Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: Networks of Solidarity and Resistance of Swedish-Afghan Youths on the Move in Europe
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background and Context
3. Literature Review
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. A Preliminary Note on Positionality and Ethics
4.2. Methods and Participants
“We feel responsible for these youngsters. We do not agree with the way the Swedish Government is handling them and we saw how these policies completely destroyed their lives. They were almost integrated in our communities, they learned the language, they were studying and working, helping their Swedish families (some of which were elders). They were active and contributing members of Swedish society before they were violently tossed out of the system. This is so wrong! (…) And so, I began to create close relationships, and in some cases I became an activist, I began to support with concrete actions, in their legal processes” (Thelma, in-depth interview, May 2020).
“A woman from Church asked me if I could host a boy, I., in exchange for his work in my park. He was at that moment living in a collective shelter, shared with many people with drug addiction and alcoholism, and he was suffering so much. I welcomed him into my park and he was incredible, we became very good friends. Also, through him, I discovered a whole new world that was completely unknown to me. I was appalled at the viciousness of the Swedish immigration system. The rules were not fair at all. I am a very objective person, not emotional. I like to get into the bottom of things, so I started doing some research to look at facts and figures. The more I found out, the more I was upset at the politics and the money that was involved. You know, in the end it’s all about the money! They pay extra money to Afghanistan, to make it ok for these deportations to happen. That’s how Sweden is getting rid of all this people” (Nora, in-depth interview, May 2019).
4.3. Limitations
4.4. Analysis
5. Findings
5.1. Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: The Disentanglement and Remaking of Belongings
Ahmed: “Sweden is good. Life there is very good. I stayed with my Swedish family for a long time, I helped them in the garden, I cooked for them. They gave me a house, so I helped them every day. I learned Swedish very well. I did not know how to read or write before, so in Sweden I learned to read and write in Swedish. I even had my own computer, in school. I learned everything very well and I made many friends. I even had a Syrian girlfriend. Life was very good for me there, until they made me homeless” (Ahmed, in-depth interview, July 2019)
Ahmed: “I wanted to stay in Paris, I didn’t care if they refused me. We can find a job in Paris, my friends were able to find ways to survive there. But my friends in Sweden told me I should come to Portugal, because I would have better chances to be accepted as a refugee here” (Fieldnotes, conversation with Ahmed, November 2019)
Thelma: “When they arrived in Sweden, they arrived at a ‘better time’, when all refugees were provided with rooms, schools and good social networks. The Sweden that they left has mistreated them very badly, throwing them out on the streets, giving them hope one day, only to take it away in the next. However, since many had time to make friends with people in Sweden they have been ‘rescued’, in a sense, by civil society. That was the situation they left I think, yet I find that they compare Portugal to what Sweden was like when they arrived there and to the networks that took them 4 years to build. This Sweden does not exist anymore, and the networks are soon worn out. Yet, I think that this is what they miss when they arrive to Lisbon. They had hopes to find that again, but now they are losing it” (Fieldnotes, conversation with Thelma, July 2019).
Thelma: “I sometimes get so sick of my own voice. I can hear myself saying ‘hang in there’, ‘breathe’, ‘one day at a time’, through their ears and feel really dumb. I may be right that the best thing is to wait, but that is all they have been doing—for four years now (…) I don’t think this issue will grow very much further. The rumor has spread that Portugal is tough (for some reason living in the street in Paris is starting to look like a safer route!). As far as I know Swedish-Afghans are all leaving Lisbon, only Mubarak, Mohamed and Said seem to be on the right track. I think Ahmed has the trickiest situation of them all” (Fieldnotes, conversation with Thelma, November 2019).
5.2. ‘Please Talk to the Swedes!’: The Clashing of Solidarities in Portugal
Nora: “Everything was so weird to me. It was the first time that I could not talk directly to people, like we do here in Sweden. All the bureaucratic procedures, and the difficulty to access the responsible people inside the institutions, even to get their emails and phone numbers, it is all so formal, makes you feel like you’re in a maze” (Nora, in-depth interview, May 2020).
Thelma: “It’s such a mess. Everyone is either upset, angry or in panic. I’m getting worried messages from Ahmed, angry messages from L. no messages from F. and panicky messages from Mubarak’s family, who is angry that his documents were translated but not certified. Nora and other helper try to pressure F. to respond, but all he does is getting angry at everyone, and does not provide any concrete answers. Everyone is so stressed out. It is so bad. I am so worried over the boys. I’m so glad you will be back soon”.
Nora: “F. sent me two emails this whole time, both no longer than two sentences with no answers to my questions on how I can help. And the latter very angry. What the hell is going on? Why are people offended with simple questions?” (Fieldnotes, messenger exchanges with Thelma and Nora, October 2019).
Nora: “I think there is no serious problem with racism there, like in Sweden, where there is open violence and physical attacks to refugees. But I found this system very violent and discriminatory, in the little things. The language barriers, the negligence, the lack of respect for people as human beings, the difficulty to just talk to people in a simple, transparent way, and ask them questions…everything seems so closed” (Nora, in-depth interview, March 2020).
Thelma: “In other countries it is easier to find civil society initiatives that establish horizontal relationships of proximity and activism, that provide asylum seekers with a sense of protection and freedom” (Fieldnotes, conversation with Thelma, January 2020).
Nora: “In Sweden a lot of families opened their homes completely to these kids. And they became friends for life. That is why you see all these engaged families around Ahmed and Mubarak. They are old people who won’t forget how the boys helped them around in the garden or whatever, and how they made them company, or how they gave a new meaning to their isolated lives. But it has taken years to develop this kind of relationships, so I don’t think this is even feasible now, in Portugal. I think there have not been enough refugees there for your society to see their precarious situation and the win-win situation of inviting them into their homes” (Fieldnotes, messenger exchange with Nora, October 2019).
Nora: “Mubarak is losing his motivation and I think I understand him. He does not feel like doing anything at all. All the youths living in Portugal are sad, at least that’s what he says to me, after looking at their faces. It must be the hard living conditions in Portugal, he said to me. If nothing happens, Mubarak will take the train somewhere else. Like all the other boys are now thinking to do” (Fieldnotes, messenger exchange with Nora, January 2020).
6. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | This concept was coined by the Brazilian feminist and philosopher Djamila Ribeiro, in 2017 (Ribeiro 2017), to reflect the intersectionality of our identities in the social spaces that we inhabit and from which we produce knowledge: https://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-71832019000200361 (accessed on 30 May 2024). |
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Rebelo, D. Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: Networks of Solidarity and Resistance of Swedish-Afghan Youths on the Move in Europe. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 322. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060322
Rebelo D. Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: Networks of Solidarity and Resistance of Swedish-Afghan Youths on the Move in Europe. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(6):322. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060322
Chicago/Turabian StyleRebelo, Dora. 2024. "Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: Networks of Solidarity and Resistance of Swedish-Afghan Youths on the Move in Europe" Social Sciences 13, no. 6: 322. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060322
APA StyleRebelo, D. (2024). Coming of Age While Challenging Borders: Networks of Solidarity and Resistance of Swedish-Afghan Youths on the Move in Europe. Social Sciences, 13(6), 322. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060322