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Article in the book Sami school history 1. Davvi Girji 2005.

Marit Aubert:

Memories from Sirma school 1950-53

English translation: Ane Helga Lykka

Marit Aubert, Drammen 2003
(Photo: Svein Lund)

Marit and Bill (William) Aubert were teachers at Sirma school in the period 1950-53. During this time they were the only teachers at this school. They were both born in 1927, Marit Aubert, born Strømme, in Lyngør in Aust-Agder, and William Dorenfeldt Aubert in Oslo. They both attended the teachers college in Oslo, where Marit completed the education for home economics before they both headed north in 1950.

After the time in Sirma they moved to Drammen. They both did further education, and attained sixth form teacher competence with time. She worked in the elementary school and he worked in the gymnasium. William Aubert died in 1985, but Marit Aubert is still living in Drammen. After retiring she has been very interested in school history, and has been involved in the work with The Norwegian School History Collections in Drammen.

While being in Sirma both of them frequently wrote to their family down south, and a great number of these letters have been preserved. They also shot a great amount of photographs, both from the school and elsewhere in the village. They were probably the only ones who had a photo camera in Sirma at the time, these photographs are thus quite unique. In 1996, at the request of old pupils, Marit Aubert wrote down memories from the 1950s. Theese were collected into a binder by previous principal Toralv Pedersen. We have been given the permission to recite some extracts.

The road to Sirma

What made two southerners come to Sirma? To give a brief answer, it has to be in only one word, namely coincidences. Bill was serving in the Royal Guards the autumn 1949. To be close by I applied for a post in Stabekk, where I met a teacher who had been teaching at the boarding school in Polmak for 7 years. It was Kari Knudsen, or Storkari (Big Kari), as she was called. After a while she figured out that Bill and I should apply for Sirma. The first time we heard the word Sirma, we did not even know where it was. We were curious, and Kari had to tell us more about it. She recounted about the river as means of transport, the mountains surrounding Sirma as a great terrain for hiking, shortage of teachers and pleasant children.

Early in 1950 Bill called the chairman of the school board to enquire about the opportunities for posts for two teachers at the boarding school in Sirma. It was District Sheriff Jann Olsen who was the chairman this period. The opportunities for employment were very good, and in spring Polmak advertised. In Sirma there was a "furnished apartment with connected water". In as much as we did not own one single piece of furniture, the furnished apartment was very tempting to us. It did not state anything about the quality of the furniture, nor that the connected water could freeze in October not to return until July.

Both of us applied for the positions, and sent both certificates and references. When the summer holiday started to draw close, and we still had not heard anything, Bill called north. He was actually a bit worried that we might not get the positions. District Sheriff Olsen let out a real guffaw. Of course we were hired! We were the only qualified teachers who had applied at all. We would receive a written confirmation. Up until then Sirma had never had permanent employed teachers with education.

We left Drammen 30th of July 1950. Teachers who went to Finmark in those days were entitled to compensation for moving. Bill and I did not represent an expense in that sense. We owned a fishing rod, a camera and a small radio. Bill belonged to the upper class and had two duvet covers and two sheets. I had one duvet cover myself, life in the bedsit had put an end to the rest. In addition we had some clothes. Nothing to write home about. Textiles were still on ration cards. We had heaps of clothing ration cards, but they were not of much use, as the shops rarely had exactly the goods we needed. We carried the entire moving load in two backpacks and our own hands.

We travelled by train over Oslo to Stockholm. We stopped there for two days before continuing by train to Narvik. From there we went to Tromsø by bus, and from Tromsø we travelled with Hurtigruten to Vadsø. The journey took us five days, and it was an adventure from the beginning until the end. Saturday 5th  of August we got off the bus in Skipagurra and walked down towards the riverbank. We met two salmon anglers there. They told us that the post boat for Sirma had left north the day before. They did not know when the next would leave. Our wealth at the time were two crumpled 10 banknotes. What on earth were we to do? We sat there for a long time, both of us were both tired and hungry, and found it more wisely to shut up. Eventually a boat came up the river. It drove close to where we sat. All of a sudden Bill cried: "Are you going to Polmak?" "Yes", was the reply. "Will you bring us for 20 kroner and let us off at the boarding school?". They agreed, and we got on board. ... This is how Bill described the trip in a letter home: "It was a monster of a boat measuring 1 x 10 m. We were seven people on board plus a dog, two bikes and luggage. But when the motor started it moved. Faster than Hurtigruta, in a cloud of water spray, we headed upwards to Polmak. I am convinced that to travel by riverboat up Tana must be one of the wonders of the world".

