Romjul – pronounced “rom-yool” – is the Norwegian word for the period between Christmas and the New Year. This year it is also the title of an exciting new theatre production, developed by the Welsh drama company Theatr na n’Og in collaboration with the Norwegian Church Arts Centre and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund.
It tells the story of two Norwegian sisters evacuated to Cardiff during WWII, who find themselves hiding from “trolls” in the little white church in the heart of Cardiff Docks.
It features traditional Norwegian stories and folk songs, and is an educational performance aimed at schools and families. Shows will last around 45 minutes.
There are public performances in English on the following dates:
Wednesday 3 December: 6:00pm
Saturday 6 December: 11:30am
Sunday 7 December: 11:30am (part of the Festival of Light celebrations)
It is the highlight of this part of the year for us and for growing numbers of people who come to join in our celebration of international and intercultural friendship – and to throw some light into the even-darkening days.
Come and join us at the Norwegian Church in Cardiff Bay where the Norsk cafe will be open all day for food and drinks.
The Salvation Army Band will again play a selection of British and Norwegian carols from 4 pm.
At 4.30, we will welcome our official visitors including the new Lord Mayor of Cardiff and representatives of Vestland County Council and, we hope, from Norway’s Embassy in London.
There’ll be some short readings in English, Welsh and Norwegian, some carol singing and lighting of lights on the tree and throughout the church.
The cafe will remain open until 6 for further refreshments.
We like to make sure that the church and the large Christmas tree that will stand proud throughout the many concerts and celebrations that take place over the holiday season reflect Norwegian tradition and culture – and so we ‘pynte’ or decorate them in a traditional style. There is no tinsel on a Norwegian Christmas tree!
Do come and join us on Saturday 23 November at 2.30 pm.
All are welcome.
We’ll bring the decorations – and supply coffee and cake.
Welcome back! Of course, you may not have been away, but it is a Scandinavian tradition to disappear and make the most of the short period of long summer days, enjoying ‘friluftsliv‘ – life outdoors.
We usually congregate at the Norwegian Church in October for a social gathering. Sadly, we have had to cancel the event planned for Sunday 20 October as no one was available to run it, due to work and study commitments.
We will be back for the highlights of the year in the run-up to Christmas.
On Saturday 23 November we will meet to decorate the Christmas tree in the church with traditional Norwegian decorations, some of them hand-made.
And then on Sunday 1 December at 3pm we will hold our annual Festival of Light and Friendship.
Save the dates, and please join us at one or both of those events!
Editor's note: Ken wrote this charming recollection of his involvement with the Welsh Norwegian Society for our Autumn 2021 magazine. We re-publish it now following his passing as the best possible testimony for his contribution to the preservation of the church, to the society and the community over many, many years. Ken's wife Signe pre-deceased him shortly after he wrote this account.
It is lovely to have the opportunity to share few of my recollections of becoming involved with the Norwegian Welsh Society. Over the years it has brought me into contact with many wonderful people. Some are named below, and I apologise to those missed out.
My involvement came about because of an earlier association with norskkrigseilerssamfunnet which enabled Norwegian seafarers who had sailed with the Allies during the Second World War to maintain contact with each other. During the early eighties, [my Norwegian-born wife] Signe and I were honoured to be allowed access to this formidable association of Norwegians who had sailed on the famous one thousand ships that defied the Quisling Government’s orders to sail to an Axis port. They had stayed loyal to the Norwegian Government in London and chose to exile themselves to serve the Allied cause.
I had sailed with such men under the Norwegian flag and was touched by the affection with which they regarded the Welsh coal ports and their people. One of them taught me the words of ‘Sjømannen og stjernen’ which tells of the sailor’s yearning for home and family during those dreadful years.
Most of the members of the Society had married women they had met whilst in exile and had made their homes all over the UK. The Association met twice yearly, on 17th May and near to Christmas. Organised by Mr Erling Pedersen, who lived in Cardiff, and another gentleman called Jorgensen, the meetings took place in the banqueting hall of the historic Westgate Hotel in Newport.
They were grand events which filled the hall. We sat each side of two rows of tables taking up the whole length of that fine room. Across the front was another table seating the officers of the organisation, the Norwegian Ambassador to the UK and the Lord Mayor of Newport. There were speeches, a fine meal and music for dancing away the rest of the evening.
