NORDIC SPIRIT Newsletter - Scandinavian American Cultural and
Transcription
NORDIC SPIRIT Newsletter - Scandinavian American Cultural and
SACHF/Scandinavian Center at CLU NORDIC SPIRIT Newsletter Scandinavian American Cultural and Historical Foundation, Inc. Autumn 2011 VOL. 21, No.3 Nearly 150 friends, relatives and members of the Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation gathered Sept. 10 for a special event honoring LeRoy Anderson of Orange County as the SACHF Outstanding Scandinavian American of 2011. 2012 NORDIC SPIRIT SYMPOSIUM: SPOTLIGHT ON LIFE, RELIGION, ART OF MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA by HOWARD K. ROCKSTAD Symposium Founder/Director LeRoy Anderson OUTSTANDING SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN OF 2011 The large attendance can be attributed to the many friends who know LeRoy and came out for the event. Publicity was an important factor as well, with hundreds of invitations going out to targeted mailing lists including Swedish groups, SACHF members, and several Conejo Valley area residents with some Scandinavian connection. The SACHF 2011 Outstanding Scandinavian American award ceremony honoring Anderson featured a program of music from the Vasa Choir, professional soloist Janelle Yates (LeRoy's daughter from Tennessee), and the Västkustens Spelmanslag fiddlers, guitar, bass and LeRoy himself on the accordion. (continued on p3) Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation T he 2012 Nordic Spirit Symposium will focus on the Nordic countries in the post-Viking era up to the eve of the Reformation, and will treat aspects of life, religion, culture, politics and art during this period of Scandinavian history. Tracey will speak on saints and politics during the Kalmar Union, which united all the Nordic kingdoms under the rule of a single monarch from the end of the 14th century into the 1520s. The former Ventura County resident now resides in Colorado, and holds a part-time appointment One of the speakers will be with the University of CopenhaTracey Sands, who was a treas- gen. ured presenter at our 2003 NorShe believes an understanddic Spirit Symposium, The Northing of the cult of saints can shed ern Front: Scandinavia in WWII. light on late medieval Swedish In accepting our invitation, political thought, noting that Tracey wrote, ―I‘m so pleased to ―many of us forget that the idea see your topic for the symposiof a fundamental separation beum. So many interesting things tween religion and other aspects happened in the Nordic region of life would have been utterly after the Viking Age, and it will foreign to medieval people.‖ be great to have a full symposium devoted to the Middle Ages.‖ (continued on p3) Morgan Yates: “Autos, Archives and Art.” Auto Club archivist on Swedish-American artist Carl Oscar Borg.. 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23 Roth Nelson Room Ib Melchior: Writer, Producer, OSS Agent 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13, 2011 Roth Nelson Room Irene Levin Berman: Norway and the Holocaust 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, Nov 15, 2011 Overton Hall Scandinavian Lecture Series see p 4-5 and more The Nordic Spirit Newsletter FROM SACHF PRESIDENT LARRY JOHNSON Sunday, August 21, 2011, the National Day of Mourning for the July 22 tragedy. Following the Oslo Cathedral service, SACHF president Larry Johnson presents collected condolences to the Rev. Dr. Trond Bakkevig, Dean of Vestre Aker, a group of eight Oslo city parishes. The SACHF messages will be added to the National Archive of Memorials. Below: A girl blows bubbles outside the Cathedral on the National Day of Mourning. photos by Larry Johnson SACHF Reaches Out to Norway ―Our hearts are with Norway‖ was true for us all following the terrible events of July 22. We were with them in grief, sympathy, and hope for healing. For four successive Wednesdays, periods of silence, candle lighting and the writing of condolences took place at the Scandinavian Center. These letters were then put together with condolences from people at CLU and four local Lutheran churches. Since my wife and I were going to be in Oslo on Sunday, August 21, we brought the collection of messages to the Oslo Cathedral. That day was set as the National Day of Mourning. Our messages were added to the National Archive established in Oslo for all the tributes and condolences from around the world. I have written before in this newsletter about ―Hearty Scandinavians Not Put Off by Obstacles.