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Cwrs Cymraeg 2003 - Wrap-Up
Cymdeithas Madog
returned to Wisconsin in 2003 for "Cwrs Cymraeg Y Llynnoedd Mawr" ("The Great Lakes Welsh Course").
The 27th annual Cwrs Cymraeg Welsh language week was held July 20 to 27 on the campus of Carthage College in Kenosha,
Wisconsin.
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Cymdeithas Madog Presented
Cwrs Cymraeg Y Llynnoedd Mawr
Gorffennaf/July 21-28, 2003
Carthage College, Kenosha, WI
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A Great Course On A Great Lake
by Sarah Campbell
Sponsored by Cymdeithas Madog,
the 2003 week-long Cwrs Cymraeg (Welsh course) was primarily a time for all the participants to learn the Welsh
language, but we had plenty of cultural instruction as well as community fun. This year’s course, Cwrs Y Llynnoedd
Mawr (The Great Lakes Course), at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was organized, coordinated, and guided
to a great success primarily by one lone Wisconsin ranger, Dick Myers. With help from Leigha Schatzman, Dick planned
an exceptionally fine week with perfect weather and extraordinary views of the Great Lake Michigan. For his hospitality,
apparent imperturbability, and energetic warmth, we all thank Dick, and Leigha for her behind-the-scenes role!
The course had an unusually early
start on Sunday, July 20, with a grand celebration of Welsh music. At Carthage College’s Chapel, a lovely carillon
concert of Welsh hymns was followed by a Gymanfa Ganu (a Welsh singing festival) in conjunction with the Welsh
Gymanfa Ganu Association of Wisconsin. The carilloneur and organist for the Gymanfa was Steve Jensen of Milwaukee,
Rev. Joseph Corbin of Reedsburg, Wisconsin, directed the Gymanfa, and Mary Jane Jones Smyth was the soloist. Joe
Corbin, Mary Jane Jones Smyth, and Mary Davis, president of the Wisconsin GGA, were all students on the course.
Many other course participants arrived early to join in the singing and welcome from the Wisconsin group.
Another unusual aspect of the course
was the course t-shirt design. The t-shirt is a course tradition, and returning participants bring their shirts
from past courses, wearing them with pride during the week. Naturally, each design is special, but Leigha Schatzman
was instrumental in having an associate of Harley-Davidson design the shirt. The flare of Y Ddraig Goch (Red Dragon)
was dramatically rendered for the course held in Harley-Davidson land!
Who were we, the people who gathered
to spend a week living in college dormitories and eating cafeteria fare? North Americans of all sorts, old and
young, family groups, from every region of the United States and Canada as well, beginning learners to fluent speakers,
newcomers and returnees happy to greet old friends, but all sharing a fascination with all (or most) things Welsh.
Participants arrived at Carthage
College passing by fields of both cabbage and corn rather than the more numerous cornfields of last year’s Iowa
venue. But once at the school, we could walk along the shores of Lake Michigan. On the first evening, after the
chapel music and dinner, we gathered for a welcoming reception hosted by the Saint David’s Society of Racine and
Vicinity. As we mingled and greeted one another, the lead tutor, Mark Stonelake, introduced all the tutors, and
Ada Mae Lewis, president of the Cymdeithas Madog Board, introduced the board members. The evening ended with a
natural Welsh event, communal singing led by tutor Meredith Roberts.
Several participants received full
or partial scholarships thanks to the generosity of organizations such as the Welsh National Gymanfa Ganu Association
(WNGGA), the National Welsh American Foundation (NWAF), and a number of local Saint David’s Societies (the Racine
Society provided scholarships for six students this year). Cymdeithas Madog also awards scholarships from its Endowment
Fund, and private individuals provide support as well; for example, this year Canadian student Stephan Charbonneau
received the Ysgoloriaeth Y Ddeilen Goch (the Red Leaf) scholarship, which was offered by Pawl Birt, former President
of Cymdeithas Madog and Professor of Celtic Studies at the University of Ottawa, Canada.
During the week, the main task
for all of us was to learn to pronounce, speak, and read as much Welsh as possible. Classes ranged from two Level
1 groups for the beginners to advanced and fluent Welsh speakers at Level 6. The integrated curriculum allows for
an orderly progression from the basics of Welsh to more complex constructions and idioms of a living language.
Our most excellent tutors--three from Wales: lead tutor Mark Stonelake, Eleri Hughes, and Robin Campbell, and five
from North America: Meredith Roberts, Hefina Phillips, Marta Diaz, Kara Lewis, and Kevin Rottet—jumped into the
fray with enormous enthusiasm and energy. Each tutor not only taught morning and early afternoon classes; they
also led workshops and attended evening events.