Age takes its toll, and the long tables became shorter year by year. Eventually the sad but wise decision to wind up the organisation was made. But we had made lasting friendships, with people from South Wales like Stan and Ellen Waine and Ebba Lovering. With these, around 1986, Signe became a member of the small group working hard to save the Norwegian Seamen’s church from demolition and she has furnished some of the details from her hospital bed.
The church building looked quite sad at its old site. It just had to be renovated.
At that time the building looked quite sad at its old site at the head of the Bute East Dock. Its decaying corrugated iron cladding belied its fine interior. It just had to be renovated to take its rightful place as an important part of Cardiff’s history. In 1987, it was dismantled and put into storage ready to be reassembled on its new site. The group worked hard, and forged links with the seafaring community of Hordaland, which includes the historic seaport of Bergen on the west coast of Norway. Aware of its links with the Welsh Norwegian community, Hordaland contributed £250,000 to the project.
The enterprise was a stupendous success. The church was rebuilt in its current position. The old, corrugated iron cladding had been a condition imposed by the nineteenth century port authority, and it was replaced by traditional timber painted a sparkling white. In April 1992, the building was reopened by Princess Martha Louise of Norway in the presence of the Norwegian community and the civic dignitaries of Cardiff. Signe was given a lift to Central Station in the mayoral car, an event now firmly ensconced in our family saga.
The enterprise was a stupendous success. The church was rebuilt in its current position.
The old church immediately commenced its new role as an Arts Centre and preserving the memory of the ships and men that hauled pit props from Norway and took coal home again. It was also creating strong links between Wales and Norway.
One of the by-products of the enterprise was the Sunday group. I call it that because it met on the last Sunday of each month at the church. It was made up of the remaining members of that original group which set out to save the building, funded by a bequest from Ellen Greve to enable members of the group to maintain contact with each other.
There was Ellen, Stan, Ebba, Mary Allen, Sid Eide, Deris and Hugh Deeks, and Averil Goldsworthy who was chair of WNS from 2003 to 2017. There were so many interesting people to chat with, like the musician, the late Mr. Nichols and his son and daughter in law, David and Pauline.
We would enjoy good coffee, Norwegian style cakes, waffles, and a good old chinwag about our experiences of Norway and her people. The highlight of the afternoon was drawing the raffle. We all contributed a prize, and most of us went home with one. Our son Gareth used to assist Stan in selling the tickets, making the draw and calling out the winning numbers. It helped the growth of his self-confidence no end.
The ancient Norse gods must have approved of the event.
Then there was the Midsummer Garden party, traditionally held in Ebba’s spacious garden in Sully. Ebba, her family, and friends would furnish a sumptuous buffet. Betty and Peter Persen were prominent memories, and Peter, who became president of the Society, would light the traditional bonfire. The ancient Norse gods must have approved of the event for only on one or two occasions were we obliged to seek refuge from the rain in Ebba’s beautiful home.
The seventeenth of May was, of course, a special event with all flags flying around the church. Around 2006, Karen Allen, the Society’s development officer, started the tradition of parading from the Wales Millennium Centre through Cardiff Bay to the Church. In the evening, all the members of the Society met for a meal, provided by the caterers who ran the Norwegian Church coffee shop. Society members contributed to the menu by supplying their own mulled wine, starters, and gateaux to ensure things could be as authentic as possible. We were never disappointed.
Christmas was celebrated with a whole day event lighting the Christmas Tree and singing the Norwegian national anthem. Evening saw us enjoying another delightful Christmas meal with akvavit served by Erling and Sylvia Lindoe.
We danced around the Christmas tree and sang carols to Mrs. Carol Roese’s accompaniment. Mrs. Barbara Bailey sang for us, she and her husband Colin regularly making the trip from Magor. Even when Colin became wheelchair bound, they managed to make the trip.
It was at one of these events that I first met Solveig Borthwick, and her husband, Don, who was the Society’s first chair. Tony and Carole Olavesen, Alan Milne, and Alan Hall were other new friends made at these events. Alan Hall taught at Atlantic College, and we were frequently joined by Norwegian students at who were always a joy to chat with.
In 2002 we celebrated the 10th anniversary of the reopening of the Norwegian Church. We were joined by Bodø Cathedral Choir, led by their charismatic conductor, Magne Hansen. He had the choir encircle the audience in Llandaff Cathedral which created a very special sound. They sang for us at Ebba’s Garden party, and at the church, first from the balcony before proceeding down the stairs to the hall. The Society also arranged for them to perform in St David’s Cathedral which the choir thought was very special.
