Actually, the angels and grays of UFO's are in reality angry fairies,
according to at least one author.  ;)

To be honest, this has the ring of one of those emails that's been passed
around forever and a day that isn't anything more than an urban legend
(which is an interesting phenomenon for folklorists and ethnographers in and
of itself).  That being said, it seems to me that this is something that's
more appropriate to a list dealing with folklore than to Museum-L,
especially with the specific questions you're asking.  Thanks for sharing it
though.
><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><
Jenny Rebecca Martin, Collections Manager
The Morris Museum                      Phone: 973.971.3712
6 Normandy Heights Road            Fax: 973.538.0154
Morristown, NJ 07960                   Email [log in to unmask]

  -----Original Message-----
  From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of Nicholas Burlakoff
  Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 11:28 AM
  To: [log in to unmask]
  Subject: Re: Adaptation of a tradition?


  I don’t see how that is so. Tradition is always in flux and transition
especially as technology changes underlying realities. For example, some
narratives that have been associated with sailing vessels have now become
associated with airplanes while some encounter tales with “angels” have
evolved to tales about “encounters” with UFO’s. As early as the 1930’s Jung
published a monograph delineating this phenomenon.

  In the case I posted there are a number of interesting questions that
immediately come to mind: 1) Is the behavior described true—did Norwegians
and Danes actually have a protest dress code?; 2) If this tale is true, then
the question is: did the letter originate in Scandinavia or in the US, or
even another country?; 3) If the referenced custom is not true where and how
did it originate?

  I think, that all these are important questions when we are experiencing
the internet phenomenon that has replaced the village square for gossip and
communication. Given the global reach of this list and its size I am hoping
that answers to the posed questions can be found.

  Cheers, -Nicholas



  -----Original Message-----
  From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of Ron Twellman
  Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 9:44 AM
  To: [log in to unmask]
  Subject: Re: Adaptation of a tradition?



  Nicholas,

  The first sentence of your response is at odds with the second.

  RT



  Ron Twellman, Curator of Collections
  EAA AirVenture Museum
  P.O. Box 3065
  Oshkosh, WI 54903-3065
  920-426-5917
  [log in to unmask]

  -----Original Message-----
  From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of Nicholas Neylon
  Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 8:33 AM
  To: [log in to unmask]
  Subject: Re: Adaptation of a tradition?

  Seems to me like this is just another, far more creative attempt for
frustrated anti-Americans to spread their anti-war sentiments.  Keep
political agendas at home, and not on a MUSEUM discussion list.



  ----- Original Message -----


  From: Nicholas Burlakoff

  To: [log in to unmask]

  Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2004 8:13 AM

  Subject: Adaptation of a tradition?



  I recently received the message below from a Quaker friend. As a
folklorist I wonder if this is an adaptation of the older Scandinavian
tradition, or a new phenomenon. Has anyone else received this message, and
if so, from what source?

  Cheers, -Nicholas



  My name is Nadia Jensen and I have an idea for a quiet revolution.

  > Please take 5 minutes to read my email, then help if you can:

  > Here's some history behind this idea: When Norway was occupied by
Germany in 1940, Norwegian women began to knit RED caps for children as a
way of letting everyone know that they did not like what was happening in
their country, that they didn't like having their freedom taken away by the
Nazis.

  > My great aunt, Karin Knudson Myrstad, was one of the women who knit red
caps for her children and others. Similarly, in Denmark, women knit
red-white-and blue caps (colors of the Allies) for the very same reason.

  > The result was that whenever Norwegians and Danes left their homes -- to
go to the store, to work, etc, they could see that THE MAJORITY opposed what
was going on in their country. As you know, both countries organized
effective Resistance efforts and changed history -- everything that happened
began simply by wearing red! (or the colors of the Allies, in Denmark).

  > I believe, as many of us do, that at the very heart of our democracy is
our right to oppose certain policies of our government. Increasingly, our
government is redefining "freedom" in ways that make too many Americans
perceive that it is risky to oppose its policies -- and in particular,
current inroads about individual freedoms and policies in the U.S. and
abroad.

  > However, many of us DO oppose what our government is doing to individual
rights -- and I have an idea that will allow all of us to recognize each
other very easily.

  > SO... I have been thinking that it's time to take action in a way that
is effective and easy for all of us to do: Just wear red every Friday
between now and election day.

  > Wear a little or a lot -- just be sure that when you leave your house to
go about your day -- to work, to school, to the store, to the gas station,
wherever you go in your daily routine -- that everyone who sees you will see
that you are wearing red because you believe in freedom and you don't agree
with our current administration's policies at home or abroad. I'm certain
that we'll see lots of us wearing red for freedom -- because WE ARE THE
MAJORITY. We just need a way to show each other who we are! Between now and
election day, ask everyone you know to wear red for "Freedom Fridays".

  > I have already spread the word to friends and have had a very
enthusiastic response. This email has been forwarded around the country by
many who receive it - feel free to send it on to your friends and
co-workers.

  > --Nadia Jensen



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