Thursday, 16 December 2010

Movie Night - Tonight

Tonight, at 18.00, we are showing the Swedish movie "My life as a Dog" ("Mitt liv som hund").

My Life as a Dog is a 1985 Swedish drama film directed by Lasse Hallström, based on a novel by Reidar Jönsson.


It tells the story of Ingemar, a young boy sent to live with relatives. When they start fighting over him, he grabs onto Saga's leg and starts barking like a dog ...

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Monday, 13 December 2010

Swedish Week; Family Day, Santa and Lucia

The Family Day at the Swedish School on December 11 became a very big success, not only because of the wonderful weather, but thanks to all families attending this part of the Swedish Week and all people working hard with the preparations. Thank you everybody!

The kids loved the work shop, preparing Christmas decorations etc. The adults loved the market buying gifts for the upcoming holidays.

Since all kids had been very kind during the year Santa Claus arrived from nowhere to the Swedish School in Longacres, Lusaka, Zambia, and gave all children well appreciated gifts. This year no kids got scared, but the secret about the man with the white beard still wasn't revealed ... at least not to the youngest part of the community.

A lottery was held to raise money for the sister school in Ndola, the Dag Hammarskjold Memorial School. More about this will be published in the upcoming issue of our newsletter Blaskan, send out beginning of January 2011.
Finally the teachers of the Swedish School, Lillian and Ingrid, together with the kids taking Swedish at the school performed some traditional Christmas carols in the Lucia procession.


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Pictures from Western Province




The Swedish School is now proud to be selling the photographs of the exhibition "Mobility in the Margins", shown at Zebra Crossings Café the first week in December 2010, as part of the Swedish Week. The pictures covered young people’s mobility in the western province of Zambia as interpreted by Swedish anthropologist, Michael Barratt and photographer Rose-Marie Westling.

If you are interested in buying any of the pictures, please contact swedishschool@gmail.com or theodorsjogren@hotmail.com and we will give you more information on prices and sizes.

More information about Rose-Marie Westling can be found at her website, www.rose-mariewestling.se

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Friday, 10 December 2010

Swedish Week; Book Reading for kids

Today the Swedish School Association arranged a book reading for kids. Among all students from the Mukwashi Trust School, grade 1-5, attended.

There were two groups that listened to Swedish books translated into English. The titles represented at this venue were Alfie Atkins (Alfons Åberg), Pettsson & Findus, Mini Mia (Lill-Zlatan) and Pippi Longstocking.

Pictures will soon be published.

Thank you ms Laura Manni for the connections to the Mukwashi Trust School.

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Thursday, 09 December 2010

Swedish Week; The Swim School


Even though it was raining and the water in the pool a bit cold, Coach Charlie did a good job teaching the 4-5 year old kids how to swim. See you next week as well!


And tomorrow we will be reading some contemporary Swedish kids books and showing a kids movie. From 15.00 to 17.00. For all kids, no entrance fee.

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Wednesday, 08 December 2010

Final rehearsals for the Family Day on Saturday December 11




Today all kids at the Swedish School, were doing the final rehearsals for the traditional Lucia Procession, which will be part of the Family Day on Saturday.






Don't miss this event, so please pre-register a.s.a.p. to swedishschool@gmail.com


15.00-16.30 Christmas Workshop

16.30-17.30 Games and dancing around the Christmas tree

17.30-18.30 Father Christmas might come over ...

18.30-19.00 Lucia Procession



There will also be a bazaar to which everybody is welcome to donate your home made Christmas sweeties, cookies, handcrafts, etc. You may also participate in the Christmas lottery with very nice prices available. All money raised during the day will be given to our sister school in Ndola, the Dag Hammarskjold Memorial School.

Entrance fee is k20 000 per person.

Traditional Swedish snacks will be served and the bar will be open.

Most welcome to the Swedish School during this Swedish Week.

Best regards,

The Board of the Swedish School

P.S. Please tell all your friends about the Swedish Week

Let the Right One In


During the Swedish Week we will show the Swedish Movie "Let the Right One In".

Wednesday, December 8, 19.30-21.30
Friday, December 10, 19.30-21.30

Information: Oscar, an overlooked and bullied boy, finds love and revenge through Eli, a peculiar girl who turns out to be a vampire.

These events are open to all, free entrance.

Tuesday, 07 December 2010

Go Batty in Kasanka

by Bodil Sörensen

Every year for about two months, aprx 24 October-24 December, the worlds biggest migration of mammals take part in Kasanka National Park. Approximately 8 million fruit bats come from all over southern Africa to feed on fruit.


During day time they hang from the trees in such numbers that they break the branches. Their body is 25-30 cm and they have a wing span of up to one meter. Their total weight is equivalent of a thousand elephants, imagine them hanging from the trees!


At six o’clock every night they all take off and fill the sky, as far as you can see. It is spectacular, amazing and a bit magic!


The Kasanka Trust runs all lodges and campsites in the park, contact via e-mail park@kasanka.com.

Muneni Club

by Johan Norman

Moneni Club. That is the name of the textile produce made by some 15 Zambian widows in Garden Compound in Lusaka. Lillian Dover, teacher at the Swedish school, started Moneni Club in 2004 which know sells textile produce in the Swedish school and Dutch Market in Lusaka and even in faraway Furuviksparken Zoo in Gävle, Sweden.

The welcome song from the widows when we arrive at their sewing room is powerful and creates a magic atmosphere. Me and another Swedish spouse has joined Lillian to Garden Compound to visit Moneni Club, the association of around fifteen widows that make their own brand of textile produce. Two times a week the widows gather in the living room of one of the members to sew. Lillian hands out the fabric she bought in Kamwala in the morning. The women start sewing while chatting. Meanwhile Lillian goes through the accounts.

Lillian started the association in 2004. She was helping out as a textile teacher in a Zambian Red Cross project for street kids when a woman approached Lillian and asked her if she could teach some of her friends how to sew too. In the beginning Lillian had to borrow money to Moneni Club but know they make a small profit. 40-50 % of the income goes to purchase and the rest goes to the women. Every item has got the name of the person who made it and she gets the profit.


"This encourages the women to show up and to become better all the time", says Lillian.

Lillian is a textile teacher in a school in Nynäshamn in Sweden and says that she keeps a strict regime when it comes to the quality of the things that Moneni Club produces.

"In the beginning the women thought they knew have to sew better than they actually did and they are very stubborn. You must keep an eye on what they do all the time but their skills have really improved a lot during the years", says Lillian. "Baby blankets, balls for babies and bottle bags are very popular but also quilts and bread baskets sell well"

Since April Moneni Club also runs a chicken farm with about 100 chickens. The project was started by a group of volunteers from Sweden called Jazz. The chickens are sold in the compound and the chicken farm is now starting to make a profit.

Moneni Club has got a stand at the Dutch Market in Lusaka and also sells their produce at the Swedish School on Wednesdays and Thursdays between 11.00 and 16.00. But Moneni Club textiles are also sold in faraway Furuvik Zoo in Gävle in Sweden by the Jane Goodall Institute Sweden within the framework of Roots & Shoots, a global development project.

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Office Space to Rent

Are you looking for Office Space to rent? A place to arrange your upcoming conference days, that can offer a good restaurant and a relax department with a 20 meter swimming pool, bar facilities and a proper sauna?

Please contact Nosiku at the Swedish School to get more information. E-mail swedishschool@gmail.com

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