It was FANTASTISK to see so many members at our annual Festival of Light and Friendship at the Norwegian Church on Sunday 10 December.
It was standing room only for the first religious service to be held in the church in many years, led by the Revd Ingrid Ims.
The Salvation Band played, carols were sung, and the tree was lit.
And we remembered our former driving light, Karen Allen, with the unveiling of a plaque in her memory in the gallery.
The Festival of Light and Friendship is becoming the cornerstone of our calendar, and really helps to cement the bonds between Wales and Norway. Thanks to all who came and those who made it happen.
Our 10-foot tall Nordman fir was delivered from the Gower last week and installed in the church. A dugnad was held and the tree was decorated. Christmas is coming!
A religious service in Norwegian and English will be held in the Norwegian Church in Cardiff Bay this Christmas for the first time in decades. Rev Ingrid Ims of the Norwegian Seamen’s Mission in London will lead the service in a new addition to the Festival of Light of Friendship.
Ingrid Ims speaking at our Constitution Day event earlier this year. Rev Ims is based at the Norwegian Church Abroad (Sjømannskirken) where she is the pastor to Norwegian students in the UK.
The Festival has become a popular event in the society’s calendar, and celebrates the friendships forged over generations between Wales and Norway. We welcome visitors from Norway, usually including representatives of Vestland Council in Bergen, with whom the society and the church have long-standing links. The Salvation Army band plays, carols are sung, and the Christmas trees inside and outside the church are lit. Traditional Norwegian Christmas food and drink including hot dogs, waffles, pepperkaker (like gingerbread) and gløgg (mulled wine) are consumed.
All are welcome.
Programme for the Festival of Light and Friendship Sunday 10 December 2023
3 pm – Christmas service, led by Revd Ims of the Norwegian Church Abroad
3.45 pm – Unveiling of the memorial plaque to Karen Allen, former member of WNS and manager of the Norwegian Church
4 pm – Salvation Army Band playing carols in the marquee
4.30 pm – Lighting of the Christmas trees
Please note that we will be decorating the indoor tree in typical Norwegian fashion at 2 pm on Sunday 26 November. Volunteers are again warmly welcomed!
We’ll write more about our plans shortly, but we wanted to give you as much notice as possible of the dates we’ve agreed for our autumn programme of events.
Sunday 24 September, 2.30-4.30 pm: A.G.M.
We’ll elect a new committee (volunteers and nominations welcome!), discuss ideas for events and social gatherings, and remember Karen Allen, a loyal friend of the society and the Norwegian church, who sadly died last year. We’ve a painting of the church to unveil and a plaque to celebrate her life.
Saturday 21 October, 2 pm – Trolls!
Thomas Alexander Husøy-Ciaccia will host our celebration of Norway’s mountain-dwellers, the trolls.
Sunday 26 November, 2 pm – Decorating the Christmas tree
We’ll make and hang decorations on the tree in Norwegian style. Special fun for families!
Sunday 10 December – Festival of Light and Friendship
This much-loved annual event where we light the Christmas trees indoors and out. We are also hoping to be able to hold a bilingual service in the church for the first time in decades. More details to follow.
Wales’s small but vibrant Norwegian community celebrated the arrival of the festive season on Sunday (4 December), at their annual Festival of Light and Friendship at their iconic church on Cardiff Bay.
Norwegians came to Wales in the 19th century as sailors and traders bringing pit props and supplies to the coal mines of south Wales as the industry boomed. Many settled, including the family of author Roald Dahl. He was born in Cardiff and baptised in the small church that was built in the Bute docks to serve the local community and visiting seamen.
As the community dispersed, the white wooden church fell into disuse and disrepair, but in later life Dahl led the campaign to have it preserved. It was eventually rebuilt at its present position on the waterfront, and now serves as an arts centre and café. It remains a focal point for Norwegians living, working and studying across Wales.
The church café was open to all, serving Norwegian favourites including waffles, cakes, mulled wine, hotdogs and lapskaus – a close relation to Welsh cawl.
There were workshops in the main hall for those wanting to learn how to make Scandinavian-style Christmas decorations.
As dusk fell, there was a traditional outdoor lantern procession to light the Christmas tree and welcome Santa. The band of the Salvation Army played.
This event was hosted by the Welsh-Norwegian Society, the Norwegian Church Cardiff Bay Charity and Vestland County Council in Norway, which has long supported the restoration of the church building and the maintenance of cultural and education ties between south Wales and west Norway.