisco • Tel: 415-775-6566

Santa Lucia. . .. . .

An authentic Swedish Santa Lucia Celebration will be held Saturday, Dec. 1 in Kingsburg, “California’s Swedish Village”.

. .Complete with Lucia pageantry (7:30 a.m.), a gingerbread house contest,

carolling, Festival of Lights Parade, and dancing around the Christmas tree. . .

Kingsburg is on Highway 99 ~ 22 miles south of Fresno. . .Plenty of Swedish

pancakes, authentic food, fun and more. . .begins at 10 a.m.; parade at 5:30 p.m.

Call the sponsoring Kingsburg District Chamber of Commerce at (559) 897-1111 for

more information! Välkommen!!!!!

Annette Åsberg, VAME-ordförande och Lena Powers från SWEA Seattle, SWEA San Francsisos ordförande Gun Bolin och Barbro Osher, SWEA San Francsicos grundare, på 25-årsfirande.

Page 6: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

THE PACIFIC STATES. page 6

Yulefest in Seattle

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Kyrkoåret börjar gå mot sitt slut, avslutas med domsöndagen och påbörjas med nyår den första advent. Texterna är dramatiska. Vi ska vara redo! Fäst upp era kläder, tänd era facklor! Vill vi vara redo? För vad? Vad är det som gör livet värt att leva?

Ja den frågan är ju inte den enklaste fråga att besvara med en sak, det kan ju finnas fler eller färre anledningar men jag hoppas att du känner en positiv känsla i bröstet när du tän-ker på vad som gör just ditt liv värt att leva.

Om man ska försöka sig på att göra ett samlingsbegrepp så kanske man skulle kunna säga att det som gör mig levande är det som driver mig, det som kallas elden, den som får dig att brinna. Elden som fenomen har ju fascinerat genom alla tider och sekler, den har förbryllat, skrämt och stärkt. Genom sitt vara, med oformlig låga och levande geome-tri. Elden som både lockar och bränner, nära och långt borta. Den eggar till fantasifulla varelser i mörkret och visar skuggornas innersta väsen. Jag vänder mig rakt till dig och frågar; Var finns den i dig, vad är din inre låga, vad får dig att brinna, vilken är din inre eld?

Vad får dig att vilja vara redo, att tända din fackla?

Vad får DIG att längta efter vidgade vyer och världsvida visioner?

Jag känner min låga, i mitt innersta rum har den sin plats. Den både värmer OCH brän-ner, ibland kvävs den nästan för att i nästa ögonblick flamma upp.

Den medvetandegör allt i mig, med sitt ljus mitt mörker, min tro och mina tvivel, min drivkraft och mina tillkortakommanden.

Jag har också bestämt mig för vad min låga, min eld ska vara för mig; den ska låta mitt väsen som nästan är skapad till en Gud, som det står att läsa i en av psaltarens psalmer, få ta plats och min låga ska lära mig att se varje människa ur samma perspektiv som jag själv vill bli betraktad. Där jag i varje möte oavsett, färg, form eller ursprung ser på människor med ärlig och uppriktigt och intresserad blick. En grund att vila på, en gemensam nämnare för den världsvida kyrkan, eller om ni vill; den globaliserade kyrkan. Något att kämpa för, en grund som säger, men inte

alltid efterlevs, att du och jag har samma värde, att du och någon på andra sidan jord-klotet med totalt andra förutsättningar och referensramar är lika mycket värda och ska ha samma möjlighet till ett värdefullt liv. Då är inte längre lågan förförande och eggande för dess geometri faller av som manteln från ett par nakna axlar. Det visar sig att elden inte är allt, något ger den näring att fortsätta brinna, leva, fortsätta skapa fantasier, histo-rier, inspiration och visioner. Kanske svaren finns i glöden och för att orka vara den som driver och manar, leder och inspirerar söka kärnan. Det är tron på det man gör och att det har ett innehåll och en trovärdighet, som driver oavsett om det handlar om ekonomi, företagsamhet eller religiösa övertygelser. Och så länge den lågan har kraften att brinna så länge kommer det också att finnas spelrum för mänskligt egenvärde, nytänkade och omtanke OCH en stadig grund att bygga gränslöst, att bygga världsvitt. I lågan ligger längtan efter helhet och helighet och den längtan får mig att vilja vara redo, att vilja tända min fackla.

Med önskan om ett gott slut på vårt kyrkoår och en god start på det nya den första advent!Pernilla Håkansdotter Olsson Kyrkoherde Kalifornien

Pernilla Håkansdotter Olsson

Låt lågan brinna

Julfest - Christmas PartyFriday Dec. 7 at Burlingame Women’s Club

Zaida Singers - Lucia Procession - Långdans/Ring Dance6:00 PM Glögg 7:00 pm Lucia Procession

Herring Table • Dinner by Chef Pelle / $55.00 Member price. $65.00 Non-members, $30.00 children. Send check,

payable to the Swedish Club, toSwedish Club c/o Loretta Ortenblad

7430 Greenville Place, Castro Valley, CA 94552. Ph: 510-733-5532http://swedishclubofsfba.org

Swedish Club of San Francisco

Yulefest was held November 17 and 18 at the Nordic Heritage Museum in Seattle to great success. Thousands of guests shopped, celebrated, and filled up on Nordic treats such as Swedish köttbullsmörgås – meatball sandwich - glögg, Norwegian Lefse and Danish aebleskiver. This long-standing event is a Seattle tradition that actually pre-dates the museum itself, and is held each year the weekend before Thanksgiving.

Köttbullar, meatballs need no explanation here. To create the sandwich, simply cut the cold meatballs in half, add cucumber, a little bit of salad, pickled red beet salad (if avail-able), tomatoes and place all on a piece of - preferably ‘limpa’ - bread. Serve open-faced. Lefse, almost a national dish in Norway is a traditional soft Norwegian flatbread made out of potato, flour and milk or cream. Not a Swedish tunnbröd but in uses and taste very similar to tortilla. Above served with a thin layer of peanut butter but may like its Mexican cousin equally well be filled with steak or chicken or served as a lefse-klenning, simply rolled up with some added regular butter.

Nordic Heritage Museum in Seattle is dedicated to the heritage of immigrants from all of the Nordic countries. Founded in 1980, the museum is both home to a variety of exhibitions and events and a gathering spot for the local Nordic groups. For more info, see www.nordicmuseum.org

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Shoppers at the Nordic Museum in Ballard, the traditionally Scandinavian section of Seattle.

Page 7: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

FEATURE. page 7

run by the Göta Canal Steamship Company takes four days.

A few years ago, my wife and I took one of these boats, the 138-year old Juno, from Stockholm to Gothenburg. A thoroughly enjoyable event, I thought I would reac-quaint myself with the Göta Canal this year, meeting up with the boats in strategic places and catch up with some of the sightseeing, which is part and parcel of these cross country cruises.

My first opportunity came early one day in the village of Berg, where a famous series of locks, eleven in all, link Lake Roxen with the canal. That morning, Wilhelm Tham (at 100 this year, a mere youngster compared to Juno) was due to arrive from the lake and begin a climb that would last for several hours.

This, I knew from previous experience, would give me the chance to board the vessel and chat, perhaps, with those pas-sengers who were not off sightseeing - the particular point of interest her being the Vreta Convent Abbey, a meticulously kept 12th-century nunnery.

Sighting the Wilhem Tham in the morning mist brought back strong memories. After Stockholm and some fifty miles of Baltic archipelago, this, I recalled, was where the canal truly takes over and begins to exert its special magic. From this point on came the sensation of gliding silently through the heart of the Swedish countryside, first as you approached Lake Vättern, then as the canal resumed it meandering ways, to the next large body of water, Lake Vänern, for miles, where the canal was just wide enough for the boat, the water would seem to disappear, leaving you floating alterna-tively through dense woods - where you could reach out and almost touch the tree branches - and quilts of open fields, punctu-ated by grazing cattle and, typically, red or yellow farmhouses.

Now, as the Wilhem Tham pause between two locks, I jumped aboard. How familiar it all felt: The same youthful, attentive yet relaxed crew, the same spirit of everyone be-ing one big family. Of course, a good portion of that family was now on its way to the nun-nery. I ducked into the empty dining room, curious about the day’s menu. “Poached Salmon,” and - how very Swedish and yet with an American twist - “Burger of Elk-meat and Lingonberries, with Blackcurrant Jam and Glazed sugar Peas,” Back on deck I noticed that practically all the passengers were gone, leaving me little opportunity for chats. Ah, there was a familiar sight! The captain’s bicycle, tied to the railing at the stern, looking old and just like the one I borrowed years ago.

Then, with my tripod strapped to the basket, I had followed one of the towpaths, soon outdistancing the Juno, when the slow-moving vessel caught up with me, shining white from behind verdant foliage; I was

all set with a fresh roll of film. These tow-paths, incidentally, have traffic of their own. Once used by oxen for hauling barges and sailing craft, they now bustle with cyclists and hikers.

The Göta Canal, or The Blue Ribbon as it is often called, takes its voyagers past castles, monasteries, palaces, medieval churches, and a number of picturesque towns. One such town is Vadstena. Idylli-cally situated on the eastern shore of Lake Vättern, and once an important center for pilgrims, Vadstena evolved around a cluster

of 14th-century religious buildings. It has narrow, twisting streets with old, beautifully preserved wooden houses.

As I approached its rather spectacular harbor, featuring a Renaissance castle with a medieval-looking moat, I sighted an old friend - the Juno.

It proved to have been chartered by a group of Americans who, now saturated with sightseeing, were coming back for dinner.

Continued from page 1

Meandering The Göta Canal

Asked how they felt about the Göta Canal, each one agreed that this was a great way to really see the country. Referring to her recent encounter with Vadstena, one woman exuberantly exclaimed: “It was wonder-ful! In three hours we saw all the sights, including two weddings and a confirmation ceremony.”

By the way, when Hans Christian Ander-sen asked for the whereabouts of Fredrika Bremer, he was told that she was in Norway. This didn’t discourage the young Dane. “Whenever I travel,” he said, “luck is with me. I’m sure I’ll meet her.” The next morn-ing he left his cabin at dawn to watch the sunrise over Lake Vänern, expecting to have the deck to himself. Instead he ran into a lady wrapped in a coat and shawl - a new pas-senger who also wanted to see the sun go up.