We walked to the boarding school where we were welcomed by teacher Hjelmbrekke. Soon we were seated at the table and thereafter we fell asleep on two matresses in a classroom. After breakfast the following day Hjelmbrekke drove us to Båteng. He called Isak Hansen who came with his truck. We borrowed money to pay for the lift and the riverboat from Bildan, and soon we stood outside Inga's house. Yes, we would get a lift. Her husband was not at home, so she would take us herself.

The river was low this summer, so Bill and Inga had to wade out in the river to loosen the boat. Before we left, Inga had called Sirma and told that the two new teachers were on their way. As a result we were met by a whole lot of people on the riverbank.

The trip up was lovely, and I was filled with impressions as we stepped ashore. I shook many hands, but the only one I remember concretely is Nils Varsi. He came with a chest containing the contents of the cash box and the keys. They helped us find our way, and soon we stood outside the barracks where we were to live. ....

Barracks with draught

The barracks was probably built in a hurry. If we laid down on the floor, we could look outside. The first winter a lot of ice were formed on the floor inside the barracks. For that reason I had a couple of involuntary slides. In one of the rooms, in the "living room department" we had a nice desk, a chair and a bookshelf. It became "the office". In the other room there were two armchairs with string covers. Anna, the house keeper in the boarding school, told us that they had been sent from lotter [1] in Moss just after the war. There was a rectangular coffee table and bedboards which someone had hammered four legs on. There was not more, but we were delighted. ...

Compared to today's standards the residence was beyond all criticism. However, we felt comfortable in the barracks. Looking back I sense the feeling of freedom I had. It was not necessary to lock the door. We did not have any insurances. The objects did not own us as they do today. Still - we did not miss anything. ...

Marit Aubert with the first grade.
(Photo: Bill Aubert)

Frightened first-graders

It was very exciting when the pupils came the 24th of August and were installed in the school. Both from the north and from the south they were transported in riverboats. Everyone had brought luggage, some carried small wooden chests, other had their things in paper-bags, it was before the era of the plastic bags. The 2. and 3. graders ran boldly into the school building. They knew where they were going. The boys to the big hall on the second floor, the same entrance as the classroom. The girls had the main entrance, straight ahead one went in to a dining room and a living room, and walking up the stairs one walked in to two bedrooms.

The new first-graders looked very frightened. The ones who had siblings to hold on to, clung to them. A few did not know anybody, and it was good to have Anna there who spoke Sami. All the beds were ready and had clean bed linen. When each and all had found a bed, they came down to eat. Afterwards they all went out to play or visit relatives in Sirma. After the evening meal the first day, the children had to start to get ready for the night. Lukewarm water had been poured into the water mugs and the pupils had been brought a glass or a cup for the toothbrush. Not all of the children had a toothbrush for their first encounter with the school, but Anna had a toothbrushes in stock and handed them out. The small ones were tired after the arrival, and fell asleep fast. Bill and I waited a while to go upstairs to wish the children goodnight. On my first goodnight-round I got to see that the ones who where far away from home for the first time, had crawled up into the beds of the older children. Bill experienced the same thing. If they had fallen asleep we would lift them carefully back into their own beds. If not, we would let them stay, and Anna would move them back in their beds when she did her round before going to bed. It was important to make them used to fall asleep separately, after time they would discover that it was not dangerous after all. 

It was not easy to take pictures inside before one started to use flash, so this picture from 4-5. grade is one of very few which was taken inside at Sirma school at that time.
(Photo: Marit and Bill Aubert)

Life in the boarding school

The rhythm of the day in the boarding school was the same both for the small children (1rst, 2nd and 3rd grade) and for the older ones (4th, 5th, 6th, 7th grade). The pupils were woken up by the house maids around 7 in the morning. (Anna had two maids every year, and when we were in Sirma, these two came from Nesseby.) During the polar night most of them wanted to sleep longer, but there was never much silence for that. We always had some early morning birds who would make sure everyone got out of their beds. During the winter-months the dressing would take more time than in the rest of the year. All the fur-shoes had to be filled with grass, and it had to be done according to the regulations. Not all of the children were good at this, and the younger ones had to seek help from the older children. The breakfast table was set at 8 o'clock. The small dining hall was completely filled when everybody was in their place. The table was set for Anna and the teachers in the kitchen. The door between the two rooms was kept open, so we were able to see what was going on. 

