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ROCK

Pensioners to recruit ageing Swedish rockers

The Swedish Pensioners Association (Pensionärernas riksorganisation - PRO) wants to cast off its "stuffy" image at the Sweden Rock festival, in a recruitment bid to set up a rock music subgroup of new members.

Pensioners to recruit ageing Swedish rockers

“We want to be in tune with the times,” local coordinator Ann-Kristin Erlandsson told The Local.

The pensioner admitted that she herself was not a rock chick, instead preferring the Beatles, but that she may dust off an old leather jacket and rip a hole in her stockings to fit in.

Rock heavy-weights such as Kiss and Europe will lead an all-star lineup of bands, including Survivor and Skid Row.

Erlandsson and 30 colleagues, meanwhile, will take turns trying to recruit new members at the four-day festival in Norje, in the southern Swedish county of Blekinge. Erlandsson said that a survey at her organization’s national office showed that almost half of the rock festival goers were aged 55 or above.

Sweden Rocks festival organizer Martin Forssman told the TT news agency that the age spread was a bit wider than that, with an average age of 37, but that they were expecting rock enthusiasts in their sixties to also attend the June 5th-8th event.

“But the PRO crew are more than welcome.”

Erlandsson remained upbeat about the recruitment drive.

“We have to reach out to people born in the 1940s who are about to retire,” she said.

“I’d be delighted if people formed a “PRO Rock” group within our organization,” she said, adding that it was time to dust off their stuffy image.

“What you hear is that PRO, all they do is drink coffee and eat biscuits,” Erlandsson said, adding that there would neither be coffee nor biscuits at the stand they have been allocated at one of the entrances to the festival area.

“We’ll grab them as they go in. I want the end result to be a PRO rock association,” she told The Local.

“That’s our goal, and you’ve got to have a goal in life.”

Ann Törnkvist

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PENSIONERS

Spain’s vaccinated care home residents rejoice on first trip out in a year

Recently vaccinated against coronavirus, a group of Spanish pensioners headed to a theatre in central Madrid on Wednesday on their first trip out in nearly a year.

Spain's vaccinated care home residents rejoice on first trip out in a year
Photos: AFP

Ahead of the outing, 98-year-old Milagro Fernandez painted her nails, curled her hair and pulled on a fur coat over her lace blouse.

As she enters the lobby of the nursing home where she lives, the staff break into applause: it's a huge moment for this tiny elderly lady who caught Covid last spring but recovered.

Heading out the door, she boards a minibus with three other residents: 87-year-old Antonio Alonso, Concha Martinez, 90, and Jose Tellez who is 92.

It's a very big day for them as they head off for the bustling heart of Madrid to a theatre on Gran Via, the city's busiest shopping street.

“Shall we have something to eat afterwards?” wonders Tellez, who like all of them is struggling to hide his excitement.

It's been an entire year since they last left the retirement home where they live and were able to walk the city's busy streets.

“I'm almost more excited than them!” grins Laura Egea who runs the home and would have loved to have gone with them.

When the virus first hit last spring, it ravaged this home of 180 residents, claiming “dozens” of lives, says Egea, her eyes welling up at the unspeakable memories.

In early December, a government report estimated that between 47 and 50 percent of deaths in the first wave of the pandemic occurred in elderly care homes.

Spain has so far counted more than 68,000 deaths and more than 1.3 million cases.

Time to have fun

Inside the minibus, they chatter on excitedly with one pointing out her former hair salon, another talking about restaurants while a third is directing the driver. “Turn left here, it's much better.”

In front of the EDP theatre on Gran Via, dozens of other buses have parked with their silver-haired passengers slowly getting out.

In the lobby, there is a sea of zimmer frames. In the auditorium many put their walking sticks under seats.

Today is a special day with the theatre inviting 150 vaccinated pensioners from seven Madrid care homes along with 50 carers, who have also been immunised, to see a one-man show by the actor Santi Rodriguez.

But the real show is not on the stage — it's the pensioners themselves, with a gaggle of reporters on hand to witness this first trip out for the newly-vaccinated.

For these elderly theatre-goers symbolise the return to normality that everyone hopes the vaccine will bring — even if they are still wearing masks and sitting at a distance from each other.

“I missed seeing so many people together, there are just so many of us,” says Conchita Martinez.

Nearby sits Milagro Fernandez in her red velvet seat, all smiles as the curtain goes up.

'Time to enjoy ourselves again'

Half an hour of jokes and laughter brighten up this chilly February morning nearly a year after the pandemic took hold in Spain.

When the show is over, everyone dashes to the loo with Antonio Alonso grumbling about the queue.

“It has been such a long time, but little-by-little we're going to start enjoying things again,” says Fernandez, her eyes twinkling.

Clotilde Frias, who runs events at the home and is the only staffer to go with them, says the relief at being able to go out is immense.

“The excitement has been the biggest thing. I think I was the most excited — along with Milagro!” she smiles.

“Truth is, we're very happy to have been able to go out. After a year and 10 days, it's about time!”

As well as receiving the vaccine, going out has given them “a healthy dose of vitality, enthusiasm and tremendous optimism,” she adds, saying this first trip out is only the beginning.

“We'll do it again and do whatever they want: go out, eat and have fun!”

So far, some 1.2 million people have been vaccinated in Spain since the start of the immunisation campaign which began just after Christmas with care home residents first in line along with their carers.

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