It was, of course, Fredrika Bremer.Written by Bo ZaundersPhotographs courtesy of Göta Kanal

Incidental IntelligenceWhen to go: The Göta Canal Steamship Company operates mid-May to mid-September. June, with its long days and midsummer festivities, is the most magical time to visit, though the boats tend to be more crowded at that time. July is when the Swedes themselves take their summer vacations.

The boats: There are three boats on the Göta Ca-nal Line: M/S Juno, M/S Wilhelm Tham, and M/S Diana. The Juno, built in 1874 and rebuilt in 1904, is the oldest and most charming, but its cabins are also the smallest. Of the three, Diana, from the 1930’s, is the youngest and most comfortable. Wilhelm Tham (1912) falls between the two, both in age and comfort. As for the cabins, they’re gen-erally small. On the Juno, the two best cabins are on shelter deck, behind the dining room, but the cabins on the bridge deck are also quite accept-able.

Prices: Prices are comparable to those on a luxury ocean liner but cabins in general much smaller than you’re used to and service and all other as-pects of the accommodations, well, having more in common with the Orient Express on water than anything you’ve ever experienced before. For two passengers in a double cabin, depending on cab-in, the two-day mini canal cruise will run $1,500 - $2,500, the classic four day cruise $3,400 - $6,200 and the luxury Great Swedish 6-day cruise $5,000 - $8,000 (prices are for two). These prices were converted from Swedish kronor and do not take into account early booking discounts and are based on the exchange rate in early No-vember 2012.

Contacts: The simplest way to find out more about how to meander the Göta Canal, is to visit the general information site http://gotacanal.se or www.stromma.se/en/Gota-Kanal for the actual Rederi AB Göta Kanal we covered here. To speak directly to a representative of the Göta Canal Com-pany in Sweden, call int. +46-(0)31-80 63 15. Or, go online, head for stromma.se/en/Gota-Kanal.

Page 8: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

FEATURE. page 8

Now you can change your name online. To change your first name, be ready to pay $$150, for a change of your last name, you’ve got to shell out $275. Above: Greta Garbo (1905-1990), one of Sweden’s most famous person to have her name changed. She was born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson and changed her name to Greta Garbo before she made her first film with Stiller.

Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center

National archives and library for Swedish-American historical research

Publishers of Swedish American Genealogist

639 38th Street | Rock Island, IL 61201-2296

Telephone 309.794.7204

www.augustana.edu/swenson

Zacharius Topelius’s “Läsning för barn” (Reading for Children) series appeared on

book shelves from 1856 – 1896. His works are now considered a treasure trove of historical significance, and their emphasis on nature, the simplicity of daily life, spirituality, and morality teaches lessons that are just as

relevant and important for readers today.

Judith Gustafson has painstakingly translated these classic stories into English, making them available for worldwide enjoyment. Her goal was to present them as authentically as possible,

bringing out the meaning, tone, and scriptural message that Topelius originally intended.Reading for children is the perfect collection of stories to be read to or by children.Order should be made through Tate Publishing

www.tatepublishing.com

Perfect gift for children

Christmas is around the cornerPlease order early

Last day for ordering Swedish cured ham is Dec. 10thPlease check the shipping deadlines on our website.

God Jul!349 Main Ave. | Norwalk, CT 06851 | Phone: 203-529-3244

Email: [email protected] | www.scandinavianbutik.com

Visit Scott’s for all your traditional Swedish treats

throughout the year.www.CookSwedish.com

www.CookSwedish.com Fine Swedish Food from Lindsborg, Kansas

1-855-227-2296 Scott’s Hometown Foods 215 N. Harrison St.TOLL FREE

Winter Reading

Nordic Studies Press

5226 North Sawyer AveChicago, IL 60625 USA

e-Mail:info@ nordicstudiespress.com www.nordicstudiespress.com

In Sweden, change your name onlineDid you always secretly wanted to be called Moonbeam or Ursus? No problem. If you’re in Sweden, feel free to change your name right away - online. The changing of a name used to be a time-consuming process, tak-

ing up to seven weeks. Now it’s easier than ever. Patent och registreringsverket (the Swedish Patent and Registration Office) has developed an online service. Within a week, from applying online, proceedings begin.

Says Åsa Ekvall at PRV: “We want to make it easier for our customers, couples about to get married, people in need of a new first name or those who just want to create their own unique last name.” In order to use this

service, you need to be able to verify your identity electronically, and you also need to be able to pay online. You also need to be over the age of 18, and a Swedish citizen or registered in Sweden. To change your last name costs 1800 SEK ($275) and to change your first name 1000 SEK ($150).

One of The Largest Selections of

Scandinavian Foods in the USFor a Mail Order form

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Phone: 510-705-1932Fax: 510-898-1753

Web Site: www.nordichouse.comEmail: [email protected]

NORDIC HOUSE

Page 9: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

FEATURE. page 9

The king himself, Carl XVI Gus-taf, will pay for the wedding of Princess Madeleine and Chris O’Neill.

Thus, the Swedish taxpayers are spared. The wedding, about to take place next summer, will be in Sweden but where is yet not known. “It’s the king, not the taxpayers, who will pay for it,” confirms Bertil Ternert, Director of the Information and Press Department at the Royal Swedish court.

When Crown Princess Victoria married Daniel, it was the state that paid for the wedding, and so the issue was brought up in a debate article by commissioner Staffan Norberg (of the Left Party) in Södertälje; Norberg questioned the justness of having Swedish tax money pay for Madeleine’s wedding. And now the king (and the Swedish court) is letting it be known that it is the king who will pay. The Swedish king (and his family) has a private fortune, which dates back to the days of the first Bernadotte, and this presumably is what will pay for the celebrations this summer.

Though Madeleine and Chris O’Neill live in New York, the wed-ding will take place in Sweden. “Definitely Sweden, and Stockholm I suppose. But we’ll see,” said

King pays for wedding

toll free: 877-784-7020. tel: 206-7847020

Nordic Worldwww.nordicworld.com

800-873-1445

Sonja Anderson’s

Söndagen den 2 december kl. 18.00Svenskt Luciatåg

Carols and Candles Wayfarers chapel

Lördagen den 15 december kl. 17.00Decemberfest

med luciatåg och jultomten på besökGlögg, lussebullar och pepparkakor serveras

Tisdagen den 25 december kl. 07.00Julotta

efter gudstjänsten serverasskinksmörgås, mjuk pepparkaka och kaffePernilla Håkansdotter Olsson, Kyrkoherde

Church of Sweden Los Angeles1035 South Beacon Street, San Pedro, CA 90731

Tel. 310-832-6800 • E-mail: [email protected]/losangeles

VÄLKOMMEN TILL DIN KYRKA!

Punch & Glögg served at 4PM,followed by a

Swedish Christmas Smörgåsbord DinnerLucia Pageant

Ring dances around the Christmas treeVisit by Santa Claus

(bring a small, wrapped present for Santa to give to your child with child’s name clearly printed on gift)

Handcrafted items & homebaked goodies for saleCall Don Christensen for price and reservations

at 707-545-2241. Due date December 3.

LUCIA FEST – JULBAZAAR

“Natten går tunga fjät…”Linnea Lodge #504 Petaluma invites you to its

Annual Lucia Fest & JulbazaarSunday December 9, 4-7 PM

Petaluma Veterans Memorial Building

LINNEA LODGE, VASA ORDER OF AMERICA

O’Neill to Swedish tabloid Expres-sen last week. And he continued: “It is Madeleine who makes me this amazingly happy. She is the star

in my life.” And Madeleine could do nothing but agree: “I am just as happy. This is simply amazing, just as Chris says.”

Page 10: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 10

The last of the three television debates of the presidential election campaign is over, and in only two weeks America will choose a new president.

The debates have played an important role in this campaign, more important, perhaps, than in many a year, maybe since John F. Kennedy met Richard Nixon in the very first debate in 1960 and upset the favorite, the sitting vice president.

In the first debate in this year’s campaign, the challenger Mitt Romney knocked the socks off a sleepy Barack Obama and be-came a serious challenger to the president. Obama’s listless performance let Romney into the race, a race that the president at that time led comfortably. And then, Romney held his ground pretty well, although the judgment is that Obama won the two fol-lowing debates—the last one by 48 percent to 40, according to CNN’s first quick poll, and by 53 percent to 23 according to CBS News.

Still, it was a fairly even debate where neither candidate committed any major mistakes. In fact, you could argue there was no real debate, for Romney had de-cided to hold back, lie low, be cautious and presidential. All his earlier criticism of Obama’s foreign policy was gone, replaced by broad consensus between the two about America’s role in the world and President Obama’s foreign policy.

On Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, the War on Terror, including the drone attacks against terrorists in various countries, and, yes, even on Libya, Romney took positions very close to Obama’s. By refraining from at-tacking Obama, Romney had clearly made a decision not to seem like a war hawk, not to seem beligerent, as someone seeking new conflicts and new wars for America in the Middle East. By doing so, he moved toward the political center, toward a more moderate policy—he became a “man of peace,” as one commentator put it, jokingly.

Romney’s transition seemed to startle Obama a bit, although the president kept up his attacks, calling Romney’s foreign policy “all over the map” and charging him for trying to “air brush history.” And while expressing his satisfaction that Rom-ney now supported the administration’s diplomatic efforts in that volatile region, Obama could not refrain from sticking it to Romney when possible. Romney’s charge that the U.S. Navy has fewer ships since 1916 was met by the zinger of the evening: Obama saying that the military also has fewer bayonets and horses than in 1916....

Why the subdued, cautious Romney? Was he playing it safe in a race that seemed more even than ever? Maybe. But as a result, he came to stand in stark contrast to a firm, straight talking, decisive president, who said he had done what he promised to do when he became president, and that he was the best one to lead America in the next four years.

Will what happened in this third debate matter? We don’t know yet. The two pre-vious debates had each been watched by almost 70 million people. The last debate most likely had fewer viewers. Foreign policy is not the main theme of this cam-paign. And most voters seem to have made up their minds by now. The number of undecided are very few and the remain-ing two weeks of the campaign will be more about getting out the vote—because turnout can decide this election.

That debate also competed with the drama of the seventh and deciding game in the National League’s baseball playoffs, and, I must say, I myself switched chan-nels a couple times to verify that my old favorite team, the San Francisco Giants, really was ahead and on its way to the World Series. Now, that’s important, too, but not, of course, nearly as important as what happens on November 6—for America and this country’s future.

TV debates do matter

Internationally renowned journalist Klas Bergman covers the 2012 U.S. election process from a Swedish American perspective.