‖ We have now witnessed another example of that truth. HM King Harald said it well: ―It is when our nation is put to the test that the true strength, solidarity and courage of the Norwegian people comes to the fore.‖ Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg put it this way: ―We are going to answer hatred with love. We will not be intimidated. “ If one person can do so much out of hate, how much more can we do out of love…” Norway is an open, tolerant and inclusive society…our response to violence is more democracy, more openness…‖ One of the youths who survived the Utoya shootings gave a response to the tragedy that challenges us all: ―If one person can do so much out of hate, how much more can we do out of love…‖ The service at Oslo Cathedral was mournful, somber and stolid in format yet centered around the theme that the ―greatest gift of all is love‖ from which a hearty hope and peace can again flourish. It was an unexpected gift to be able to represent SACHF as we brought so many heartfelt messages there. Thank you to all who contributed to that effort. NOTES FROM THE PRESIDENT The Highest Goals selected by the Board of Directors at its ―Vision for the Future‖ retreat this summer: A. Continue to promote successful programs: Festival, Symposium, Brown Bag programs, Lecture Series, Hall of Fame, Outstanding Scandinavian American, etc. B. Permanent Scandinavian Center for the long-range future at CLU. C. Funding Plan to develop major donors for the Stave Church and permanent Center. D. Expand identity, outreach, communications, advertising, e-mail, social network, website, etc. ♦ The NORDIC SPIRIT NEWSLETTER THE SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN CULTURAL & HISTORICAL FOUNDATION, INC. The Scandinavian Center at California Lutheran University 60 W. Olsen Road – 2600, Thousand Oaks, CA 91360 Richard Londgren, Scandinavian Center Director President Vice President Secretary CFO Past President Larry H.T. Johnson Lana Lundin Joy Brooks Sandra Grunewald Howard K. Rockstad BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Lynn M. Anderson, Larry D. Ashim, Joy Brooks, C. Allan Carlson, Siri Eliason, Sandra Grunewald, Einar Hovind, Larry H.T. Johnson, Anita Hillesland Londgren, Lana Lundin, Robert Melsness, Niels Mikkelsen, Agneta Nilsson, Rueben Perttula, Howard K. Rockstad, Joann Scott, Patricia Sladek, Leonard S. Smith, Fred Tonsing, Judith Vinje Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation EDITOR: Judith Gabriel Vinje, jgabriel.vinje@gmail. com 2 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter Outstanding Scandinavian American LeRoy Anderson (continued from p1) The Swedish Folk Dance Club of Los Angeles brought their skills, humor and joy to the crowd gathered around. Then during the third dance, sadness struck as Armond Deny, long-time leader of the group, collapsed with severe heart trouble and was taken to Los Robles Hospital. He is now recovering at home BEHIND THE SCENES SACHF wishes to thank Siri Eliason, Howard Rockstad, Fred Tonsing and the OSA Committee for planning the event. Thanks also to Scandinavian Center directors Dick and Anita Londgren and their crew who helped put the reception together — including Torsten Olsson, Jan Wennberg and friends cleaning up the grounds and adding shading material to the patio roofs, setting up refreshments, cleanup afterwards. ♦ Janelle Anderson Yates, LeRoy's daughter, traveled from Tennessee for the event, and sang two solos in the program SACHF Board members and musicians lead the parade from Holy Trinity Church to the Scandinavian Center. NORDIC SPIRIT SYMPOSIUM FEB. 10 - 11, 2012 at CLU Erik Lindberg. a good fishing buddy of LeRoy's, gave "a friend's tribute.” Erik is active in the Swedish Club of Los Angeles and is currently chair of the North Star Lodge of Vasa Order of America. about medieval clothing, and about how something like setting in a sleeve and tailoring for a close fit can be associated with a huge social revolution.