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Sweden: Visiting Rinkeby, Stockholm's Immigrant Ghetto

Categories: Middle East & North Africa, Western Europe, Sweden, Yemen, Citizen Media, Ethnicity & Race, Migration & Immigration

The Rinkeby [1] district of Stockholm, Sweden is famous for its high concentration of immigrants. Curious outsiders have documented their visits.

Yemeni journalist and blogger Afrah Nasser [2] lives in Stockholm. She wrote about visiting Rinkeby for the first time in a blog post [3] on April 6, 2012.

Afrah says:

I've always heard from people in Stockholm that there is an area called Rinkeby that is so full of immigrants and you can even hardly see Swedes there. So, I decided to go there, yesterday. I wanted to go and discover this mini-Non-Swedish area.

Rinkeby [4]

A street sign in Rinkeby. Photo by Afrah Nasser (used with permission)

Afrah noticed a difference upon arrival at the Rinkeby metro station [5] which was shabbier than most central Stockholm metro stations like, T-Centralen [6]. She compared photos of both stations:

My first impression when I arrived at the metro underground was, “OMG, Why the metro underground looks horrible! why there is no decoration at the metro !! Like how it is in , for example, Karlaplan (Where Swedes dress/walk like there is some kind of a fashion show)! No ads, no pretty pics on the walls like how it's the case at the average metro’ walls in the city.

T-Centralen Station [4]

T-Centralen Station. Photo by Afrah Nasser (used with permission)

Rinkeby Station [4]

Rinkeby Station. Photo by Afrah Nasser (used with permission)

Many people living in Rinkeby can't find a good job outside the community because they don't have the minimum Swedish language skills. According to Tricia Wang, an American blogger and cultural sociologist who visited Rinkeby in 2008 [7], the woman in the next photo fears her children won't have good work opportunities because of the level of English and Swedish spoken in their school.

Hatice Erkal working in the bread shop of her family in Rinkeby [8]

Bakery in Rinkeby. Photo by Tricia Wang on flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Vegetable market in Rinkeby [9]

Vegetable market in Rinkeby. Photo by Tricia Wang on flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

 

At the end of her visit, Afrah said:

I said goodbye to Rinkeby with a feeling that Stockholm is segregated. Sana'a, my hometown, has been always segregated as well. The rich lived at one side and the poor at the other side. The Yemenis lived in one side and the immigrants lived at the other side. So, I know what social segregation means. There is an area in Sana'a called Safia that's heavily inhibited by Somalis. We used to call is Maqadishu. I bet Rinkeby is Stockholm's Safia. This is not new for me but it was interesting to discover this side of Stockholm.

Poster in Rinkeby advertising international money transfers to Africa [10]

Poster in Rinkeby advertising international money transfers to Africa. Photo by Tricia Wang on flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)