Born in Stockholm, Bergman spent most of his adult life

outside Sweden, reporting from western and eastern Europe, the Middle East and the U.S., based in Washington, DC and working

mainly for the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter and the

Christian Science Monitor. His primary domicile has been America, ever since his early

student days in California in the 1960s. He now lives in the

Washington, DC area.For more information on the

columnist and communications specialist, see http://ksbergman.

wordpress.com

Swede in D.C.

Want to “meet with” Klas? Klas Bergman continuously also blogs at nordstjernan.com, under “Blog”

What keeps Swedes up at night?What do Swedes worry about? No, it’s not the mortgage, and it’s not debt that make them

toss and turn at night. Instead it’s unemployment and prolonged sick leave. One in every four Swedes worries their income will change because of unemployment or illness, ac-cording to a poll by Svensk fastighetsförmedling (Sweden’s largest chain of estate agents). Especially women worry. 29 percent of them express serious concern over these issues, whereas only 20 percent of men worry over the same things. And it’s mostly people in the age group 35-59 who worry; younger Swedes are not as concerned. In the age group 25-34 the greatest worry is sinking housing prices. “There are reports of a marked increase in the number of notices and rising unemployment,” says Peter Pütsep, managing director at Svensk Fastighetsförmedling in a press release. 1,022 Swedes from all over the country participated in the poll.

Swedes for ObamaDaily Aftonbladet polled their readers to see which of the American presidential candidates

appealed most to them, and it is clear Barack Obama is the winner, were Swedes to vote: As many as 90 percent keep their fingers crossed for the Democrat. However, in the town of Älmhult the numbers differ from other municipalities, as 34 percent would vote for Mitt Romney there. Singer Pauline Kamusewu grew up in Älmhult, and she expresses shock over the result: “Is it true? They need a reality check. I’m shocked.” Kamusewu says she’d rather not say how she’d vote if she were an American but that she leans toward Obama: “Perhaps he hasn’t done the best, but he has done what he has better than others. If he gets to stay then maybe there will be a change.” Aftonbladet polled 23,143 readers, of them 20,877 voted for Obama and 2,266 for Rom-ney. The newspaper cautions that this poll shows who Aftonbladet readers would vote for, and may not be representative for all Swedes.

Page 11: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 11

Swedish News

Sweden’s population has surpassed 9.5 million.

Taylor Swift’s Swedish successAmerican singer Taylor Swift sold 4 million copies of her new CD in 24 hours. And she did so with some Swedish help. Super producers Max Martin and Shellback are being cel-ebrated by both the star herself and American media, for the three tracks they’ve helped her with on the album titled “Red”. When Swift performed live from a stage at Times Square last Tuesday, she sang “We will never get back together”, a song she recorded in Stockholm and wrote together with Max Martin and Shell-back and also produced by the duo. In an interview with Los Angeles Times, Swift says it was something of an ex-perience for her to watch Max Martin create the hit single in the studio. “I wanted to watch Max Martin conceptual-ize a pre-chorus that gets stuck in your head as much as the chorus. I wanted to see him suggest a post-hook, or a bridge that sounds like another chorus. I wanted to see how all that unfolds.... I loved watching everybody have their own process. I think moving forward that just gives me more colors to paint with.” The other two songs the Swedes contributed with, “I knew you were trouble” and “22”, are also considered top numbers. And USA Today writes that the three Swedish songs are the absolute best ones on Swift’s album.

Sweden Democrats pushing aheadThe controversial party Sverigedemokra-terna (Sweden Democrats) is experienc-ing good times. In the latest poll from Yougov, they are pushing ahead. This fall, the leaders from the eight political parties met for their first debate, though Swedes in general seemed only mildly interested as the program was seen by only 750,000 people. And according to the latest elec-tion poll by Yougov, not much has hap-pened. Only one party sticks out from the rest and that’s the Sweden Democrats; 9.3 percent of Swedes today said they’d vote for the Sweden Democrats were there an election in Sweden this year. That’s 2 percent more than last month.

World heritage threatened on ÖlandThe planned wind turbines on the southern part of Öland may lead to the island losing its world heritage status. The warning comes from the Swedish department of Icomos, Unesco’s expert agency. The world heritage area Södra Öland (southern Öland) is comprised of over 56,000 hect-ares (138379 acres). The plan is to put up the wind turbines right there. “To say that they (the wind turbines) would cause no apparent harm on the value of what constitutes the world heritage area would be near impossible,” writes Kerstin Westerlund Bjurström, chairwoman for Icomos in Sweden, in a letter to Mörbylånga municipality.

Record number apply to universityA record number of applicants wanting to enter colleges and universities in Sweden has been reached, according to Verket för högskoleservice (the Swedish Agency for Higher Education Services). Meanwhile, there are fewer spots available, which means stiffer competition. Earlier this month, 209,023 persons had applied for college and university for spring 2013, which is 7,000 more than a year ago, and 9,000 more than two years ago. In spite of the increasing number of applicants, the number of avail-able spots at Swedish institutions is decreasing; next year it will decrease by 10,000.

Jimmie Åkesson

As many of you know, I reside in the south, a place where the spires of Baptist churches, like telephone poles to God, invade your peripheral vision en route to one of the few liquor stores around. Where I live you also hear people talk about the War of Northern Aggression, which to most of us is known as the Civil War, and took place in America in 1861-1865.

We have a “neat” Confederate memo-rial statue celebrating the Great South. If you come to visit and people see you come or go in the vicinity of a Civil Rights museum that has been strug-gling to stay afloat, do not count on being invited to lunch by southerners, who are known for their hospitality—like Paula Deen and her ear-splitting butchery of the English language.

I had these thoughts and images when I took my three mini-Dachshunds for a walk this morning, a beautiful and sunny one, temperatures finally bear-able for those of us who have Viking blood coursing through our veins; the heat and humidity level below 90 degrees. I was also visited (no, not by divine intervention) by a plan that was beginning to formulate itself in my mind.

What if I turned a neighborhood, such as the one I live in, into a Swedish ha-ven? Of course all of this is dependent on investors or cultural grants, but let us worry about the financing later.

Let us call the settlement “Swedev-ille.” Not a particularly beautiful name that will have people flocking to live here, but then some of the names of retirement communities are either patronizing or outright frightening.

In this Swedeville, we will have to come up with street names to replace common ones around here in the south, such as those containing the name Rob-ert E. Lee (famous southern general who fought in the War of Northern Ag-gression) and the very much favored “plantation,” which exists to remind southerners of times when things were glorious and right and they were living out a kind of manifest destiny.

So we will gather names of Swed-ish kings and maybe something with “björk” or “sjö.” The latter would be a particularly good choice because as in-habitants of Swedeville we could laugh at all the people trying to pronounce its sound that really shows if you are Swedish or not. I would also include a

street for the literati among us, nicely tongue-tripping, of “Nordstjernan.”

The houses in Swedeville we might as well turn into humongous som-marstugor. They have to be that identi-fiable red that signals summer and for a Swede, a relatively elevated mood. But most important, the word stuga must equal McMansion.

Things are starting to look good in Swedeville and all we have done so far is name some streets and put in comfortable, large homes.

Our car choices must of course include Volvo (they could become an important founding sponsor of this community), and Saabs are only available used, due to recent economic developments. But since our neighbor-hood is to be appealing to people who are trying to emulate being Swedish in a kind of non-religious paradise way, BMW and Mercedes are to co-exist with Volvo.

While Swedes have a reputation of being neutral, which somehow seems to equal a willingness to take in political refugees, the refugees of Swedeville must be people who come from South American countries and look like the offspring of Nazis who hid down there. No Africans, please! I don’t think we can post this at the en-trance of the gated Swedeville commu-nity, but surely there must be a clever way to make this kind of population planning palatable.

Swedes are neutral, so if some people of Swedeville decide to keep out dark people, then neutral will the rest of the residents of Swedeville show themselves to be. No sense taking sides or engaging in overt aggressive arguments.

We must make sure people have Swedish flags. While they are not hoisted in front of your everyday Swedish home, it is both safe and slightly exhilarating to engage in this sommarstuga practice. I imagine my neighbor who sports the sign “That We May Be One In Christ”—all caps and a very visible red logo of the cross—might be reasonable and exchange this sign for a Swedish flag. Especially if that means the Vietnamese neighbor he has been feuding with about property lines moves out among all this Swed-ish pride.

Weren’t those great shirts? “Swed-ish Pride” and “Träna for Sverige”? Instead of residents wearing T-shirts with Confederate flags or NASCAR after work, now we will see the yellow and blue light up the neighborhood. And we can dress our dogs in these

clothes, too. It takes a long time to plan a neigh-

borhood properly, even if we are mak-ing good progress. So let me offer a few more suggestions, while promising to continue this planning, with your help, I hope—send those emails and letters to Nordstjernan.

We need to build a church that looks like one of those empty Swedish churches. It could serve as a meeting hall for our Swedeville neighborhood association. The building of the church, as opposed to church, is one many of us are familiar with. I remember one, barely, that I stepped inside maybe three times as a child. Remarkably, I saw one just like it on a Swedish Wal-lander episode featuring some religious zealot and nut. Come to think of it, believing in God and going to church is very crazy and un-Swedish. But let’s have a church in our Swedeville because next to serving as a meeting ground for our neighborhood asso-ciation it can also come in handy as a fortress against southerners criticizing us for our godlessness.

There is so much exciting news I still want to tell you about Swedeville. We are planning a store featuring Swedish foods, particularly lots of cheese, and the topless sunbathing will be great, along with plenty of sambo features, and I am not talking about the story involving Sambo that is no longer deemed acceptable reading.

But while you think about if we should have recently renamed choco-late balls (recipe, page 10) for sale in the wonderful store that offers knäckebröd wheels, please give some thought to policies regarding weapons and make other suggestions that would make living in Swedeville palatable to Swedes and those who want to be Swedes. Which, of course, begs the question: Just who is the Swede? And another: What does he really think? And one more: What does he really want?

From the south, planning Swedeville, this has been Super-Swede returning from his Saturday promenade.

Blue and Yellow UtopiaBorn in Sweden and raised both in

Europe and the U.S., Ulf Kirchdorfer is as Swedish American as we come. Ulf, who has a Ph.D. in English and is dean of global studies at Darton College, will keep all of us - Swedes, Americans and Swedish Americans alike - on track.