Housekeeper Anna and the girls who were working in Sirma boarding school.
(Photo: Marit and Bill Aubert)

We rarely had to say anything. The food tasted good, and the pupils ate nicely. Before each meal everyone stood up and sang the blessing. The housekeepers had always made ready sandwiches on the plates. After the meal we had about 10 minutes left before the school were to start.

At this point some pupils ran to the bedroom to make the bed, some tidied, others went out to play and others again payed a visit to the outside lavatory. I remember one of our students who refused completely to go to the toilet. He simply sat down in the schoolyard. Anna had to explain to him that when we were so many people in one place, we needed to follow different rules than the ones he followed when he was in the mountains. The boy looked at Anna, thereafter proclaimed that he did not want to go to the toilet. "But why not?" Anna asked. "No, it smells so bad in there", the little guy replied. Anna was amused when telling us this story.

The teaching started at 08.30. As in the regular Norwegian school we had three lessons with 10 minutes breaks in between. The lunch break was at 11 o'clock. Normally breakfast and lunch consisted of bread, spread and milk, but now and then hot chocolate was served. After the meals there was a slice of Swedish turnip or a piece of carrot. At 11.30 three more lessons started. Dinner was served at 14.30. After dinner the pupils had some chores in turns. Some had to get milk, others had to go to Tapio to get goods, some cleaned off the dinner table, others dried off the cups and put the service away. These small chores were popular, and one would always get something once the job was done. And when the rain and cold started, it was always comfortable to be able to spend some more time in the kitchen area.

Otherwise the time before doing homework was spent differently. Some of the pupils went to their relatives in Sirma, others played outdoors, meanwhile others again played in the classroom. Everyone were gathered at 16 o'clock. The pupils who lived in Sirma had gone home by that time, so we would manage with one classroom for doing homework. When our daughter Anne Marie was born 26th of December 1950, Bill took on this part of the job on a regular basis. The intention of being present was two-sided: 
1. To ensure peace and quiet for working, and
2. To offer help

As the children felt their homework were done, they went outside. However it was remarkable how many who continued working up until the supper at 18.00. It was not all imposed work, but they read more and drew. Supper changed between sandwiches and porridge twice a week. ...

Bill and I started to read for the pupils in the evening to make them calm down. We got hold of a lot of children's books from the south, many of wich were classics we knew from our own childhood, but we also bought newer literature and tried to make a school library. The pupils who did not understand what we read, fell asleep rather quickly, while others listened intensively. In the end most of their eyes were closed, we could say goodnight and tip-toe out. 

The children's dormitories probably would not have been approved today, neither in terms of sanitary nor security reasons. At the time we did not think about square metres pro pupil or allergenic substances, but security was a matter that occupied us a lot. We had to keep fire in the oven for many months a year. The firewood was piled in the dormitories. The pupils had to put the grass for their fur-shoes close to the oven to make it dry for the next day. How easily it could have caught fire! It was strictly forbidden to play with the fire, but we never dared to trust our pupils to obey this rule. When 12 little boys are playing at their highest intensity before bedtime nobody knows what could happen. ... 

The maids' regular task was to put firewood in the ovens. The dormitory heated quickly, but the barracks was a different matter. Up there the ink pots froze every night in some periods, and we had to make them defrost on the oven. When the cold was at it's worst, the pupils had to wear mittens in class. Every now and then we had to get up to flail our arms, only in the late morning it actually became comfortable to stay in the classroom. The first winter was the worst. In the summer of 1951 the classroom in the barracks was renovated and isolated. We chose a bright yellow colour for the walls and we got curtains, and I found that the room became pleasant with time.

On an empty stomach....

