Stop the Violence

2018-10-16T09:33:30+01:00October 23rd, 2014|

RCN student Mateo Dupleich Rozo leading a Theatre Game activity with our visitorsOn Wednesday we were visited by 48 ninth-grade students from three different schools in Svelgen and Bremanger, a district two hours north of the College. The visit came about through our cooperation with the Sogn og Fjordane Red Cross, who organize events and activities for people to highlight the effects of violence and teach how to develop tools to work locally against violence.

A day of activities was organised for our visitors: there were talks and presentations in the morning about our cooperative projects with Fredskorpset and several of our students, some from our Survivors of Conflict programme, others from areas of conflict, shared their stories with our visitors in a presentation in the Høegh Centre. Later in the day there was yoga, ice-breaker games and Theatre activities led by students. 

 

Our thanks go to the Red Cross, to our visitors who made the journey to the College, and to our students and staff  who put together such a varied and interesting programme.  As a future development from this visit, we are hoping – in co-operation with Sogn og Fjordane Red Cross – to develop a programme that can be offered to all schools in our region.

RCN students and staff with our visitors

UWC Dilijan

2018-10-16T09:33:31+01:00October 11th, 2014|

The students and staff at UWC Red Cross would like to express our delight that UWC Dilijan in Armenia is holding its inauguration today, Saturday 11th October 2014. Tom Gresvig (one of the founding team of UWC RCN), Stig Moltumyr (Director of Finance at UWC RCN) and Pål Brynsrud (UWC RCN Council) shall be attending the opening ceremony as representatives of our College.  It is particularly exciting that a UWC College has been established in Armenia given the historical partnership between Norway and Armenia. Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930) – famous Norwegian explorer, author, statesman, Nobel Laureate – requested in 1921 in his capacity as High Commissioner for Refugees (appointed Nansen with a group of Armenian orphans in 1925by the League of Nations) that the League validated the “Nansen Passport”, which gave the stateless people the right to enter different countries. Thanks to these passports 320,000 Armenians won the right to move freely to their preferred country. Nansen was also responsible for resettling 7,000 people in Armenia in 1925 – these refugees who had been displaced during the First World and ill-treated up until 1925 when Nansen drew up and implemented a plan for resettlement. The Armenian Genocide-Museum and Institute issued a medal “Fridtjof Nansen 150” on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of Fridtjof Nansen to honour and celebrate his commitment and support of the Armenian people.

We wish the first cohort of students and new members of staff (drawn from Armenia and across the world) all the very best for the academic year ahead.

Larry
Rektor

Update:

Tom Gresvig, member of the founding team of UWC RCN and currently ‘our man in Armenia’, reports from the opening ceremony of UWC Dilijan.

Impressions from an Armenian Opening Ceremony

Where is Armenia?  An embarrassing question to have to ask for someone who is invited to go the opening ceremony of the lastest United World College, UWC Dilijan College.  Especially as we were to discover that it is the oldest Christian country in the world, and that there are more Armenians outside of Armenia than inside, some six million compared to little more than three million in the country itself.  And that by the time Jesus was amongst us on Earth it was one of the bigger realms stretching from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea and further on to the Caspian Sea.  And that it has its own language, written and oral used, in daily use all over the world, as well as their own religion.

But before 1990 it was hidden to the unobservant outside world as part of the Soviet Union, only to emerge as an independent country again at the fall of the Soviet Empire.  A Christian landlocked country surrounded by a Muslim world.   A country that has seen war and holocausts, but now enjoys peace and wants to pursue prosperity and happiness. This history in fact in combination made it possible for enthusiasts from inside and outside of Armenia to realize their dream of opening a United World College, and to convince the UWC International Board that this College will be sound and sustainable.  Armenians abroad, in Russia, the US, Lebanon and other places have been very successful business people, and they have combined to contribute to the development of Armenia, presently a poor country.  They think education is the ideal vehicle, and have found a truly stunning place to realize their dream, the Dilijan Valley up in the Mountains from the capital city of Yerevan.  From relatively barren land passing the big lake of Sevan one ducks into a long tunnel and emerge in this green Paradise Valley, as yet completely undeveloped with some 10.000 people living along the valley.  The weather is surprisingly different, much cooler and more clouds and rain,  and hence green.