[email protected]

‘Swedeville’

Page 12: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 12

You’ve heard it before, haven’t you? We aren’t eating enough fruits and vegetables. At least Swedes aren’t. Only 9 percent of all adult Swedes are. By eating enough, according to recommendations from Livsmedels-verket (the National Food Agency), you should consume half a kilo of the good stuff a day (that’s 1.1 lbs).

According to Statens folkhälsoin-stitut (the Swedish National Institute of Public Health), how much you eat depends on what group you belong to. “People with good economy and a long education oftentimes have better eating habits than those with shorter educations and poorer economy,” says Pia Lindeskog, director of the department for living habits at Statens folkhälsoinstitut. “This is something we see in almost all studies. It’s a class matter.” Lindeskog says those of us who eat lots of fruits and vegetables increase our ability to feel good, while also making sure common diseases are prevented. The nutrition and vitamins found in vegetables cannot be gotten by popping vitamins: “Studies show that you might get side effects if you use these pills to get the nutrients you need. So the best thing is to eat fruit and vegetables.

” The number of Swedes eating the right amount of fruit and vegetables in Stockholm: 11 percent (women: 15 percent and men: 7 percent). Best are the people living in Täby and Sollentuna, where 14 percent eat the recommended amounts, and worst are the people in Norrtälje, who only eat 6 percent.

Most Swedes do not consume enough fruit and vegetables. Do you?

Not enough fruit and veggies

“Searching for Sugar Man” a documen-tary about the folk singer Rodriguez, has received an Oscar nomination.

“Searching for Sugar Man” is a movie directed by Swedish film director Malik Bendjelloul. In the film, Bendjelloul fol-lows the epic search of two South Afri-cans to track down the elusive Rodriguez, who has become a legend in their country while living a life in relative obscurity in Detroit. The nomination was announced early Thursday morning at a press confer-ence in Beverly Hills.

“It feels surrealistic, crazy. Oscar is, the word itself, it’s something you’ve

heard about since you were a kid. It never occurred to me that it was some-thing anyone ever achieved. I mean, I’m from Sweden. It’s completely crazy,” Bendjelloul told the Free Press from Los Angeles. He further said that he had expected to get a phone call around 5:30 in the morning if he earned a nomination,

Swedish Cinderella

Page 13: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

NEWS IN BRIEF. page 13

‘Drivin and Dreaming’ in California

Swedish singer-songwriter Sofia Talvik, above, is in California on her Drivin’ and dreaming tour of the U.S.. Talvik also played at Lollapalooza and SXSW, but the extensive two-year U.S. tour in an old RV with her husband will put her in close contact with the fans. Check when she’ll be near you www.sofiatalvik.com and enjoy ur video clip of Sofia and her husband Jonas Westin; driver, PR, bookings as well as sound technician online, at nordstjernan.com

Malik Bendjelloul, his film “Sugar Man” has been nominated for an Oscar. The Oscars take place on Sunday, February 24 this year.

when he woke up later than that, he though the film had failed to make it into the best documentary category. Then he went online. “I checked my e-mails and I was like, ‘Wait, wait, no, no I got it, I got it!’,” he said with a laugh.

Bendjelloul credits Rodriguez with being the key to the film’s success. “This is the most amazing story ever. The story of Rodriguez, it was like the Cinderella aspect of it, a man lives his whole life without knowing he’s a superstar. When I heard the story, I thought it was the best story I ever heard in my life.”

The 85th Oscars is broadcast live on ABC on February 24.

story Oscar nominated

InBox

I recognized a quote you used in your holiday greeting, thought you might like to know its source. It was John Wesley (1703-1791), an Anglican cleric and Christian theologian - who said, ‘Do all the good you can. By all the means you can. In all the ways you can. In all the places you can.’ He was one of the founders of Methodism and I suspect he came by these tenets at his mother Susanna’s knees. The story is told that she, who had a bevy of children and a husband who was often gone preaching - well, she ran her household in a disciplined fashion, both godly and practical: for every hour spent praying or reading the Bible, an equivalent hour was to be spent Doing Good - most probably first of all helping with the housework. Her teaching took hold, which is why the Wesley brothers (John and Charles) were sneered on while at college, called ‘those darned methodical Wesleys’ - hence the name Methodists. FYI. Thanks so much for your column.

Birgitta Ericsson, Medford, ORThanks for this Birgitta, much appreciated!

Quite a joy to learn about the “methodical Methodist brothers” /Ed.

Much ado about method...

Page 14: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

DASHBOARD. page 14

Washington, D.C.L-R: Mrs. Eva Hafström, Ambassador Jonas Hafström, Marga Bergman and the author Klas Bergman. The aAmbassa-dor and Mrs. Hafström held a book release event at the Nebraska Ave. residence recently for Bergman’s book “Ameri-ka - Drömmarnas Land” so far only available in Swedish. The author promises to have an English version available for download as e-book early next year. In case you read Swedish, the book is an entertaining read through the author’s five decades of experience with the U.S. beginning with his high school and colllege years in California in the early sixties. Publisher: Carlsson Bokförlag ISBN-13: 9789173315159

Food Biff StrindbergLet’s add a bit more of a salute to Au-

gust Strindberg (1849-1912), since 2012 marks his centennial. This is a recipe for a minute steak (“lövbiff”) with mustard. The origins of the dish aren’t actually clear, and it’s even unclear whether the Swedish author ever ate it.

Ingredients for four servings:4 minute steaks (sometimes also known

as cube steaks, thin cuts of red meat)4 Tablespoons mustard1 finely chopped onion2 egg yolksMix mustard and egg yolks to a batter,

spread it on one side of the steak and drizzle chopped onion on top. Put the steak in the frying pan batter side up, turn the steak once. Serve the steaks with fried or boiled potatoes.

Recipe courtesy of recept.nu.

Biff Strindberg seems like a variation on Biff a la Rydberg (originally introduced at the long ago disap-peared Stockholm Hotel Rydberg) oftentimes called Biff Greta and served as a luxurious “pytt-i-panna” with ingredients served separate on a plate.

Biff Strindberg—an easy and quick-to-make classic. Photo from recept.nu

Sweden and the United StatesFirst of Advent (a major event in Swedish households) is fast approachingwhich means it’s time to light the first candle of the Advent candlestick. This year it falls on December 2.

Is it sill or is it strömming? “Sill” is herring and “strömming” is Baltic (small) herring. The above photo shows strömming.

‘Sill or strömming?’It has been scientifi-

cally proven: Sill (her-ring) and strömming (Baltic small herring) are two different things.

A study from Uppsala and Stockholm univer-sities shows that the two fish are genetically different. Previously, it was thought they only had small or no dif-ferences at all. “All the ‘sill’ and ‘ström-ming’ we’ve studied are closely related. But for a small percentage of the genes, we’ve found very clear differences, not only between ‘sill’ and ‘strömming’ but also between different collections of the two,” says Leif Andersson, professor of gunctional Genomics at Uppsala University, in a press release.

Page 15: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

DASHBOARD. page 15

‘Name’s days’ of the Swedish Calendar: /Kommande två veckors namnsdagar

November 30: Sunrise SunsetIn New York 7.00 a.m. 4.29 p.m.In Stockholm 8.13 a.m. 2.59 p.m.In Kiruna 9.52 a.m. 1.04 p.m.Lund 8.09 a.m. 3.44 p.m.In Los Angeles 6.41 a.m. 4.44 p.m.

Stockholm, SwedenWhen Kanye West visited Stockholm’s Grand Escalier, he couldn’t find any-thing he liked on the menu. No problem, the staff made the American su-perstar a burger he won’t forget anytime soon. Recipe: Begin with the bot-tom half of a piece of Brioche bread. Add Dijonnaise, salad, and oven-baked tomatoes as well as fresh tomatoes. The burger itself then consists of diced prime rib and duck liver and pancetta, fried with shallots. Let a slice of Gru-yère cheese melt over the burger and top it with onion and more Dijonnaise.

December 01 Oskar/OssiannDecember 02 Beata/BeatriceDecember 03 LydiaDecember 04 Barbara/BarbroDecember 05 SvenDecember 06 Nikolaus/NiklasDecember 07 Angela/AngelikDecember 08 VirginiaDecember 09 AnnaDecember 10 Malin/MalenaDecember 11 Daniel/DanielaDecember 12 Alexander/AlexisDecember 13 LuciaDecember 14 Sten/SixtenDecember 15 GottfridDecember 16 Assar

“Ljusets tid i december” What happens in Sweden in December?On December 13 one of the

most beloved holidays takes place, and that, of course, is Sankta Lucia. Along with Advent, Lucia marks the be-ginning of Christmas. Some trace the “re-birth” of the Lucia celebrations in Sweden to the tradition in German Protestant families of having girls dressed as angelic Christ children handing out Christmas pres-ents. The Swedish variant of this white-dressed Kindchen Jesus, or Christkind, was called Kinken Jes, and started to appear in upper-class families in the 18th century on Christmas Eve with a candle-wreath in her hair, handing out candy and cakes to the children.

Another theory claims that the Lucia celebration evolved from old Swedish traditions of “star boys” and white-dressed angels singing Christmas carols at different events during Advent and Christmas. In either case, the current tradition of having a white-dressed woman with candles in her hair appearing on the morning of Lucia Day started in the area around Lake Vänern in the late 18th century and spread slowly to other

that year. The initiative was then followed around the country through the local press.

Today most cities in Sweden appoint a Lucia every year. Schools elect a Lucia and her maids among the students and a national Lucia is elected on national television from regional winners. The regional Lucias will visit shopping malls, retirement communi-ties and churches, singing and handing out “pepparkakor” (gingerbread).

Guinness World Records has noted the Lucia procession in Ericsson Globe in Stockholm as the largest in the world, with 1200 participants from Adolf Fredriks Musikklasser, Stockholms Musikgymna-sium and Stockholmläns Blåsarsymfoniker.

parts of the country during the 19th century.In the Lucia procession depicted by Carl

Larsson in 1908, the oldest daughter brings coffee and St. Lucia buns to her parents while wearing a candle-wreath and singing a Lucia song. Other daughters may help, dressed in the same kind of white robe and carrying a candle in one hand, but only the oldest daughter wears the candle-wreath.

The modern tradition of having public processions in the Swedish cities started in 1927 when a newspaper in Stockholm elected an official Lucia for Stockholm

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Lucia as seen by popular Swedish painter Carl Larsson (1853-1919).

