• Sweden edition

Desperately Seeking Sweden

Christine Demsteader embarks on a journey around Sweden in 56 and a half days

One average Joe, one Gävle-annoying Börje

I’m blessed with the talent of being a fairly good traveller and the ability to sleep well in a upright position. So I generally like to use train, bus or plane journeys as a nice excuse to relax.

I also think I’m pretty adept at talking to most people and happy to exchange a few opening pleasantries with the stranger I’m sat next to. But when it comes to travelling, I become Swedish. If I don’t know you I want you to leave me alone and please don’t try and engage me in uneccessary small-talk. Tack!

Saying that, it also seems I’m blessed with an unintentional talent of sitting close to the person with the world’s most irritating cough, a professionally loud mobile phone addict or a rhythmical seat-kicker.  

This time his name was Börje. From the moment I took my seat on the train to Gävle, Börje wanted to be best friends. I tried playing a few trump cards. Number one: speak English. Börje was keen to practise his foreign language ability. Number two: get a book out. Börje started reading over my shoulder, announced he had read it and even went out of his way to share the ending. Number three: pretend to go to sleep. Börje prodded my arm to show me a view of a nice lake.

Now Gävle sounds similar to a Swedish swear word and non-Swedish speakers will get the gist if I put it as follows: ”For Gävle’s sake Börje, shut the Gävle up.”  In typically Swedish form, I said nothing and instead went and sat on the toilet for ten minutes. 

We parted on friendly terms and I soon hooked up with a few Danes and Germans, who were equally confused as I was as to the whereabouts of the tourist information office. Shut away in the corner of a shopping centre, it resembles a cigarette kiosk, and the employees must have been out the back having a crafty smoke.

It’s rather fitting for a place which is famed for its flaming attempts to set fire to the enormous Christmas goat. The record holding world’s biggest straw goat (where else would you find one) has been erected in the city centre during yuletide season since 1966.

When the tourist information lady appeared she tried to flog me a cut-price copy of a DVD about another Gävle claim to fame. In December 1998, a snowstorm basically buried the town and the film invites you to watch two hours of raw weather footage. This version, a second edition, is dubbed ”now, with even more snow.”

The storm didn’t dampen the arsonists spirits that year and the goat was burned down on December 11. A city centre plaque chronologically charts its rise and fall over time:

In 1976 a vehicle drove into the goat and demolished it.
In 1979 the goat was set alight before it even got to the square.
In 1988 it survived but British betting shops starts offering odds on the goats’ fate.
In 2001 the goat was set alight by a 51 year old American who was caught and fined.
In 2006, the goat was sprayed with flame resistant chemicals to survive its 40th anniversary.

Rather than a snowstorm thriller or a goat burning comedy, there’s a 1971 movie I’d like see about local man Johan Hägglund. Born in Gävle in the late 1800s, he was a fairly normal bloke until he moved to the US and became a prominent labour activist. He changed his name to Joe Hill and is remembered as a working-class hero.

His story comes to a bitter end when he was allegedly framed for murder and executed. The tourist information lady advised me to find out more at the museum in his memory but it was closed.

Joe could have ended up in the county jail, another place I went to visit. Not under arrest for verbal abuse to blokes called Börje but by recommendation again by Ms. Tourist Info and it was even open. Now it’s a museum charting criminal life from the 1500’s onwards, demonstrating how Swedish prisons have gone from gruesome torture houses to holiday camps.

A man could have his nose cut off for being a 16th century gigolo. If you were caught drunk on a Sunday in the 1700s you faced three consecutive Sabbaths in the stocks outside church. And you could be sentenced to death by hanging in 1830 for carrying forged money.

Now, I can empathise with the injustice apparently served upon Joe Hill. Maybe not to the same extent but I, an innocent traveller, was sentenced two hours of being Börje’ed – a 21st-century-style punishment in Sweden today. 

Report abuse »

3 responses to “One average Joe, one Gävle-annoying Börje”

  1. Marian says:

    Yes! That TI is very hard to find. Hope you had a chance to walk over to the Järnvägsmuseum. Enjoy your travels!

    Report abuse »

  2. Christine says:

    Hi Marian,

    Indeed I did make it to the Järnvägsmuseum, making the most of the free entrance with my rail pass and saving myself 40 crowns to boot! I was fairly impressed with SJ but the admiration was short-lived I’m afraid as my next train was delayed!

    Report abuse »

  3. Anette Berg says:

    Hi
    Anna-maria gave us the same tour, and the way you describe it -is exactly as I remember it. Well written!!

