February Blog
We had not planned it that way, but this month’s Swedish Press has turned into somewhat of a theme issue on successful immigrants in Sweden. It started with an interview with Somali-born Abbe Ibrahim who was the king of Stockholm nightlife as the head of the trendy Cafe Opera night club. An inspiring conversation with him (most of which you can read on page 20) led to an in-depth research and article about the richest or most successful immigrants in Sweden (on page 17) and what they have done to achieve that.
And then as an example we take a look at what one refugee from Lebanon has achieved at Ur&Penn (on page 23), the company that once propelled the Persson family of H&M fame to becoming one of Sweden's absolutely richest families.
My interest in the fate of immigrants was given a further boost by the Last Word in the November issue entitled "My grandfather was an economic refugee" (that you can read in English on the SweMail site http://members.shaw.ca/swemail). In the article Swedish journalist Annika Lindquist visited the house in Manhattan where her grandfather had lived as an immigrant to the United States. She went on to reflect on why so many Swedes, who were proud of the emigrants in their families, were so negative to immigrants to their country.
We have a similar phenomenom in North America, where we are all basically immigrants, but always tend to think of those that come after us as "the immigrant problem". Just like Swedes talk condescendingly about "juggar" (people from ex Yugo-slavia) and Somalis, North Americans talk about Mexicans and Muslims.
There seems to be somewhat of a discrepancy between emigration having a positive connotation but not immigration. They are just the different sides of the same coin.
At a time when most Swedish immigrants in North America are so well established that newer arrivals just think of themselves as ‘global citizens’, we also tend to forget how looked down upon our ancestors were over here when the great wave of Swedish emigration descended on the continent. We were the "dumb Swedes" then. That should perhaps make us more understanding of the struggle of those who came after us.
Have a really nice February
Anders
PS. If you are reading the electronic issue of Swedish Press the link to the LastWord article refrenced above is just a click away. That is one of the great advantages of the less expensive all-color electronic edition of Swedish Press.



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