‘Namnsdag’ December 5Sven is Old Norse for “young man” or

“young warrior.” The original spelling in Old Norse was

Sveinn. Over the centuries, many northern European rulers have carried the name includ-ing Sweyn I of Denmark (Sven Gabelbart), who established Danish rule over Norway and successfully invaded England in the year 1002.

An old legend relates the pagan king Blot-Sven ordered the execution of the Anglo-Saxon

monk Saint Eskil. In me-dieval Swedish “sven” (or “sven av vapen” (sven of arms) is a term for squire.

Los Angeles, CACongrats to Swedish actor, director, and martial artist Dolph Lundgren who re-ceives the 2012 Eliason Merit Award. The Swedish movie star and action hero has starred in over 40 movies since his breakthrough in “Rocky IV” and the James Bond feature “A View to a Kill”. His most recent films include the suc-cessful Sylvester Stallone produced “The Expendables.” Born in Stockholm a former Fulbright Scholar and with a Masters degree in Chemistry Lundgren is not your typical action hero, however.

Page 16: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

LOCAL EVENTS. page 16

Christmas Bazaar at the Swedish Church

a great, Swedish-style Christmas. Preparing for the Christmas Bazaar takes

time and commitment, and the church couldn’t do it without plenty of volunteers. What is it, we wanted to know, that makes these volunteers give their time and energy?

Photographer Michael Skoglund has helped sell Christmas table linens the last three years, and says that though he likes everything involved with volunteering at the bazaar, the best is the glögg.

Mona Johnsson has been volunteering at the Christmas Fair every year since 1973. She was also selling Christmas linens.

“I began as a ‘glöggdam,’” she says. “That’s when Gunnar Granberg was pastor here. Up with the vodka from underneath the table whenever someone said the glögg wasn’t strong enough! In those days we made all the food ourselves. We made the gravy for the meatballs; there was red wine in it. Oh, it was fun! It still is. I meet people here that I don’t meet during the rest of the year.”

Monica Oscarsson has been involved as long as Mona. “It’s a great tradition. We want it to continue, so we help out. Every year I

meet the same people, but there are new ones, too. It’s great.”

“Yes,” adds Mona. “It’s a tradition I hope will always continue. Whether there’s money made or not, it’s great. It’s like a great big family here.”

Anne Rudolph sells lussekatter and cinna-mon buns. “I do this to help the church—I want to keep this bazaar going, so I do my share. What’s best about the event? That everyone’s happy, there’s a positive atmo-spehre. I just told Gunhild Ljung, who is always here with me: ‘I can’t believe it’s a year since last time!’”

Carin Friberg comes in from Mount Kisco, in Westchester, to help; it’s her third year. “It’s great to meet other Swedes,” she says. “I come to the church a lot. I usually am here for Träffpunkt* every Wednesday.”

Artist Bert Alexander is back in New York after living a while in Malmö. Bert took some time off from painting to help out at the bazaar: “Why am I here? Because it’s a lot of fun!”

In January, you’ll be able to see Bert’s paintings of famous Swedes exhibited at the Swedish Church—paintings that are unique as well as affordable, he says.

Continued from page one

Madeleine RIbbing, at SWEA’s table, says for her the Christmas Bazaar is the very beginning of the Christmas celebrations.

We went upstairs for some glögg, and there we found Pastor Stellan Ponnert and film critic Niclas Goldberg.

Mona Johnsson, Michael Skoglund and Monica Oscarsson sell table cloths.

Administrator of the Swedish Church, Lena Fleischmann, likens the preparation for the Christmas Bazaar to giving birth: It takes nine months to prepare, she says, and it cannot be done unless you have a little bit of help (in this case, glögg).

Carin Friberg spends much time at the Swedish Church and recommends “Träffpunkt,” where Swedes meet for fika and chat.

Gunilla Lindblad from Malmö likes to volunteer at the Christmas Bazaar because it’s a great way to meet good friends.

Hollister North likes to chat with people.

Bert Alexandersson, back in New York after having lived in Malmö for awhile, has an exhibition of paintings of famous Swedes at the church in January.

Anne Rudolph, right sells lussekatter and cinnamon buns.

At SWEA’s table we met Madeleine Rib-bing, who calls the Christmas Bazaar an “injection” of Christmas. “For me this marks the beginning of the Christmas celebrations,” she said.

Hollister North’s father is American. She grew up in Sweden but is now back in the U.S. “I’ve been here for the past 15 years,” Hollister says. “What’s best about it? Oh, I don’t know. Maybe the dinner they give us volunteers at the end of it. It’s also fun to talk to the people stopping by.”

Gunilla Lindblad comes from Malmö. She likes to volunteer at the Christmas Bazaar because it’s a great way to meet good friends.

“It’s always fun to sell things. And this gives a nice taste of Christmas. My bestseller? The candles and the tomtar.”

And then there’s Lena Fleischmann, who isn’t a volunteer but the administrator at the Swedish Church. Nevertheless, Lena has been working at the Christmas Bazaars for the past 33 years.

“I always say it’s a bit like giving birth,” she says. “It takes nine months to prepare, and then when it actually takes place you have to have just a bit of glögg to make it easier. But not too much, or it will get you in trouble.”

By Eva Stenskär

For more information about the activities at the Swedish Church in New York: svens-kakyrkan.se/newyork

*Träffpunkt is a weekly event at the church, where you meet for “fika” and conversation.

Page 17: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

LOCAL EVENTS. page 17

Triumph for SATC and Strindberg“Bastards of Strindberg,” a staged reading of four

one-act plays, shows that August Strindberg still has the power to inspire, even when his own material might be a bit stale. These children of Strindberg are quite beautiful and very much carry his blood.

What promised to be just another staged reading of “Bastards of Strindberg” by the Scandinavian American Theater Company at Scandinavia House, turned into a triumphant evening. I write “just another” because for a media-stuffed audience, readings can be dry and uninspiring. In addition, this time the reading was four one-act plays based on or informed by one of Swedish playwright August Strindberg’s most dated and overplayed pieces: “Miss Julie.”

The reading, however, was wonderful. All four plays (“High Powered,” “Midsummer at Tyrolen,”

“Chanting Hymns To Fruitless Moons” and “The Truth About Fröken Julie”) were sharply written, relevant and fun as well as practically acted rather than read, and excellently done so. The four plays showed that though it’s 100 years since Strindberg died (and 124 years since he wrote “Miss Julie”), he still has the power to inspire. The reading was also a testament to the enormous talent that’s around—whether they are writers, actors or direc-tors, and regardless of where they are from.

If I were to pick a favorite, it’d be Swedish playwright Andreas Boonstra’s “The Truth About Fröken Julie,” the longest of the pieces, which was constructed like a bunch of directorial notes more than a regular play. It delved into Strindberg’s original text with a magnifying glass, exposing its loopholes and mistakes, and doing so with verve and finesse without dismantling the Swedish liter-ary giant. Boonstra is fluent when it comes to “Miss Julie” for he has read it and read it and then read it some more. In his play, he gently pokes fun of Strindberg’s textual problems. Why, for instance, would a man like Jean be a footman when he has traveled around Europe and speaks French? And what of the name Jean? What servant in Sweden at the time had a name like Jean? Boonstra did more than that, he broke with what Strindberg wanted to do with “Miss Julie”—to usher in the naturalistic theater.

“Strindberg wanted to raise up the fourth wall in the theater room,” explained Boonstra. “He wanted to give the audience the sense that they were flies on the wall, seeing and hearing something on stage they weren’t supposed to see or hear. But what we’re doing in Europe today is the opposite; we’re tearing down that wall. We want to close the gap between the stage and the audience.”

In the panel discussion that followed the perfor-mances, Boonstra admitted he didn’t feel enthu-siastic when he was approached to write a short play inspired by “Miss Julie.”

“First I said ‘yes’ because who doesn’t want his play read in New York City,” he said. “But when I heard ‘Miss Julie’, I thought ‘Oh, no, not again.’ I think the play lacks relevance today; I think it’s antiquated.”

My thoughts as well. Yet, these four plays all added something to the character of Julie, in a way they were better—or perhaps just more in tune with our time—than Strindberg’s “Miss Julie.” I think what’s lacking in “Miss Julie” is that we as an audience don’t really care what happens to any of the characters, we never feel for them, but that wasn’t at all the issue with the newly written plays.

In “High Powered” by Dominique Morisseau, a couple is fighting over whether it’s worth the price you have to pay to move up in society. Wonder-ful acting by Jocelyn Bioh and Harvey Gardner Moore—the audience loved and rooted for both their characters: his fierce insistence on becoming somebody, of making something of his life, and her feelings of being happy with what she already had.

In “Midsummer at Tyrolen,” written by Lina Ekdahl, actors Vanessa Johansson, Oliver Burns and Anette Norgaard began by commenting on the three characters in “Miss Julie” (Julie, Jean, and Kristin) and then slowly merged into them. It’s an enormously entertaining morsel which again shed light on Strindberg’s play.

In “Chanting Hymns To Fruitless Moons,” play-wright David Bar Katz examines what would have happened had Julie not met the fate Strindberg forced upon her (suicide).

“When re-reading the play, I found myself an-gry,” Bar Katz said at the discussion that followed the reading. “Angry that Miss Julie had to die. So I was channeling my anger on her behalf (by giving her another ending). I also wanted to know what Midsummer really meant, what it was Strindberg alluded to in the play, the pagan forces. I wanted to see these actualized.”

And lastly there was, Boonstra’s “The Truth About Fröken Julie,” a gem for anyone in love with Strindberg.

Thus the reading was also a triumph for Strind-berg. It is of course flattering for a Swede like myself, to see non-Swedes—Americans in par-ticular—discover someone like Strindberg. It is even more flattering to watch foreigners create something as moving as these plays inspired by Strindberg.

The Scandinavian American Theater Company is a collective of theater artists founded in 2009 to provide a Scandinavian perspective through the new generation of Scandinavian playwrights and theater artists. They present contemporary plays and inventive takes on the classics from the Nordic region, which includes Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland, the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Iceland.

www.satcnyc.orgwww.scandinaviahouse.org

by Eva Stenskä[email protected]

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Two American, two Swedish playwrites participated in the SATC project. L-R: Andreas Boonstra in one of his plays at Momentteatern, Stockholm, David Bar Katz, Dominique Morisseau and Lina Ekdahl.