‖ The above-described presenters are only a sampling of those planned for the February 10-11, 2012 program on meWe are also pleased to include Stephen Mitchell, dieval Scandinavia and, as in the past, the program will Professor of Scandinavian and Folklore at Harvard Universi- include expert presenters from Europe. ♦ ty. Stephen regularly complements his teaching and research on site at Harvard by teaching Harvard‘s Viking studies summer program in Scandinavia. His research centers on popular traditions, mythology and legends in the late LEADING VIKING AGE EXPERT RICHARD HALL DIES medieval and early modern periods. Recently his research resulted in a book-length study of witchcraft and magic We were saddened to learn of the death of world throughout medieval Scandinavia. renown archaeologist and former Nordic Spirit Symposium speaker, Dr. Richard Hall, one of the world‟s leading exFor variety, the program will include an illustrated presenta- perts on the Viking Age, who died in September at the age of 62. He was best known for his pivotal role in the internation by a clothing historian, Michelle Nordtorp-Madsen of tionally significant Coppergate Viking Dig in York, where he the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota. Tracey Sands was Director of Archaeology and Deputy Director of the wrote of her, ―Shelly can tell you a lot of amazing things York Archaeology Trust. ♦ (continued from p1) Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation 3 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter scandinavian lecture series at CLU Covering the West Ib Melchior: Writer, Producer, OSS Agent Morgan Yates on paintings Swedish American artist created for Westways Magazine Sunday, Nov. 13, 2:30 p.m. Roth Nelson Room Sunday, Oct. 23, 2:30 p.m. Roth Nelson Room Artists whose works adorned the cover of the magazine of the Automobile Club of Southern California for more than 50 years will be the subject of the first event in the 2011-2012 Scandinavian Lecture Series at California Lutheran University. Morgan Yates, corporate archivist for the Auto Club, will present ―Autos, Archives and Art‖ at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23, in the Roth Nelson Room. Yates, a regular contributor to Westways, will talk about Swedish-American artist Carl Oscar Borg and others who provided cover art for the Auto Club‘s monthly member magazine. The cover art program began in 1928 when editor Phil Townsend Hanna ditched the original plain covers featuring the Auto Club logo in favor of original fine art as part of his plan to expand the magazine‘s focus to include travel, the arts and regional culture. Hanna began presenting works from artists widely recognized for their California painting. To begin, he commissioned a series of 12 landscapes including ―Grand Canyon‖ by Borg. Born in Sweden in 1879, Borg spent time living with Native Americans and is best known for his paintings of Hopi and Navajo Indians, cowboys and California and Grand Canyon landscapes. He taught at the California Art Institute in Los Angeles and the School of Arts in Santa Barbara. Borg died in Santa Barbara in 1947. The Westways cover program was scaled back in the 1930s and 1940s, revived in the 1950s and ended in 1981, when photography fully displaced other visual arts on the magazine covers. Today, the corporate archives house more than 250 paintings, collages and assemblages representing the diverse and vibrant art scene of early- and mid-20th century Southern California. The Roth Nelson Room is located on Mountclef Boulevard near Memorial Parkway on the Thousand Oaks campus. Following the presentation, a reception will be held at the Scandinavian Center at 26 Faculty Road, where a collection of Borg‘s magazine covers is on display. This lecture is sponsored by the CLU Art Department and the Scandinavian American Cultural and Historical Foundation, SACHF. ♦ Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation Decorated World War II hero and prolific author Ib Melchior, a native of Copenhagen, Denmark, and still an active writer at 94, will discuss his exciting career as part of the Scandinavian Lecture Series at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13, in the Roth Nelson Room at CLU. The dangers he encountered as a counterintelligence agent for the US Office of Strategic Services behind enemy lines provided material for gripping espionage stories that later evolved into novels and films that moved beyond the war into sagas of outer space. Son of the noted opera singer Lauritz Melchior, he has carved his own