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Welcome to the Portal to Norway or otherwise known as PTN. PTN's primary ambition is to build a gateway of information for foreigners and Norwegians around the world helping one another build a life in Norway. This group however does not focus solely on a single subject matter, rather identifies many points of interest and resources that are considered necessary when preparing a move or travel to Norway. Norway is a beautiful country, with a relatively small population, however it can also be challenging to begin a life in a new country. This group will allow its members to interact with one another, providing information and recourses to support you in your relocation to Norway. Please visit the Yahoo Group, associated with this website. There you will be able to chat and correspond with fellow members.

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 17th of May is Norway's Independence. Every year throughout Norway, the citizens proudly march down the streets in their traditional folk costumes, the Bund, while bands play loudly the national anthem and organizations strut with their heads held high.

Why march with pride?:

The Story of Norway's Independence

The Norwegian government, dominated by ministers with liberal politics, became one of the most advanced in Europe in matters such as unemployment insurance benefits, old-age pensions, and liberal laws concerning divorce and illegitimacy. In 1913 Norwegian women were given the right to vote in all national elections.

After the beginning of World War I in 1914 the sovereigns of Sweden, Norway, and Denmark agreed to maintain the neutrality of the Scandinavian countries and to cooperate for their mutual interest. The policy of neutrality and friendship thus established continued to be the joint policy of all three nations after the war ended. The world economic depression that began in 1929 affected Norway considerably because of its dependence on commerce. The Labor party was elected to power in 1935 and continued the policies of moderation and political liberalism that had dominated Norwegian politics since 1905.

Norway maintained its traditional neutrality when World War II began in 1939. Despite sympathy for Finland during the Russo-Finnish phase of the conflict, Norway rejected an Anglo-French demand for transit of troops to aid Finland. German maritime warfare along the Norwegian coast, however, made neutrality increasingly difficult. On April 8, 1940, Great Britain and France announced that they had mined Norwegian territorial waters to prevent their use by German supply ships. The next day German forces invaded Norway.

Assisted by the Nasjonal Samling (National Union) party and disloyal Norwegian army officers, the Germans attacked all important ports. Vidkun Quisling, head of the Nasjonal Samling, proclaimed himself head of the Norwegian government. King Håkon and his cabinet, after an unsuccessful attempt at resistance, withdrew to Great Britain in June. For five years thereafter, London was the seat of the Norwegian government-in-exile. Political leaders in Norway refused to cooperate in any way with Josef Terboven (1898–1945), the German commissioner. In September Terboven dissolved all political parties except the Nasjonal Samling, set up a so-called National Council composed of the party members and other German sympathizers, and announced the abolition of the monarchy and the Storting. These and other still more repressive measures of the Germans and their puppet government, headed by Quisling, were met with mass resistance by the Norwegian people. Quisling proclaimed martial law in September 1941 because of large-scale sabotage and espionage on behalf of the Allies.

The leaders of the Resistance in Norway cooperated closely with the government-in-exile in London, preparing for eventual liberation. The German forces in Norway finally surrendered on May 8, 1945, and King Håkon returned to Norway in June. To punish traitors, the death penalty, abolished in 1876, was restored. Quisling, along with some 25 other Norwegians, was tried and executed for treason.

Copied from: http://www.historychannel.com/thcsearch/thc_resourcedetail.do?encyc_id=217874

 

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