Page 18: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

FEATURE. page 18

In equal Sweden: Most film support to men

Swedish film support is not very gender equal - most of the money (73%) goes to men. The only woman on the top ten list of film makers to receive grants from Svenska Filminstitutet is Lisa Langseth, director of the awarded film “Till det som är vackert” (“Pure”). Above: Langseth (left) and Alicia Vikander, star of “Pure”.

A quarterly journal devoted to Swedish American biography, genealogy, and personal history. Founded in 1981.

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So much for gender equality in Sweden! Nine out of ten film grants go to men, in spite of Filminstitutet’s pledge to gender equality, this according to Swedish Televi-sion’s “Kulturnyheterna”. This past year, the Svenska Filminstitutet (the Swedish Film Institute) has granted production sup-port of 101.6 million SEK ($15 million) - to nine men. Lisa Langseth (director of the feature film “Till det some är vackert” or “Pure” as the English title is) is on the top ten list of awardees as the only woman. In total 187.4 million SEK ($28 million) has

been granted, of which 73% has gone to men. Managing director of Filminstitutet, Anna Serner, who took office early in 2012, has earlier referred to the lack of gender equality in the film industry as a “demo-cratic problem”. After the release of these new numbers, she says that changes take time: “A film project is a developmentally process that takes a long time, so we won’t see any changes until the end of the contract periods, in 2015.” And she added: “My absolute ambition is that we should see a change in the coming years.”

Page 19: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

VIEWPOINTS. page 19

Ulf NilsonSweden, November [email protected]

Are we going to experience an atomic war in the Middle East? Israel against (more or less) all the others? Hundreds of thousands of dead bodies, houses in flames, the future destroyed. …?

Yes, yes, I know the question has been asked before and is always answered with a resounding NO. But the times they are changing and you shouldn’t be too sure.

Politicians should have been able to stop the first world war from breaking out—but, alas they didn’t.

The democracies could have stopped a certain Adolf Hitler before he built that unstoppable army, but they didn’t.

And so it goes. The fact that we have had some kind of peace (minus Korea, Vietnam and others) is no guarantee for the future. The former Soviet Union, now Russia, is in decline and therefore dan-gerous. The giant China is growing in population, strength and ambition. And therefore dangerous.

To put it plainly: The world is not as dangerous as it was before. It’s worse.

It is worse, one must say, because the last

decade or so has been reasonably quiet. This leads people to believe that things have really changed—maybe we are in for peace.

But no. The reality is the world is becoming more dangerous by the day. This is not the least because atomic weapons are more available than ever before. More states have them, more will get them and one day they will come into use. I, being a bit pessimistic, judge this to be inevitable.

In the Middle East, the last few weeks have been truly awful. Israeli rockets destroyed 245 rockets from the other side but 500 went into Israel, killing men, women and children and destroying houses. The Israelis, naturally, retaliated.

And so it goes ... (as Kurt Vonnegut would have written).

So it goes, and the worst thing is the only thing in sight: escalation. Israel must defend (there is no other word) its borders and territory, which is small and makes it awfully easy to kill people. The Israelis have all kinds of weapons and an

absolute will to defend themselves. The enemy is immensely superior in numbers and better and better at using modern weapons.

In other words, the future is grim. The U.S.—the only superpower today—is committed to the defense of Israel, but what forms will the defense take? The U.S. can hardly bomb Cairo or Damascus. It can hardly send troops to fight alongside its Israeli brothers …

Or can it?We simply don’t know. What we do know is that the problem is in-

humanly complex yet will have to be resolved by humans. Of course, negotiations would be the best solution, but who should negotiate with whom, and who could make an agree-ment—should there be one—stick?

So what we Europeans can do, being totally powerless in (among other places) the Middle East, is wait and see and hope that the combat-ants come to their senses.

Fat chance, indeed.…

Nuclear in 2013?

Olle Wijkströ[email protected] Våra behov av öppna fönsterFör tio år sedan startades en

betagande ceremoni i Gamla Stan i Stockholm. Den första

december för tio år sedan började det. Ett fönster öppnades i ett hus i en av stans gränder. Grannar lika väl som folk från andra stadsdelar och besö-kande turister samlades i gränden under det öpp-nade fönstret. En trumpetare från den närbelägna Storkyrkan blåste in julen, när fönstret öppnade. Precis när klockan slagit sex slag i Storkyrkan öppnades fönstret. En av arrangörerna från Mäster Olofsgården hälsade välkommen och tackade lägenhetsinnehavaren som upplåtit sin lägenhet och fönster.

Någon boende i Gamla Stan, som var i besitt-ning av någorlunda njutbar sångröst kom fram bakom gardinerna och sjöng en sång. En annan spelade något stämningsfullt på piano eller fiol. En tredje läste en dikt. En fjärde berättade någonting intressant om huset eller stan. Andra spelade en truddilutt på munspel eller nöjde sig med att bara vinka och önska varandra God Jul!

Utanför i gränden står människor, som lyssnar och ler. Eller nöjer sig med att känna samhörighet med omvärlden under den halvtimme det tar innan fönstret stängs och folk troppar hem för att se på Aktuellt i TV och få reda på alla onda nyheter om vad som utspelas i Syrien och andra avlägsna orter långt från Gamla Stan. Sådana nyheter tycks det tyvärr aldrig råda någon bríst på.

Så här gick det till och fortsätter att gå till varje kväll år efter år det senaste decenniet i Gamla Stan. Ett år öppnade kungen själv med Silvia vid sin sida ett fönster i slottet och önskade sina medborgare en trevlig helg. En levande julkalender öppnades i fönster efter fönster. Ena kvällen i en gränd. Nästa kväll i en annan gränd. Gränd efter gränd.

Ingemar Ingevik hette en av stöttepelarna bakom julkalendern i Gamla Stan. Innan han för blott någon kort tid sedan avled hade han under tio år fått uppleva vilken succé Gamla stans julkalender

initiativ blivit. Tack vare hans och flera andras engagemang, uthållighet, och envishet ställde människor upp, lägenhetsinnehavare upplät sina våningar. Artister, målare, skådespelare och sångare boende i Gamla Stan övertalades att vara med och sjunga eller deklamera. Även när december kylan ven genom gränderna eller snön föll i tunga sjok stod Ingemar ned-anför det fönster, som stod på tur att öppnas och såg till att allt fungerade med högtalaran-läggningar och strålkastare.

I en tidningsartikel läste jag att Ingemar före sin död uttryckt sin stora glädje över att Gamla Stans julkalender blivit en stor framgång. Han sade: ”Egentligen borde vi öppna våra fönster varenda dag året runt. Det finns ingen anledning att begränsa lyckan av öppenhet och samvaro till några få veckor i december,”

Det finns många skäl att hålla med Ingemar. Alla behöver vi öppna våra fönster och för-nimma den varma tomtebolycka som julka-lendern är till för att skapa. Som vi alla vet är världen tyvärr också full av elände, fattigdom och krig. Bara några kvarter från de öppnade fönstren i gränderna i Gamla Stan pågår drog-handel på Sergels torg, överfall, knivdramor, otrohet, hustrumisshandel och brottslighet av allehanda slag runt om i storstaden. Bara i vår egen näraliggande värld florerar eländet. Vidgar vi synfältet till hela världen

finns ytterligare anledning till djup förstäm-ning.

Allt detta betyder ytterst att det trots allt finns än mer anledning att glädjas över att det ändå existerar en del bitar av tillvaron, som fortfa-rande smittats av julkalenderns budskap. Det finns fortfarande gränder med fönster som öppnas för varma budskap. Det finns ännu också hyggliga människor, som Ingemar, som engagerar sig för andra människor och för traditionerna vidare

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Page 20: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

LOCAL EVENTS. page 20

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l California11.30.2012 06:30 PM - 12.01.2012 02:00 AMEliason Merit Award 2012: Dolph Lund-gren SACC-LA is proud to announce that this year’s Eliason Merit Award goes to the world famous Swedish movie star and ac-tion hero Dolph Lundgren, star of over 40 movies since his breakthrough in “Rocky IV” and the James Bond feature “A View to a Kill”. His most recent films include the suc-cessful Sylvester Stallone produced “The Expendables” The Eliason Merit Award is an exclusive red carpet event honoring Swedes that have contributed significantly towards strengthening Swedish-Amerian relations. Swedish-American Chamber of Commerce -LA. www.sacc-la.org | 323.309.5037

12.09.2012 10:00 AM - 05:00 PMSWEA Los Angeles Annual Christmas Fair at at the Shrine Expo Hall. Gifts and crafts, traditional food, a Lucia pageant and choir perform twice, at noon and at 3 pm.www.swea.org/losangeles | 562-472-9098

l Connecticut12.01.2012 10:00 AM - 04:00 PMThe Scandinavian Club Annual Fair & Bake Sale - Local artisans, Nordic gifts, hand-made crafts FREE ADMISSION. www.thes-candinavianclub.com (203) 938-9677

12.08.2012 07:00 PM - 09:00 PMStämbandet Jul Concert & Lucia Fest at Unit-ed Covenant Church, WIlton. 203-847-9824

l D.C.12.01.2012 11:00 AM - 05:00 PMSWEA Christmas Bazaar at House of Swe-den, 2900 K Street NW Washington DC 20007 (Georgetown Waterfront) Metro: Fog-gy Bottom. www.swea.org/washingtondc

l Georgia12.07.2012 07:30 PM - 09:00 PMLucia Concert This is a Christmas concert featuring Atlanta’s Lucia Choir as well as children’s choir and musicians. At New Location free-will offering will be taken. This is for the whole family. Check www.vasaorderatlanta.org. Vasa Order. . [email protected]. http://www.vas-aorderatlanta.org/

12.08.2012 06:00 PM - 12:00 PMSACC-Georgia 27th Anniversary Lucia Gala at The Commerce Club 191 Peachtree Street, Atlanta. www.sacc-georgia.org | 770-670-2480

12.09.2012 05:00 PM - 09:00 PMJulbord, Christmas Dinner t the Ansley Golf Club with Nordic Lodge 708. www.vas-aorderatlanta.org

12.14.2012 07:30 PM - 09:00 PMAtlanta Lucia program starting at 7:30 p.m. For more info, see www.vasaorderatlanta.org

l Illinois11.30.2012 04:00 PM - 11.30.2012 10:00 PMLate Night Andersonville and Julmarknad Preview Sale 773.728.8111 | swedishameri-canmuseum.org

11.30.2012 07:30 PM - 08.30PMSwedish Historical Society Lucia Concert at the First Lutheran Church Address: 225 S. 3rd St., Rockford, IL 61104. www.swedish-historical.org Admission: Free will offering

