Nerbyen – A Bluff in History
Friday
September 12
18:00
Meeting point: The entrance to Olavshallen from Krambugata on the corner of Bakeriet hotel
NOK 290
Between Olav Tryggvasons gate and Fjordgata.
Between Kjøpmannsgata and Søndre gate.
There is Nerbyen.
Between 1870 and 1940, this was Norway's only Jewish quarter.
And then it was gone.
Like a hitchhiker.

Photographer: Åsmund Flaten
There remains only a single physical reminder of the flourishing Jewish life in Nerbyen: a tiny, listed door sign with the name David Isaksen.
We know very well why this life suddenly ended.
But what was it like? Why did they come here? Why not to Bergen or to Sweden? What did they do? What did they believe in? What did they live on?
The performance attempts to answer these questions. It is not about how it ended, but how it began and what it was like.
Jews are enormously concerned with their culture, their history, and their dead. Why?
Perhaps because their history is characterized by such hitchhiking. They establish themselves somewhere and then have to leave again without leaving any trace. The Norwegian Jews came mostly from the Shtetls (small villages) in Poland, the Baltics and Russia. Like Nerbyen, these communities were also hitchhikers in history. There are almost no traces of them or their descendants in the areas that were abandoned by tens of millions of Jews about 100 years ago.
But fortunately there are many descendants of Trondheim's historical Blaff. And we have spoken to these people to try to understand what it was like when their great-grandparents lived in Nerbyen. It has been a real treat to delve into it, and we hope the performance conveys something of the life we have gained an insight into. Through stories, music, religion, culture, food, drink, family love, business life, enterprise and most of all through a generous and unassuming humor.
A group of professional theatre workers with roots in the Rhubarb Theatre have created this performance for the Trondheim Jewish Cultural Festival. And it is of course performed on historical grounds.
Where it happened.
In the nearby town.
Directing
Øyvind Brandtzæg
Costume design and set design
Jenny Hilmo Teig
Composition/rehearsal of music
Øyvind Jo Heimdal Oak
Musicians
Ola Lindseth, violin
Sunniva Hovde, accordion
Technical/supervisor
Hilde Knedal Andersen
Producer
Rita Abrahamsen
Actors
Bendik Sjømæling Nordgaard
Wild Soyland
Madeleine Brandtzæg Nilsen
Cengiz Magnus Sicakkan Nereid
The production is supported by
Ministry of Culture and Equality
The Arts Council
Directorate of Culture
Free Speech
Fund for performing artists
Trøndelag County Municipality
Trondheim Municipality
Jewish Cultural Festival Trondheim
