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    7 commenti

    1. Die_Steiner on

      My buddy has said that some of these Finnish-Americans wear a Sami folk dress during cultural celebrations, and this video proved to me he wasn’t kidding 😀

      The Maypole confused me too until i remembered us Swedish-speakers also raise them sometimes.

    2. The_AmazingCapybara on

      I bet elementary schools in Hancock have more Finnish surnames amongst their pupils than average elementary school in East Helsinki.

    3. maddog2271 on

      Growing up not too far from Hancock in Wisconsin, I can say I knew a lot of people from that area who still spoke Finnish at home even as late as the 1980’s. Far higher percentages than spoke German in any form in the area I grew up in. It wouldn’t have been a first language at that point, but we had a lot of Saari and Mackey (Mäki) and so on family names attend the university where I studied and most of them knew at least some Finnish, and several went on to do graduate programs in Finland. I won’t weigh in on the whole “capital of culture” thing but the Finnish roots are pretty strong in that area.

    4. EffableLemming on

      Interesting. I guess this is kinda how the Irish feel during St Patrick’s day anywhere in the US.

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