12.01.2012 09:00 AM - 02:30 PMSwedish Historical Society Julmarknad at Trinity Lutheran Church Address: 200 N. 1st St., Rockford, IL 61107 www.swedishhistori-cal.org

12.01.2012 10:00 AM - 12.02.2012 04:00 PMJulmarknad Swedish American Museum’s annual Christmas Bazaar. 773.728.8111 | swedishamericanmuseum.org

12.06.2012 03:30 PM - 04:30 PMHejsan – Children’s After-School Pro-gram: “Swedish immigration movement” 773.728.8111 | swedishamericanmuseum.org

12.07.2012 05:00 PM - 12.07.2012 08:00 PMIKEA Swedish Julbord at IKEA Bolingbrook. www.ikea.com/us | 630-972-7900

12.08.2012 09:00 AM - 11:00 AMBreakfast with Tomten (Santa) 773.728.8111 | swedishamericanmuseum.org

12.08.2012 01:30 PM - 03:30 PMMusicians and instructors Mary Allsopp and Paul Tyler co-host a Scandinavian Jam at the Swedish American Museum. 773.728.8111 | swedishamericanmuseum.org

12.13.2012 11:30 AM - 12.13.2012 08:00 PMSt. Lucia Celebrations Thursday, Dec. 13, 11:30 a.m. at Daley Plaza; 4:45 p.m. at Swed-ish American Museum; 7 p.m. at Ebene-zer Lutheran Church, 1650 W. Foster Ave. 773.728.8111 | swedishamericanmuseum.org

12.16.2012 05:00 PM - 08:00 PMJulbord, Family Dinner, a traditional Swed-ish Christmas Smörgåsbord, catered by Tre Kronor restaurant. 773.728.8111 | swedis-hamericanmuseum.org

ContinuouslyStep back in time in historic Bishop Hill. Utopia on the Prairie, then and now. For in-formation call 309-927-3899 or email [email protected]. Visit our Website at: www.bishophill.com

l Kansas12.02.2012 03:00 PM - 05:00 PMJultide at Bethany College The Bethany College Choir and the Handbell Ensemble come together for a memorable evening.. Bethany College. 888-227-2227. [email protected]. www.visitlindsborg.com

12.08.2012 10:00 AM - 03:00 PMLucia Festival Music and festivities begin downtown at 10:00 a.m. The 4th grade Lucia program commences at 11:30 a.m. at the Bethany Lutheran Church, 320 N. Main, with the crowning of the younger Lucia, a choir concert and an account of the legend of Lucia. The Lindsborg Swed-ish Dancers and Lindsborg Folkdanslag will engage in a routine of traditional folk

dances downtown at 1:30 p.m. These talented ambassadors embody the spirit of Lindsborg sharing colorful performances throughout the year, in Lindsborg, nationally and abroad. The processional starting at 2:45 p.m. concludes at Bethany Lutheran Church with the coronation service of a local Lucia.. City of Lindsborg. 888-227-2227. [email protected]. www.vis-itlindsborg.com

l Minnesota12.01.2012 10:00 AM - 8:30 PMJulmarknad - Swedish Christmas Market at American Swedish Institute. Admission is $7 adults, $6 ages 62 and above, $4 ages 6–18 and full-time students with ID, and free for children under 6 and ASI members. www.asimn.org | 612-871-4907

l New York11.27.2012 06:30 PM - 08:00 PMAugust Strindberg and His Turbulent Life - a Free Lecture by Lena Einhorn, a Swedish author, filmmaker, and director at Scandinavia House. 212.847.9740 | www.scandinaviahouse.org

12.01.2012 01:00 PM - 03:00 PMSwedish Christmas Children’s Workshop $12 ($10 ASF Members); ages 5-10 Enrollment is limited; early registration is strongly encouraged Scandinavia House invites young children and their caretakers to experience how Swedes prepare for Christmas in this customary julpysseldag (Christmas craft day). Kids will learn the secrets of making traditional holiday crafts like woven hearts, yarn tomtar, and paper angels. . Scandinavia House: The Nordic Center in America. 212.847.9740. [email protected]. http://www.scandinaviahouse.org

12.08.2012 06:00 PM - 10:00 PMLucia Pageant and Christmas Party with Stenland Lodge VAO District 4 New York. 845-359-5188.

12.11.2012 06:30 PM - 12.11.2012 10:30 PMSWEA New York Julfest med Lucia at Battery Gardens Restaurant. Pris: $100. 212-599 2949 | www.swea.org/newyork

12.15.2012 07:30 PM - 12.15.2012 09:00 PM55th Annual Lucia Fest in the Rochester, NY area. Procession, carols, dancing around the Yule tree. Refreshments, free admission. Fairport United Methodist Church. 31 W. Church St, Fairport, NY. http://fairportumc.org | 585.367.8469

l Pennsylvania12.07.2012 06:00 PM - 09:00 PMJoin us for a very special Swedish holiday tradi-tion. Drinks and an authentic Christmas smörgås-bord dinner are followed by the Lucia procession. The Christmas Market is open all evening. Mem-bers $45, non-members $55. Cash bar. Register by phone or online by December 3rd. American Swedish Historical Museum. 215.389.1776. www.americanswedish.org

12.08.2012 11:30 AM - 4:30 PMLucia Fest and Christmas Market. Drop in for our family-friendly Lucia Fest, with Lucia processions at 1 pm and 3 pm. The Christmas Market includes your favorite holiday deli items, Christmas deco-rations, and gifts, the SWEA bakery tables and

will be open all day. The Swedish Christmas Café will be selling holiday foods and sweets for your refreshment. Admission is $10 for non-members, $7 for members, children 4-12 $4, and children under 4 are free. Reservations are not required, but tickets may be purchased in advance on online. American Swedish Historical Museum. 215.389.1776. www.americanswedish.org

12.07.2012 06:00 PM - 12.09.2012 05:00 PM75th annual Lucia Fest- Old Swedes’ Church- Phil-adelphia Sankta Lucia and St. Eric’s Fair – Gloria Dei (Old Swedes’ Church) - Philadelphia Celebrating 75 years of the Lucia Fest! Presentations will be made at 6:00 & 8:00 PM on Friday, December 7th; on Saturday and Sunday, December 8th and 9th, the presentations are at 2:00, 3:30, & 5:00 PM. Be-fore, during, and after each of the presentations, visit the St. Eric’s Fair, a Christmas bazaar that specializes in Scandinavian imports in the Parish Hall that adjoins the Church. Food and drink are available. Tickets, $10.00 per adult; $6.00 for chil-dren under 12, can be purchased online at www.old-swedes.org until November 30 or at the door. Gloria Dei (Old Swedes’ Church) is located in South Philadelphia on Christopher Columbus Blvd, just to the south of Penn’s Landing, between Christian Street and Washington Ave. (Free parking.

l Wisconsin12.01.2012 10:00 AM - 04:00 PMA Nordic Christmas at the Inn. Elmbrook Histori-cal Society presents “A Nordic Christmas at the Inn”. Their historic Dousman Stagecoach Inn Museum will be decorated by various Scandi-navian organizations as we assist them in their fund raiser. Swedish American Historical Soci-ety of WI members will decorate the Parlor in a traditional Swedish Christmas theme. Tour the Dousman Stagecoach Inn Museum and visit our Swedish Christmas Parlor. Children’s craft area, Nordic music, bake sale. Admission: Adults - $5, Children 6-12 - $2, Children 5 and under are free. 1075 Pilgrim Parkway, Brookfield, WI. (suburb of Milwaukee) Saturday, December 1, 2012 – 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, December 2, 2012 – Noon to 4 p.m. . Elmbrook Historical Society. 414-352-7890. www.sahswi.org

12.16.2012 04:00 PM - 12.16.2012 06:00 PMLucia Celebration Join us for this festivity of light as the Christmas season begins. Enjoy coffee and treats following the procession and program. We’ll dance around Christmas tree and Santa will be available to greet the children. Held at Whitnall Park Lutheran Church, 105th and Forest Home Ave., (just east of Hwy. 100) in the suburb of Hales Corners, WI . Swedish American Historical Soci-ety of WI., Inc. . 414-352-7890. [email protected]. www.sahswi.org

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Page 21: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

LOCAL EVENTS. page 21

‘Not my time to die’The Titanic and the Swedes on boardPlease send me ____ book(s) x $19.95 = _______ Shipping & Handling $ 4.95 Total: _________

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Page 22: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

NORDSTJERNAN, November 30, 2012

FEATURE. page 22

Sverige är indelat i 25 landskap. Dessa är historiska, geografiska och kulturella områden, och även om de inte har några administrativa funktioner, förblir de en del av vårt historiska arv och är ofta en del av en persons sätt att identifiera sig själv. “Han är från Skåne”, säger vi. Aha, då tror vi att vi vet exakt hur den personen är. “Hon växte upp i Norrbotten.” Då får vi genast en mental bild av den personen. Ursprunget till “landskap” är mindre riken som gradvis blev mer och mer utsatta för den svenska kungens regler under konsolideringen i Sverige, runt 800-1000 e Kr. Efter att Sverige enats och en gemensam svensk monark blivit etablerad blev dessa provinser hållna som hertigdömen.

Sweden is divided into 25 “landskap” or provinces. These are historical, geographical and cultural regions, and though they have no administrative functions, they remain historical legacies and often are part and parcel of a person’s way of identifying him or herself. “He’s from Skåne,” we say. Aha, then we believe we know exactly how he is. “She grew up in Norrbotten.” We immediately get a mental picture of the person depending on what “landskap” he or she is from. The origin of the “landskap” is smaller kingdoms that gradually became more and more subjected to the rule of the Swedish king dur-ing the consolidation of Sweden, around 800-1000 AD. After Sweden was unified and a common Swedish monarch was established, these provinces were held as duchies.

Language - Practice your Swedish!