To help the learners along, the
course also invites a bookseller to attend and sell Welsh dictionaries, learners’ kits, literature, accessories,
etc. This year, David Lloyd and his wife of Y Ddraig Goch came from Sacramento, California to provide these services
for the participants.
So what did we do when we weren’t
absorbed with learning the language? Lots of things. One is never bored at Cwrs Cymraeg! During the post- lunch
Dosbarthiadau ar y Cyd, or Plenary Sessions, we gathered to hear lectures on tracing Welsh ancestry by Charlotte
Olsen from the Mormon family history library; the genius of architect Frank Lloyd Wright with Craig Jacobsen from
Taliesin; medieval architecture in Wales with Barbara Stinson; and the work of the great Welsh-American composer,
Dr. Joseph Parry, with Welsh scholar, Dr. Dulais Rhys. All interesting topics to enrich our understanding of the
contributions of the Welsh and Welsh culture.
The late afternoon workshops followed
the afternoon classes and offered a change from the classroom attention. We could choose Robin Campbell’s folk
singing group, reading sessions for beginners and more advanced students, or even linguistics lessons with Marta
Diaz. Meredith Roberts orchestrated the music program, directing the course choir (with devoted members and wonderful
singers), leading evening sing-alongs, and rousing our early morning spirits with a few old favorites. Mark Stonelake
presided over the course paper, always an eagerly anticipated publication. This year’s course paper, Llais Y Llyn
(The Voice of the Lake), was another afternoon (and evening and late night) activity.
For Wednesday afternoon’s traditional
field trip, we toured the famous and stunning Johnson Wax Headquarters designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Afterwards,
we spent time visiting the museums, cat walk (oddly and colorfully imagined statues of cats throughout downtown),
and bookstores in Racine. Finally, we picnicked on the grassy Racine harbor and watched the sailboats tacking right
and left and busy birds swooping about looking for their dinner. A few of the Welsh tutors even joined in a rather
bizarre form of American football/rugby.
Another change of activities, but
not the pace, marked our evening events. The traditional Monday Twmpath Dawns, Welsh folk-dancing, is always a
rollicking ice breaker. The Quiz night is another popular attraction. This year we also saw the fascinating BBC
production of “The Story of Welsh” as well as a poignantly imagistic and sad Welsh film, Un Nos Ola Leuad (One
Moonlit Night). Finally we enjoyed the traditional banquet, entered the Course Eisteddfod, and engaged in the uproarious
antics and superb music and storytelling of the final night’s Noson Lawen or “Merry Evening.”
The Course Eisteddfod is a very
special event for Cwrs Cymraeg. It is a peculiarly Welsh celebration of literature and culture in which competitors
submit their writing in Welsh. For our Eisteddfod, three competitions are held, one for the lower levels (a postcard),
one for middle level learners (a journal), and one for the more advanced students. This year, the theme for the
highest level competitors was shipwrecks--an appropriate topic given the many famous shipwrecks that have occurred
off the coasts of Wales and on the Great Lakes. The tutors played the solemn role of the Druidic adjudicators and
announced the winners: Betty Cullingworth, Bill Roberts, and Kathleen Whitt who was chaired as she received the
druidic blessing and the small-scale, hand carved Eisteddfod chair to keep until next year’s competition. Congratulations
to all the Eisteddfod winners, and cheers for the many entrants!
We had even more hwyl (fun) at
Saturday night’s Noson Lawen, which was a wonderful evening of entertainment to round out the week of learning
and fun. Punctuated by some very bad jokes from emcee Mark Stonelake, the audience was treated to skits by fellow
classmates, an Arthurian folk story, a conceptual lesson on the distance between the solar system’s planets (in
English and Welsh), a crazy Cinderella story by bookshop keeper, David Lloyd, lovely musical interludes, folk songs,
and the performance of two songs by the course choir.
During the week, the Board of Directors
found time (during meals) to meet daily for their annual general meeting. During board elections, Norah Hogoboom,
Sam Little, and Sarah Campbell were re-elected for three-year terms. We welcome our new board member, Kara Lewis,
who also taught the Level 6 class. Our congratulations to our newly elected officers: Jenny Hubbard Young, president;
Sam Little, vice president; Ginny Grove, secretary; and Wayne Morrissey, treasurer. We especially want to thank
retiring president, Ada Mae Lewis, for all her hard work for and dedication to Cymdeithas Madog.
The week flies by, and, too soon,
we say farewell until next year. Kenosha was a gracious host city and even published a fine article by Jessica
Hansen about our activities in The Kenosha News.
As for next year, planning has
already begun for the course to be held in the lovely city of Ottawa, Ontario. Please join us there for another
rich and exhilarating adventure of Wales in North America.
Thanks to Wayne Morrissey, Dick
Myers, Sarah Stevenson, Andrew Welsh, and Jenny Hubbard Young for their reviews of this story.
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