Being a house keeper in a boarding school was not an easy job. It was her responsibility that we would have enough food in the house at any given time, that the bed linen were cleaned and to oversee that each and all of the rooms were kept clean. She also took care of all the maintenance of the bed linen, towels and clothes for the pupils. Even in the 1950s the circumstances were difficult for many families along the Tana river, and yard goods and clothes were difficult to get hold of. Anna bought flannel from Finland, and from these rolls she sewed shirts and pants for the pupils. When we took a bath on Fridays, the pupils who needed it were allowed to use these clothes. The little ones called the garments "state-pants" and "state-shirts". It was good for them to change into clean clothes after a whole week. ... 

Anna bought the winter-supplies of food in big quantas. The daily food supplies were bought in Taipo, which got a rich selection of goods with time. Flour, sugar, grain, etc were bought in sacks from a wholesale dealer in Vadsø, potatoes and vegetables came from Tromsø, she ordered codfish and halibut from Varangerbotn, salmon, sheep and reindeer meat were bought in Sirma. She bought cordial and jam in 5-litre buckets, and cloudberries were picked on the marshes beyond Sirma.

Best, Rivgomáret

When the students were going home, it was normally with horse in the wintertime and by riverboat in the summer.
(Photo: Marit and Bill Aubert)

Extracts from letters home

 Letters from Bill:

Sirma, 9th of August 1950.
Dear father and mother.

Well, here we are, finally. It is warm and beautiful outside, but it is pleasant to relax a little bit inside. We arrived here monday 7th of August at about 11 o'clock in the morning, so now I am starting to get an overview of what needs to be done. Some painting in- and outside would not be a bad idea. The bucket and the brush are ready, so I suppose we will get things going soon.

The school in itself is a big building, almost timbered and panelled on the outside, with the dormitories and one bedroom for the staff situated on the second floor. In the attic there is also a room furnished for one person. Downstairs there is a kitchen, dining room, living room and the classroom. The basement of 4x4 m look good. We have most of one of the long sides of the barracks. ...

We use one separated room as bedroom. It seems quite new, panelled. I am going to oil the floor there today. Then there are two connected rooms without a door in between, about 4x3 and 3x3. The ovens looks good, and there is a foundation wall under the house. The household contents are also acceptable. The barrack is 15 m long and 7,8 m wide. Across the hallway we have a bedroom, two rooms for washing and sauna, and in the end of the hallway there is the classroom that Marit will have.  

We hope to get started the 28th of August, but time will show. As I assumed, we will have about 50 children in total, of which about 40 will be living in the dormitories. From autumn on the lower primary school, first and second division will come for 7 weeks, then Marit will have the newcomers and I the 2. and 3. grade. Afterwards the upper primary school will come and stay their 20 weeks, and after easter the lower primary school will return the second time. A quite odd arrangement, but reportedly so to allow the older children to help out at home in the summertime. It seems that we will have some teaching aids, I talked with the Chief Education Officer today. Among other things we should get nice new woodwork equipment, so in spring we can get started teaching woodwork.  ...

Friday evening Anna, who is a great woman, arrived. She also brought one of the maids, so now Marit and I have very nice days. The barrack has got a coat of red paint, and the rooms start to be organized. One of the days we went strolling in the mountains, it was magnificent colours, but rather cold. It could be that the fair weather we have had a lot of is about to finish. ...  

The next letter is dated 25th of August.

Thank you for your letter. It is nice to get post, but none of us feel the solitude the least heavy. Today we slowly began school. But, the pupils arrive slowly but surely, and we will not have everybody here before Wednesday. Marit's class is by now counting 6 pupils, and my 2. and 3. grade are 17. The children seem pleasant, but we do not understand much of one another. Otherwise everything is ready for them by now. 18 of them will live in the dormitory this round. --- 

17th of September:

So, we have been running the school for 14 days already. The children are more or less as in the south, we think, and the ones we have now are nice and pleasant. But - there is no doubt that the children should have learned Sami in the school, at least for the first three years.

It is rather sad when you think about that only one of ten pupils find any pleasure in listening to the fairytales we read for them. It is just as difficult with religion as with fairytales. Most of the time we work with Norwegian and Math, but 5 hours a day is a lot for the little ones, they get disheartened by the end of the day, restless too. Most of them are normal when it comes to intelligence, but we also have several who are very gifted, moreover a couple of weak ones, who need more help than the others.

