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By sharing housing, seniors and migrants in Sweden build bridges

Intergenerational living projects exist around the world, but the Sällbo project in Helsingborg, Sweden, stands out for its integration of migrants. The six-story building with 51 apartments helps counter both the loneliness of advanced-age Swedes and integration difficulties faced by young migrants who arrived from places like the Middle East or Afghanistan.

Tenants of Sällbo have found common ground, which they attribute to the cumulative impact of courtesy, kindness, mutual curiosity, and understanding.

Why We Wrote This

Living situations can be difficult for seniors and for immigrants, due to loneliness and separation from society. One Swedish housing project is trying to help both groups by putting them together – and it seems to be working.

“The whole goal was to show that even if you are different and even if you are people who would not usually socialize,” says project manager Dragana Curovic, “you would do so if there is a safe environment.”

Tenants must agree to socialize at least two hours per week. That can happen in shared kitchens, activity rooms, or cozy living areas. Young and old concur that the pandemic helped strengthen the bonds that bind them. The younger residents did grocery shopping for the elders, who returned the favor by helping the young with their classes online.

“People try to understand each other,” Afghan native Zia Sarwary says. “I know you have your differences. I have mine. But we can meet in the middle ground and do something together that is good for both of us.”

It was when his older Swedish neighbors threw him a high school graduation party that Afghan native Zia Sarwary finally felt a sense of belonging in this picturesque seaside city.

“It meant everything to me,” says Mr. Sarwary, who at the age of 13 arrived alone in Sweden during the 2015 refugee crisis. “That was the beginning of feeling at home.”

Mr. Sarwary is one of dozens of tenants living in Sällbo, a shared-living project mixing elder Swedes and young adults, some of them from Sweden, others – like him – from the Middle East or Afghanistan. The six-story building with 51 apartments helps counter both the loneliness of advanced-age Swedes and the integration difficulties facing migrants who arrived as unaccompanied minors.

Why We Wrote This

Living situations can be difficult for seniors and for immigrants, due to loneliness and separation from society. One Swedish housing project is trying to help both groups by putting them together – and it seems to be working.

Tenants of Sällbo have found common ground within these colorful walls, which they attribute to the cumulative impact of courtesy, kindness, mutual curiosity, and understanding.

“The whole goal was to show that even if you are different and even if you are people who would not usually socialize, you would do so if there is a safe environment where you know who is in the house,” says Dragana Curovic, the project manager for Sällbo. “After three years, we can say that it worked.”

Dominique Soguel

Zia Sarwary stands outside the Sällbo apartment building in Helsingborg, Sweden, Feb. 8, 2022. Mr. Sarwary says he appreciates that his Swedish neighbors don’t make assumptions about his native Afghanistan. “They would always ask instead of just judging. ‘OK, is this true about your country?’ … Everywhere else they don’t even ask. They have this picture in their head about you.”

“We can meet in the middle ground”

Had they not moved under the same roof, the older Swedes and young migrants living here would almost certainly not have mingled. Fear and misunderstanding would have been major obstacles. Older Swedes’ impressions of young migrants draw heavily on negative press reports linking them to crime.

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