Lily Joanna Esther Cecelia Monson-Gimpl is the 4-year-old embodiment of her family's love of Swedish heritage, with grandmas and great-grandmas reflected in her elongated name. But she introduced herself to Sweden's Queen Silvia simply by saying, "My name is Lily Jo."
She presented the queen with flowers as she and King Carl XVI Gustav entered the American Swedish Institute on Thursday afternoon for the first stop of a three-day visit to Minnesota, their first since 2002.
"Lily is the youngest life member of the Swedish Institute," said her bursting-with-pride grandfather, David Monson of North Oaks. "She became a life member when she was 40 hours old, joining her seven cousins."
Lily, the daughter of Rob and Jennifer Monson-Gimpl of Falcon Heights, got some help from grandpa when the bouquet proved rather massive for a 4-year-old to hold for too long as everyone waited for their majesties. "She's right," he said with a surprised look as he hefted the spray of fall-colored blooms. "It is heavy."
Sweden's royalty then toured the new Nelson Cultural Center, with ASI president Bruce Karstadt and architect Tim Carl of the Minneapolis firm HGA explaining the sustainable values that went into its design. Behind them stood the fiberglass goat that Karlstadt installed after enough good-natured jokes about the center's roof of grasses and sedum.
Then it was down the staircase, with its traditional Swedish leather-wrapped handrail, to the craft room where more than a dozen youngsters were constructing en takkrona, or "ceiling crown."
Or close enough, anyway. "There really isn't a good English translation for the word," said Susan Brower, whose son, Julian Brower-Snelson had strung together lengths of straws and leaf shapes then attached them to a small wreath of woven twigs. His efforts merited a brief audience with the king.
"He asked me where I was going to hang it," Julian said. "I told him, 'In my room.'"