6th of October:

In school we are progressing rather slowly, but at least there is progress. Poor children who do not have teachers who speak their own language. It is a crime against them. As much as Marit and I would like to, we are not able to offer our students proper teaching. 

25th of October:

We have now entered the last week with the little ones. Sadly they have not learned much. The language is the barrier. We did not learn much Sami ourselves either, we somehow fall between two stools when we have to teach the children Norwegian. Next year a Sami ABC will be published, it will be exciting, maybe we can learn also together with the students. Yesterday "Big Pedar" brought me fur-shoes. It was difficult to get hold of this good in size 46, but luckily Pedar has just as big feet as me, so I got to buy a first-rate pair of fur-shoes which originally was sown for him. They look marvellous with read and yellow bonds and tassels, but the footprints I leave most of all resembles bear-paws.

5th of November:

The cold has arrived now, 19 degrees below zero today. We are still doing very well. Friday I acted as a priest. Yes, really, since I baptised a small boy after all the rules of the psalm book. Pavel Varsi had his 7th boy, and as just was, he was named Håkon. ....

More on Sami language

I have quoted some letteres which expresses our frustration of not being able to offer adequate teaching due to language problems.
The cause for the following article written by Bill was a clip from one of the newspapers in the capital that his mother sent us. I do not have the clip, but I gather from Bill's contribution that someone had written something about Sami teaching in the lower secondary school in Karasjok. He - the writer  - has  apparently written that Sami language will perish, and that the school is moving in the right direction with it's norwegianization.
Today the view on these things is completely different compared to what it was in the 1950's. I find that Bill shows he was ahead of his time in regard of the Sami-politics.

Extracts from Bill's letters from Finnmark 6th of September 1952.

"I for my part do not agree with the contribution in the newspaper. The Sami Finmark has still not departed this life, although "the culture" is not in high regard in these times. Forasmuch as several thousand (also along the coast, in Nesseby for instance) use Sami as their daily language, I can not understand that offering a little bit of Sami teaching in the lower secondary school in Karasjok could make any damage. It is fairly sure that Sami will be spoken for at least 100 more years — why not learn the language better than they do at home? Sami is not actually a primitive language. One can express anything one would wish to in this language, thus I do not think it will be extinct so appallingly soon.

Of course the lower secondary school in Karasjok means that there will be a divide between Norwegians and Sami. That it should bring about a down-valuing of the Sami people I can not understand as anything but turning the matters upside down. It seems obvious to me that a people who is not managing anything with its' own language or craft, etc, will be down valued to a greater extent. Forasmuch as reindeer husbandry will continue in Finnmark, the crafts connected to it will continue to be in use as well. 

Many of the clothes and tools which have been used and developed through centuries, will obviously continue to be the best.  

The article also mentioned that in the primary school one is heading in the right direction — where Norwegians and Sami are mixed, and only their capabilities influence their stand. From what I gather this also needs to be completely wrong. In a class where Norwegian is the language of teaching, maybe even with a teacher who does not know Sami, it is evident that even poorly gifted Norwegian speaking children have a great head start compared to the Sami speaking. In my opinion this situation should be splendidly suited to daunt the Sami children, at least for the first three years, and they will most probably determine a lot for the years ahead as well. A rule that is a foundation stone in anything that has to do with teaching: one shall move from the known to the unknown, etc -is completely ignored when it comes to the Sami children. They should start with the most difficult: a foreign language. A specific curriculum for the bilingual districts is non-existent, and is of course a very complicated story. A beginning have been made through the ABC and the Sami course of study in the teachers college in Tromsø, and eventually more steps need to be made in the same direction. 

Everyone up here wish to achieve a Norwegian standard of living. This is not possible until roads are built here, etc, and until they have equal opportunities for education like others. I believe it would have a greater impact for the norwegianness up here with steps in this direction, in stead of forcing a norwegianization through the school, while the Sami are still a social underclass. The school time needs to be extended for the Sami children, at least with a couple of years, and in that time they need to learn to express themselves both in Sami and Norwegian. I believe it is impossible for one who is not able to express his thoughts in his own language to learn a foreign language which is not used on a daily basis.

Well - this nearly turned into a treatise, but I have been thinking quite a lot about these matters, so when you ask my opinion you need to take it in its entire length."


[1] "Lotter" are women voluntarily working for the armed forces, doing mainly medical and kitchen work.


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