    Report abuse »

Leave a reply

By posting a comment you agree to be bound by The Local's terms and conditions.


Highlights from Follow Sweden

Meet Sanna, 9 years old

Sanna is one of 2 million people in Sweden under the age of 18. Sweden is seen as a good place to grow up. The law makes sure children are well-protected and defends their rights and any organizations work with children's well-being. Read more »

Strindberg, king of drama

August Strindberg's plays shocked society, dazzled audiences and revolutionized drama. A century after his death, Strindberg, with his powerful, timeless themes, is celebrated around the world. Read more »

Blog Update: The Local's Blog

23 May 16:27

Prime Minister Reinfeldt chats with The Local »

"If you missed it yesterday, here’s The Local’s editor David Landes snagging Prime Minister Reinfeldt for a chat before Princess Estelle’s baptism. Always nice to know the PM has time for TL!" READ »

Highlights
Thegreenj/Wikipedia (File)
OPINION »
Swedish journalist and columnist Ola Tedin to reflect on how a sometimes uncritical media appears to serve the interests of the Swedish state
Photo: Shayne Kaye/Flickr (file)
BUSINESS & MONEY »
Nine of ten tourists 'happy' with Sweden
DoToday
LIFESTYLE »
What's On: The Local's guide to upcoming attractions and events in Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö.
German ambassador Harald Kindermann
OPINION »
Harald Kindermann, the German ambassador to Sweden, talks to The Local about the importance of the German language, nuclear power, and the legacy of the Stasi.
Claudio Bresciani/Scanpix
LIFESTYLE »
The Local's coverage of the baptism of Princess Estelle
Björn Tesch/Arbetsförmedlingen (File)
BUSINESS & MONEY »
Sweden drifting from 'Swedish model': report
The Local Street Style - Lund
GALLERY »
The Local's Street Style from Lund, southern Sweden.
Olle Lindeborg/Scanpix (File)
OPINION »
The problem of profiting ex-politicos isn't simply money, money, money, argues contributor and historian David Linden
LIFESTYLE »
The Local catches up with Sweden’s comedian of the year Al Pitcher and preview our first ever “Local Lockdown” video segment.
Photo: Aprilbell.stock.xcbng.com
OPINION »
Sweden strips foreign doctoral candidates of the same rights as other tax-paying migrant workers, argue a group of doctoral candidates from the Royal Institute for Technology (KTH).
Marco Vasini/Scanpix
SPORT »
Sweden looking for redemption at Euros
Chadawg24/Flickr (File)
LIFESTYLE »
'Are Swedes really more polite in English?'
Photo: Nikater
SPONSORED ARTICLE
Saxony with InterRail: a gateway to central Europe
Photo: AGS
SPONSORED ARTICLE
Moving made easy: Top tips for your international move
Photo: Poker Listings
SPONSORED ARTICLE
No Swedes Signed Up for Most Expensive Poker Tournament Ever
Photo: Jan Videgren
SPONSORED ARTICLE
How Bergman blazed a trail for Swedish film
Photo: Contiki
SPONSORED ARTICLE
Ten great reasons to travel this summer
Photo: Stock image
SPONSORED ARTICLE
Swedish university traditions make foreigners feel at home
Swedish Down Town
Swedish Down Town PR Consulting and Productions is an innovative business company which provides valuable assistance with Public Relations and Communications in the Swedish and the international market.
www.swedishdowntown.com
QUALITY ACCOMMODATION ON SWEDISH HIGH COAST
Comfortable Fully Serviced Apartments for Leisure or Business Travel Beautiful surroundings. Internet & Sat TV
www.oldriverhouse.se
Volunteer Venture
Volunteer Venture is dedicated to promoting community tourism by welcoming volunteers and travelers to discover the cultural differences in Nepal as English teaching volunteers, orphanage volunteers, Monk teachers and many more
www.volunteerventure.org/
The Local's new Marketplace
Find products and services that are specifically focused on English speakers living in Sweden!
FULL DETAILS
English Speaking Therapist Stockholm
British-Australian Male Counsellor. Counselling Therapy for Depression, Mental Health, Sex, Relationship & Expat Issues
08-559 22 636 or CLICK HERE
Doctor of Psychology
Therapy in English in Stockholm Trained in California Individuals & Couples (08) 93 81 48 FREE phone consultation
Visit anxiousorblue.se
Turning Point Counseling
Turning Point Counselling centre offers the international community of Stockholm a safe space for personal development, counselling and coaching.
http://www.turning-point.se/show.asp