In the course of eight years their plans are realized, and on Saturday the 11th of October 2014 some one thousand guests from far and near arrived in Dilijan to celebrate the opening of the UWC together with the Presidents of Armenia, Serbia (who happened to be in Yerevan for a football match) and of Nagorno Karabakh (a semi-independent part of modern Armenia).  We were whisked away from the luxury Marriotts and Hyatt hotels of Yerevan by racing police escorts to arrive at the College in time for the great festivities.   Students met us, and Stig and I handed over the Red Cross Nordic College gift to the new school, the big Nordic history book, the “Edda” by Snorri Sturlason.  All guests brought books for the school library.

The Prince of Wales appeared on a huge screen congratulating the founders, and hoping for fruitful educational cooperation with his Scottish Dumfries House Trust, and the Head of the Armenian Church, His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of all the Armenians blessed the school.  The guests returned in the motorcades for the big Friends Party in Yerevan, and Stig and I agreed that this has been a most colorful weekend, and we wish the Founding Head of College John Puddefoot and his school every success and hope for fruitful cooperation also with the Nordic College and Region.

Tom Gresvig

Here is an article from an Armenian newspaper about the new College.

Nobel Peace Prize Winners

2018-10-16T09:33:31+01:00October 10th, 2014|

On Friday 10th October at 11am, the Nobel Institute will announce the 2014 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. The Norwegian Nobel Committee has received nominations for 278 candidates (the highest number of nomination in the history of the prize) including nominations for 47 organisations.  The Nobel Peace prize aims to reward a person, or organisation, who’s worked tirelessly for peace despite the world’s many hurdles. Last year, the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons was awarded the prize for its mission to destroy Syria’s chemical weapons stocks and 16 years of wider global efforts.

Nominees for this year’s award include: Edward Snowden, Pope Francis, Ban-Ki Moon, Malala Yasafzai, the international Space Station Organisation, Jose Mujica, Chelsea (Bradley) Manning) and many others. Since the opening of the College, the Nobel Institute in Oslo has kindly given 5 tickets for RCN students plus one for a member of staff to attend the ceremony in Oslo City Hall – and we look forward to being part of the ceremony on Wednesday 10th December.

Please click here if you would like to learn more about the Nobel Peace Prize. You will also discover on this page that the Red Cross has been awarded the prize on three occasions (1917, 1944, 1963). On this page, there is also a game which invites you to perform as a camp commander of a prisoners of war camp and test your knowledge of the Geneva Convention.

Update:

Nobel Peace Prize Winners  2014: Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzay

This morning, it was announced that the Nobel Peace Prize for 2014 is to be awarded to  and Malala Yousafzay (Pakistan) and Kailash Satyarthi (India) for their struggle against the suppression of children and young people and for the right of all children to education. On behalf of UWC Red Cross Nordic, congratulations to the joint recipients of this award and a heartfelt thank you for your unstinting and continued struggle against suppression and for the rights of children and adolescents. Since starting in 1995 we have had the privilege to send a group of our students to the prize ceremony. This year it will be a very special occasion – the award gives so much hope for young people’s rights for an education.

For more information, please click here.

 

Nordic Ambassadors

2014-10-09T05:01:39+01:00October 9th, 2014|

On Monday 6th October 2014, General Secretary Espen Stedje at “Foreningen Norden”, together with Olemic Thommesen, in his role as Chair, hosted a reception in Oslo as a prelude to the 20th anniversary of our College. This was a fine way of bringing together different stake holders within Nordic co-operation; for the College, it was an opportunity to express our gratitude to representatives of all countries and also to initiate dialogue about the road ahead. Fortuitously, the reception was held on the date of Thor Heyerdahl’s centenary anniversary.

The ambassadors from Denmark (Torben Brylle), Sweden (Axel Wernhoff) and Finland (Erik Lundberg) were all present. Iceland was represented with Embassy Counsellor Elín Rósa Sigurðardóttir. Anne Sofie Bjelland, Special Advisor on Nordic Affairs in the Norwegian Foreign Ministry, was there, together with Secretariat Leader Vibeke Greni from the Norwegian Parliament delegation to the Nordic Council.

Our Chair, Tove Veierød, gave an introduction to the College, followed by an address by Rektor Richard Lamont on Thor Heyerdahl and his vision of a Nordic college – please click here to access the speech. Director of Development Arne Osland presented on recent and future developments at the College. After the lunch, an open invitation to visit the College was given the embassies to connect with our students and staff during their posting as ambassadors to Norway.

Coming up to the end of our teenage years, we will continuously look for relevant ways of combining the Nordic and the global perspectives in our educational operation – also for the next 20 years!

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