
Uppgivenhet
Daniel J. Meyer
Live is not to lose hope
Ivan and Petar arrive in Stockholm hopeful, looking for a city to welcome them.
Inge works at a Swedish "inclusion centre" where she welcomes newcomers with the conviction that she is building a more multicultural society.
Tarik has been enjoying Nordic generosity and wellbeing for years and is working with Inge to encourage newcomers to create a new history.
These four young people will fight to make this change a reality. But how long can hope be maintained? Undoubtedly, living means not losing hope.
There are spaces that should be untouchable, indisputably untouchable. It should be impossible and inconceivable for someone to disturb them. Children belong to this space; innocence should be an inviolable time.
And if it is young people’s drive that keeps turning the wheel, if it is their ideas, their enthusiasm, their courage and their bravery that improve humanity... then, it is in danger of extinction when the lights go out.
For this reason, we are committed to opening our eyes, learning about their stories and making them our own. Perhaps it will be the only way to maintain their laughter and keep the wheel turning with the magic of getting up every day and the hope that everything we find is better than what we imagined yesterday.
Montse Rodríguez Clusella