NATURALISATION CONTROVERSY
Dutch-born Nancy Holten has lived in Switzerland since she was eight, speaks fluent Swiss German, has three children with Swiss passports, has no criminal record, doesn’t claim welfare and is a firm believer in direct democracy, collecting signatures for various petitions. A shoo-in for a Swiss passport? Wrong. Her neighbours have twice rejected her application.
Holten’s story is essentially one of personal beliefs versus tradition, set against a uniquely Swiss political backdrop.
Gipf-Oberfrick is a rural municipality of 3,500 people in canton Aargau, northern Switzerland. Horse racing is popular there, as is sitting down to a Sunday roast with the sound of cow bells and church bells in the background.
However, this pastoral image of Switzerland is anathema to Holten, a vegan. She has tried, and failed, to collect enough signatures to force votes to ban horse racing, Sunday roasts and various bells.
As a result, when she applied, twice, to become Swiss – and the citizens of Gipf-Oberfrick were called on to give the thumbs up or down – the decision wasn’t even close. She says she was accused of not being integrated because she wanted to abolish these traditions.
“I was rather naive,” Holten tells swissinfo.ch. “I never thought about [the integration issue] – I just wanted to get involved in protecting animals. I didn’t realise that these things are traditions for many people. I now understand that.”
‘I felt like a criminal’
Naturalisation in Switzerland takes place at the municipal level. In some municipalities, the local authorities or parliament decide; in others, it is up to voters. Unfortunately for Holten, Gipf-Oberfrick is in the latter category.
Being present when local residents, often neighbours, weigh up the pros and cons of giving you a Swiss passport – in other words your strengths and weaknesses – is unsurprisingly not particularly pleasant.
“That was tough,” admits Holten, referring to applause that broke out when the result of her second application was announced. She adds that people who wanted to speak up for her were booed. “I felt like a criminal.”
Holten’s case is not a one-off. In 2014, a retired US chemistry professor was rejected, despite living and working in Switzerland for more than 40 years and raising his children in the country.
MORE: http://www.swissinfo.ch/directdemocracy/naturalisation-controversy_can-one-be-refused-a-swiss-passport-for-being-too-swiss-/42827836
Categories: Europe, Europe and Australia, Switzerland, The Muslim Times
I asked my Swiss son, aged 10, (who never lived in Switzerland so far) what he thought about this. When I asked ‘should some one not get a Swiss passport because she thinks the Swiss cow bells are too loud?’ he sort of hesitated and did not know what to say. When I asked ‘should some one get a Swiss passport who is annoying’ he answered more quickly with a ‘no, I do not think so’. Yes, it depends how the questions are asked …