Speech at the opening ceremony at NSSS 2014 in Tartu, Estonia
Kallid laulusõbrad! – Dear fellow singers!
In these days, when the rights of independent nations to stay
independent are obviously questioned and threatened by obscure dark forces, it
is important to remind us all of the days in the late 1980s when choral singing
in Estonia came to play an important key role in this country’s liberation from
an unwanted intruder. History has come to name this “The Singing Revolution” and
it led to the restoration
of the independence of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
I had the privilege to visit the Tehnikaülikooli Akadeemiline Meeskoor in Tallinn in 1990 and I can still remember the
energy and the force linked to the coming liberation that I perceived in the choir and in the
individual singers.
Choral singing is powerful.
And choral singing is creates peace.
When choral singing started at the universities in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Finland in the very beginning of the 19th century, one of the main purposes of the singing was to unite the people in the Scandinavian area and to make peace between the brothers and sisters in the neighbouring countries.
One of my friends and colleagues, Bosse Johansson, conductor of the world famous “Adolf Fredrik’s girls
choir”, once said: “children that sing together in
choirs don’t start wars”,
and I guess we
can all continue the sentence: “University
students don’t either”!
I am extremely happy and proud of being a part
of the NSSS movement. When we started the first NSSS in
Linköping in 1987, 27 years ago, we did not have the slightest idea of what
this was to become in the future. We had not
planned for a continuation and we had not
expected it. But the singers wanted otherwise and now we can see and feel the result. We have gathered every third
year, this year for the 9th time, and for the second time in Estonia.
I am convinced that we are only in the beginning of the NSSS tradition.
I am convinced that we will continue to meet for many years and decades to come.
I am convinced that NSSS is an important event with the lofty goal of bringing people from the Baltic and Nordic
universities together in joyful and peaceful singing.
I wish you all some really great days and let us all rejoice – or as we say in Latin – GAUDEAMUS IGITUR !
Hans Lundgren