NorrbottenSveriges nordligaste

landskap heter Norr-botten, och det gränsar söderut till Västerbot-ten, västerut till svenska Lappland och österut till Finland. Norrbot-

ten är ett ganska ungt landskap, det fick inte sitt vapen förrän år 1995, efter årtionden av kontroverser (idén om Norrbotten som ett landskap tog tydligen ett tag att vänja sig vid). Under medeltiden var Norrbotten ett in-genmansland, glest befolkat av samer som levde på jakt, fiske och renskötsel. Men från medeltiden och framåt, gjorde svenska kungar sitt yttersta för att kolonisera och kristna området. Nybyggare från Finland kontrollerade handeln och även beskattningen av området, som inte var bundet till Sverige förrän mot mitten av 1500-talet. Finska och samiska minoriteter bosatta i Norrbotten har hållit sin kultur och sitt språk levande. Eftersom Norrbot-ten är så långt norrut man kan komma i Sverige, är det intressant att titta på temperaturerna här: Somrarna kan vara förvånansvärt varma, med ett rekord på 37C (98F), om vintrarna kan temperaturen sjunka till -19C (-2F). Norrlands landskapsblomma är åkerbäret, och lands-kapsdjuret är lavskrikan. Språken som talas i Norrbotten omfattar svenska, meänkieli, finska och samiska. Vissa talare av meänkieli har successivt betraktat sig som en del av Kvenfolket, ett folk som förmodligen kom till området mycket tidigare än de svenska nybyggarna. Gammel-stads kyrkstad, utanför Luleå, upptogs 1996 på Unescos världsarvslista. Befolkningsmängden i Norrbotten ligger på omkring 192,542. Den största staden i Norrbotten är Luleå, med 45,467 invånare. Luleå ligger på den norra kusten, och är säte för Luleå universitet. Hamnen i Luleå - Sveriges femte största hamn, som transporterar mer än sju miljoner ton gods varje år - är av särskild betydelse för järnmalmen från LKAB: s gruvdrift i Kiruna och Gäl-livare / Malmberget. Under vintern fortsätter sjötrafiken i stort sett i oförändrad takt med hjälp av isbrytare. Luleå är hemmahamn för de svenska isbrytarna. I Luleå finns även ett av världens äldsta köpcentrum ,”Shopping”, designat av den brittiske arkitekten Ralph Erskine. Det öppnade år 1955. En känd person född i Luleå är filmstjärnan Maud Adams (född 1945). Adams, som föddes Maud Solveig Christina Wikström, upptäcktes i en affär 1963, av en fotograf som bad att få ta hennes bild, en bild han sedan skickade in till Fröken Sverige-tävlingen som arrangeras av tidningen Allers. Adams vann den tävlingen, och blev sedermera fotomodell och skådespelerska.

The northernmost province in Sweden is Norrbotten, which borders south to Västerbotten, west to Swedish Lappland and east to Finland. Norrbotten is a fairly young province; it didn’t receive its coat of arms until 1995, after decades of controversy (the idea of Norrbotten as a province evidently took some getting used to). During the Middle Ages, Nor-rbotten was a no man’s land, sparsely populated by the Samis who lived on hunting, fishing, and reindeer herding. But from the Middle Ages and on, Swedish kings did their utmost in trying to colonize and Christianize the area. Settlers from Finland controlled the trade and even the taxing on the area, which wasn’t tied firmly to Sweden until the mid 16th cen-tury. Today, Finnish and Sami minorities live in Norrbotten and have kept their culture and language alive. Since it is as north as you can come in Sweden, it’s interesting to look at the temperatures in Norrbotten: Summers can be surprisingly warm, with an all-time high record of 37C (98F), winters see degrees drop to sometimes -19C (-2F). The provincial flower for Norrland is the Arctic raspberry, and the animal the Sibe-rian jay. Languages spoken in the province include Swedish, Meänkieli, Finnish, and Sami. Some Meänkieli speakers have gradually been considering themselves part of the Kven people, which supposedly arrived to the area much earlier than the Swedish settlers. The Church Village of Gammelstad outside Luleå has been named a UNESCO World heritage site. The population of Norrbotten is around 192,542. The biggest city in Norrbotten is Luleå, with 45,467 inhab-itants. Luleå is situated on the northern coast, and is the seat of Luleå University. The harbor of Luleå — Sweden’s fifth-largest port, which transports over seven million tons of cargo each year — is of particular significance for iron ore from LKAB’s mining in Kiruna and Gällivare/Malmberget. During the winter, sea traffic continues at a virtually unchanged rate with the assistance of icebreakers; Luleå is the home port of the Swedish icebreaker armada. In Luleå you’ll find one of the oldest indoor shopping centers in the world, called “Shop-ping”, designed by British born architect Ralph Erskine, and opened in 1955. Famous people born in Luleå include movie star Maud Adams (b. 1945). Adams, who was born Maud Solveig Christina Wikström, was discovered in 1963 in a shop by a photographer who asked to take her picture, a picture he submitted to the Miss Sweden contest arranged by the magazine Allers. Adams won this contest and from there her modeling, and eventually also acting, career took off.

Sveriges landskapSwedish movie star Maud Adams (Bond girl) was born in Luleå in 1945.

Norrbottens länsvapen [the Norrbotten County coat of arms - literally ‘weapon’]

Contrary to the other traditional provinces of Sweden, Norrbotten County, consisting of the northern parts of Lappland and Västerbotten, is older than the province. The ‘landskap’ Norrbotten was allowed its own heraldic coat of arms as late as 1995, above.

Piteå Havsbad in the province’s south, often called the ‘Riviera of the North’ since, for several summers it’s offered the highest water temperatures in the Baltic.

This dramatic photo is from one of the lakes in Stora Sjöfallet national park in Norrbotten, the third largest park in Sweden at 1278 km2 The name of the park comes from a five-level waterfall on the Lule River. The national park was created in 1909 and today considered part of the Laponian area which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The park’s highest peak is 2015 meters above sea level and is a part of the mountain massif Áhkká which has 13 peaks and 10 glaciers totally. Global warming reportedly makes the glaciers melt with 10 meters each year.

Page 23: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

November 30, 2012 NORDSTJERNAN

SPORTS. page 23

Chipp Reid, Sports [email protected]

Jaerbyn retires, Zlatan shinesSweden team captain Zlatan Ibrahimovic executes a reverse bicycle kick to score his fourth goal of the game against England Nov. 16 at the inaugural match of Friends Arena. Bildbyrån photo

SKIINGJaerbyn calls it quits

For two decades, Patrik Jaerbyn was a fixture on the World Cup circuit, carrying Sweden’s lone hopes in the downhill for many of those years. In 2004, that changed, when countryman Hans Olsson joined him on tour, and the Swed-ish downhill team immediately doubled in size.

Olsson, 28, praised Jaerbyn, 43, who retired after this year, saying his elder teammate was a pioneer, trailblazing a path for the Scandinavian nation—despite lacking an adequate support staff—in the sport’s most thrilling discipline.

Jaerbyn, who currently resides near Vail, Colorado, will coach a few young American racers this winter but admits that he is still in a conundrum as to what the future holds.

“It’s a new stage of my life, so the question is what is the next challenge. It’s a tough task, it’s very confusing,” said Jaerbyn.

Jaerbyn added: “I will miss the pure joy of skiing, the excitement of getting everything dialed in and pushing yourself to the potential of where you can be.”

Myhrer nets first WC gold Andre Myhrer took home the gold medal in

the first World Cup slalom race of the season. Myhrer, with a time of 1 minute 49.55 seconds, the Swedish skier picked up where he left things

last season. He won the slalom at the finals in Schladming last year to take the crown in the discipline title, and he now starts the new season at the top of the podium.

“It feels great to start the season with a win,” Myhrer said with his usual calm. “This means I can continue to do what I have been doing so far; there is less stress when you start like this.”

When you are the best in the discipline, it’s not always easy to keep it going over the long summer but Myhrer seems to have found a good way, as strong as we left him in March.

“The skiing is there and I had a good sum-mer. I took it easy in spring due to some back problems but was able to slowly increase the training. We also went to New Zealand, as we haven’t been there for two years the change was welcome. I felt really good coming into this race.”

After being only .27 seconds behind Myhrer in the first run, last year’s Overall title winner Marcel Hirscher gave it his best shot at stealing the victory from the Swede. But, his efforts proved just not enough as he finished second, a mere .06 seconds behind the Swede.

HOCKEYHV 71 tops Eliserien

The Eliterien neared the half-way of its regular season, and HV 71 continued to hold down the top spot in the standings. The Jönköping team

has 49 points. Skellefteå is in second place with 47 points from a 16-7 record while Luleå is third with a 15-7 record and 42 points. Defending champions Brynäs is currently in sixth place with a 12-11 record and 37 points.

So far the work stoppage in the NHL has had minimal impact on the Elitserien. Dallas Stars forward Fabian Brunnström is back with his former team Frölunda, but he remains one of the few NHL players to head for Sweden. Brunnström has 12 points in 22 games with the Chiefs.

FOOTBALLHalmstad back in Allsvenskan

It took less than a season for Halmstad to fall apart as an Allsvenskan side. After a bitterly unsuccessful attempt to rely on Spanish play-ers, Halmstad went down to the Superettan, and in the space of the year rebuilt a team that won three titles in 10 years and returned to the Allsvenskan.

Halmstad topped GIF Sundsvall in the home-and-home promotion playoff, topping Sunds-vall by a combined score of 8-5. Halmstad won at venerable Orjans Vall 5-1 in the first leg. HBK lost the second 4-3, but the three away goals more than ensured that Halmstad would advance.

“This is just fantastic,” said Halmstad veteran Mikael Svensson. “To be part of this is very special to me. Halmstad always holds a high

place in my place. This is where I started and to be able to help the club get back to the Alls-venskan is fantastic.”

Gudjun Baldvinsson was the scoring hero for Halmstad as he netted five goals in the two games, including a pair in the loss to Sundsvall.

Halmstad finished third in the Superettan this season while Sundsvall finished third from last in the Allsvenskan.

Sweden wins opener in ‘Zlatan’s house’

The Yankees have the House that Ruth Built: Yankee Stadium. Now, Sweden might just have the House that Zlatan Built.

The Swedish national soccer teams opened their new home at Friends Arena in Solna Nov. 16 with a 4-2 win over England with captain and striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic scoring all four goals. Zlatan scored the first-ever goal at the new stadium 20 minutes into the match. After England took a 2-1 lead, Zlatan took over. He tied the game in the 77th minute and put Sweden in front seven minutes later. A minute into stoppage time, he struck an incredible, overhead bicycle goal from 30 meters out to cap Sweden’s win.

Friends Arena is a state-of-the-art stadium modeled after several in North America. The stadium has a retractable roof, which will allow year-round play. It cost $240 million to build.

(For more on the match and Zlatan’s goals, see our website.)

Page 24: Nordstjernan Issue 20, 2012

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