legend. In 1995, he was honored by the American Scandinavian Foundation in Thousand Oaks with its Outstanding Scandinavian American Award. In 1965, he was dubbed Knight Commander of the Militant Order of Saint Brigitte of Sweden. In 1976, the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films awarded Ib Melchior its Golden Scroll Award of Merit for Outstanding Achievement. Born Ib Jørgen Melchior on Sept. 17, 1917, he has been a novelist, short story writer, film producer, film director, and screenwriter of low-budget American science fiction movies, most of them released by American International Pictures. His novels include Code Name: Grand Guignol, Eva, The Haigerloch Project, The Marcus Device, Order of Battle: Hitler's Werewolves, Sleeper Agent, The Tombstone Cipher and The Watchdogs of Abaddon. His non-fiction includes the books Quest: Searching for Germany's Nazi Past (with co-author Frank Brandenburg) and Lauritz Melchior: The Golden Years of Bayreuth, the latter a biography of his father, the opera singer and movie star Lauritz Melchior. With his wife, L.A. architect Cleo Baldon, Ib Melchior wrote the nonfiction books Reflections on the Pool: California Designs for Swimming and Steps & Stairways. Melchior also wrote Hour of Vengeance, a play based on the Viking story of Amled that also had inspired William Shakespeare's play Hamlet. In 1982, it was awarded the Hamlet Award for best playwriting by the Shakespeare Society of America. As a filmmaker, Melchior wrote and directed The Angry Red Planet (1959) and The Time Travelers (1964). He was co-screenwriter of Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964). English language script for Planet of the Vampires (1965). For television, he wrote "The Premonition" episode for the second season of the original The Outer Limits series. Melchior's short story The Racer was adapted as Paul Bartel's cult film favorite, Death Race 2000 (1975), starring David Carradine and Sylvester Stallone. ♦ Admission is free. Sponsored by the Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation and the CLU History Department. For more information, contact Anita Londgren at (805) 241-1051 or call the Scandinavian Center at (805) 241-0391. 4 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter PAUL SELLIN’S ADVENTURES WITH SIR WALTER RALEIGH P ut aside everything you thought you knew about Sir Walter Raleigh! There was a mysterious ―Swedish connection,‖ and former SACHF board member Paul Sellin writes about it in his newly released book, Treason and the Tower: the Murder of Sir Walter Raleigh, published by Ashgate. Based on years of adventure and research, the book is receiving acclaim among scholars and history adventure buffs as well. Sellin will speak about the adventures that went into researching and chasing the trail of history when he is the featured speaker Wednesday, Nov. 2 at the Scandinavian Center Brown-Bag program. How Sellin came to write the book is in itself a thriller! He had come upon some previously neglected Dutch correspondence found in a Swedish archive and followed a complex trail... a paper trail through Jacobean history to trekking through modern day Venezuela. As a result, Sellin located Raleigh‘s gold mine on Cerro Redondo. The UCLA professor emeritus sheds light on how the Duke of Buckingham maneuvered to send Raleigh to the block in 1618 on trumped up charges, leaving the Duke free to grab the very mine he claimed Raleigh had invented. Sellin‘s book is being heralded for unmasking the whole plot, with scholarly depth and personal adventure. ♦ For more information, contact Anita Londgren at 805-241-1051 or call the Scandinavian Center at 805-241-0391. ♦ scandinavian lecture series gan rounding-up all Oslo Jewish women and children for mandatory passage on a ship to Auschwitz. The book was originally published in Norway in 2008 to very good reviews. The English version of the book was launched at the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the University of HartIrene Levin Berman: ford on April 1, 2010. Berman noted that ―In personally translating the Norwegian text into English, I adapted the content somewhat for English readers. In the process I found myself adding some additional Tue, Nov 15 at 7:00 p.m. information which I have acquired since the Norwegian publication.