Wednesday, 28 January 2009

New Years in Norway

Some of the things that happened while I was in Å, Senja visiting my family...

My younger brother Peter taught me how to skii. These photos are from New Years eve.






- Bekymring for folket på Gaza

Heidi Dansholm (foto:hnn)
Heidi Dansholm (foto:hnn)
-Vi vil uttrykke bekymring for folket som lide på Gaza, sa Heidi Dansholm (bildet) da ho ønska velkommen til støttemarkeringa på Eidet fredagskveld.
-Det viktigaste no e at krigen stoppe, sa ho.
Heidi e heime på sør-Senja en snartur, -ho jobbe til daglig med internasjonalt hjelpearbeid. Og e ikkje ukjent med forholdan i Midt-Østen.

Fleire lokale aktøra stilte opp. Dag-Erik Pedersen (bass), Svein-Arild Berntsen (munnspill/vokal), Åge Tobiassen (gitar/sang) og Erling Stangnes (trekkspill/sang) sto for de kulturelle innslagan.
Svein Arild hadde i tillegg en apell.
-Menneska har alltid vore flink til å bygge opp mura. Religion har vore flink til det. Alle trur dem har den sanne gud, sa Svein Arild Berntsen.
-Vi kan akseptere tingan som dem e, eller akseptere vårt ansvar for å få forandringe, sa han. Og fikk applaus.
Tretti menneska hadde møtt opp på Våres Kafè på fredagskvelden.

(Lokalavisa.no http://www.lokalavisa.no/artikkel.php?aid=45539)

People do what people see

Integrity has high influence value...


A young Jewish boy who grew up in Germany many years ago. The lad had a profound sense of admiration for his father, who saw to it that the life of the family revolved around the religious practices of their faith. The father led them to the synagogue faithfully.

In his teen years, however, the boy’s family was forced to move to another town in Germany. The town had no synagogue, only a Lutheran church. The life of the community revolved around the Lutheran church; all the best people belonged to it. Suddenly the father announced to the family that they were all going to abandon their Jewish traditions and join the Lutheran church. When the stunned family asked why, the father explained that it would be good for his business.

The youngster was bewildered and confused. His deep disappointment soon gave way to anger and a kind of intense bitterness that plagued him throughout his life.


Later he left Germany and went to England to study. Each day found him at the British Museum formulating his ideas and composing a book. In that book he introduced a whole new worldview and conceived a movement that was designed to change the world.

He described religion as “the opiate for the masses.” He committed the people who followed him to life without God. His ideas became the norm for the governments of almost half the world’s people.

His name? Karl Marx.

The history of the twentieth century was significantly affected because one father let his values become distorted.