|
|
|
|
|
by dariosalvi78
123 days ago
|
|
It's clear to me that you don't have the experience of being an immigrant. There is nothing "normal" in expecting to renounce to a previous citizenship if you gain another one [1]. As an Italian citizen living in Sweden I obtained the Swedish citizenship (fortunately before the current government makes it way harder) but I'd never give up my Italian one. I "feel" Italian and owe my country a lot and my happily go back at some point, but I also feel like having the Swedish citizenship is useful, and allows me to vote in a country where I have chosen to live for a good chunk of my life. 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_citizenship |
|
Then that settles it, no? You're an Italian citizen who happens to work abroad, not Swedish citizen material.
> Swedish citizenship is useful
That's probably where the friction lies, countries see citizenship as something of greater importance than something to obtain because it's "useful".