‖ Overton Hall Recently, the book received an „...Going to Pick Potatoes‟ endorsement from Nobel Laureate, activist and probably the most renowned Holocaust survivor in the Because of its small Jewish world, Elie Wiesel, who stated the population, Norway has been largely following: ―This untold story about overlooked in histories of the Holowhat happened to Norwegian Jews caust. However, stories such as Ire- during the Holocaust deserves to be ne Levin Berman's have surfaced in told – and now it is.‖ recent years. In further notes of praise, Nik Sten of the Norwegian Club of San She and her family escaped to neutral Sweden where they lived for Francisco, in an Internet posting, three years. Encouraged by Arnfinn noted ―What a tremendous blessing to read this extraordinary book. ConMoland, director of Norway's Retemplating such a stomach-turning sistance Museum, Berman researched and wrote her 2010 book, subject matter alongside the endearWe are Going to Pick Potatoes: Nor- ing intimate family details is not easy, but the opportunity to learn a way and the Holocaust, the Untold little about this remarkable family is Story, which illuminates a hidden a blessing to cherish. It is unimagichapter in Norway's history. nable to me the incredible courage, Norwegian-born author Irene Berman recalls her first memory as commitment, wisdom, and fortitude a four-year old of being swept out of Ms. Berman had to muster to start and complete this work, and to renOslo to travel overnight to Sweden der its content so thoughtfully and to escape the Holocaust. She effectively.‖ ♦ arrived in Sweden only several hours before Norwegian police be- Norway and the Holocaust ALSO AT CLU — DIRECT FROM NORWAY Nils Marius Kjøsnes, clarinet and Knut Erik Jensen, piano Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 7:30 p.m. Overton Hall Nils Marius Kjøsnes has been involved in concert bands since he picked up the clarinet at the age of 8. In 2009, he played the Premiere Rhapsody by Debussy with the Student Society Orchestra of Trondheim and has been a member of the Norwegian Royal Air Force Band. Since 2010, he has founded iQuintet, a woodwind quintet that plays a broad repertoire of chamber music, and has performed at MIT in Boston and the Symphony Space in New York City. He is working on his master‘s degree in American and European clarinet music from the 20th century. This tour is the first of three major graduate projects. Knut Erik Jensen has performed more than 80 solo concerts in 18 states featuring Norwegian and international music since 2007. He was guest soloist in Edvard Grieg‘s A-minor Concerto for the 2007-2008 season opening of the Minot Symphony Orchestra in North Dakota and performed the same concerto with the National Philharmonic Orchestra of the Republic of Moldova in May 2009. He has recorded two CDs of Norwegian piano music. Donations accepted. ♦ Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation 5 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter ANITA’S CORNER Happenings Around the Scandinavian Center by ANITA LONDGREN, Program Director After July 22‘s tragic killings in Norway, Larry Johnson led a weekly ―Moment of Silence and Candle Ceremony‖ for the four weeks remaining until he and his wife went to Oslo. Pages of condolence comments from the Scandinavian Center and churches in this area were delivered to the Oslo Cathedral on the one-month anniversary during an official day of mourning. Of special note is the young woman from Oslo, Norway, a CLU grad, who called seeking a ―community‖ where she could share her sorrow and be comforted. Dr. Johanna Halls came from Santa Clarita on Aug. 3, joined by her husband, to participate in the Memorial Time that day. Noomi Wennberg prepared and brought Norwegian waffles and raspberry jam for Johanna – and the rest of us that day INTERNET SITE FOR SCANDINAVIANS An Internet news-and-announcements option for Scandinavians in Southern California was launched in September by Kristin Londgren, our daughter, to help promote Scandinavian American activities and to inform about people, books, movies, whatever, that both young people and not-so-young Scandinavian Americans might like to know about. It will be a good resource for the Scandinavian Center (as well as SACHF) to get information out quickly and/or to promote our various activities SCANDINAVIAN CENTER ADDITION Jan Wennberg and Torsten Olsson installing plastic panels over part of the Scandinavian Center patio. SACHF ANNUAL MEETING SATURDAY JANUARY 7, 2012 POTLUCK LUNCH 1 p.m. Check it out at: http://www.facebook.com/ScandinavianCentral. The e-mail address is [email protected] and you can use that to send information and announcements to her. followed by business meeting at THE SCANCINAVIAN CENTER PASSING OF ELAINE OLMON With a sad heart, we report the news of the death of Elaine Olmon. She, along with her husband Luther, had been a member and good friend of the Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation. We regret the loss to our community, and we want to express our sympathy to Luther and others in the Olmon family. Elaine had participated regularly in our Brown-Bag Lunches and she had helped with preparations for the annual Scandinavian Festival. She had also been closely associated with California Lutheran University, where Luther was a member of the first Board of Regents and a leader of the Habitat for Humanity program at CLU. A memorial service for Elaine was held at New Hope Lutheran Church (formerly Westlake Lutheran), Oct. 8. ♦ SCANDINAVIAN YULE AT STAGECOACH INN MUSEUM The Scandinavian Center will have a festive presence in a Christmas project at the Stagecoach Inn Museum in Newbury Park, with the SCANDINAVIAN CENTER is located at 26 Faculty Road Lana Lundin acting as chief nissar collector to present all the magic and color of traditional Scandinavian Yule. The SACHF exhibit will be set in a room with a fireplace. Lana, who is SACHF vice-president, will populate the space with tomtar, nissar, gnomes, elves…‖whatever you want to call those cute little ‗guys‘ all Scandinavians bring out at Christmas.‖ She‘d like to have at least one Christmas character from each of the Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation 6 For information call 805-241-1051 Visit us online at www.ScandinavianCenter.org or e-mail us at [email protected] Nordic countries. And she‘s putting out the call. ―If you have one of those magical creatures you could spare for this Christmas season, it would be great!‖ And she promises they will all be returned. Lana herself will be there when the exhibit opens Dec. 4. The museum, which is a project of the Conejo Valley Historical Society, is located at 51 S. Ventu Park Rd., Newbury Park, just off the 101. ♦ The Nordic Spirit Newsletter stave church portal fund pledge match dollar for dollar NOW’S THE TIME TO GIVE! The Stave Church Portal nears completion. According to Larry Johnson, SACHF president, ―This grand addition to the Scandinavian Center exemplifies the hope of finally constructing a full replica of a stave church on the CLU campus.‖ Donations made now to the Portal Fund will be matched dollar for dollar by pledges already received. Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation 7 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter Ja, sure, these are hard times ! Your immigrant forebears knew hard times well before they left their beloved homeland, and again in the decades of struggle to establish a new life in the New World. They gave it their all; they passed it forward . . . This is no time to let their story fade away, perhaps never to be reclaimed, never to be shared by the generations to come. Our folk made do with very little, yet they made significant, lasting contributions to this country. Through a lot of hard times . . . THAT’S WHAT SACHF IS ALL ABOUT: PRESERVING, CELEBRATING, DISCOVERING, SHARING JOIN UP OR RENEW SACHF MEMBERSHIP NAME(s)_________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________________________________ CITY____________________________________________________________________________________________ E-MAIL ___________________________________________________PHONE ________________________________ CIRCLE HERITAGE Household (family) D $50 I F N S Other Individual member Nordic Golden Circle Life $1,000 Patron $35 Fulltime student $20 $500 Sponsor/organization Corporate Member $250 $75 Other Please make checks payable to SACHF or the Scandinavian American Cultural and Historical Society. Mail to The Scandinavian Center at California Lutheran University, 60 W. Olsen Road — 2600, Thousand Oaks, CA 91360 Scandinavian American Cultural & Historical Foundation 8 The Nordic Spirit Newsletter
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