▲Communal living: Svanholm seems indeed a great place to raise children.
While I was walking around the village with Mrs. Laegaard, I met a woman in her 40's who was painting words on a wooden board. She was a newcomer who had been living in the community for 4 months. I asked what she was doing, and she replied that she was making an information sign for visitors to an upcoming village festival. Why did she, a teacher of an elementary school nearby, join this community?
"Before I came here, I lived in a small community in the city. But then as I got 2 kids, I thought it would be better for them to live in the countryside. But I still wanted to live with other people, so we thought this was the very place. Now my children are really enjoying here."
She was giving a present called communal living to her children. Another teacher Mr. Mikkel Brink, in his 30's, chose this community for the same reason -- for his 2 children. Considering that his child and other children were playing restlessly and having a fun time during the 30 minutes of the interview with Mr. Brink, it seemed that Svanholm was indeed a great place to raise children.
But a big question remained for the father, who was teaching music in an elementary school outside the village. How could he accept that 80% of his income belongs to the community? Was there any conflict or hesitation inside him?
- You just have 20% of your income. It makes you…I mean, a better person? You have no greed?
"All the value I have here is not about money. By choosing to live here, we have also chosen to not have that much money and it's some part of our conviction that we should take care of the planet and we should live organic. Of course, as a human being, I have some kind of greed inside. But by living here, I try to control that greed. Sometimes I want to buy a big car, but I should suppress it. It's a way to consciously control my own greed because I can't do the same as I can when I live outside."
He said the 20% of his income is enough to live in this community because housing and food are free even though he has to buy clothes and pay for tickets to enjoy cultural events.
- Don't you envy your friends living in big cities and traveling around the world?
"When I see my friends who are traveling abroad many times a year, I also feel that I can never go to Paris. And sometimes I feel strange but at the same time I also feel that it's good that I don't just rush out to do all these things, which is not so necessary, which is actually a part of the destruction of the planet."
- So you are feeling that you are controlling your greed.
"Yes, somehow."
- Wow, it's a very big thing.
"Yes it is."
- Anyway, you chose this life. Are you happy now?
"I feel that I am happy. But of course I am a human being so I have a lot of...all of these stress and worries and all of that stuffs like every other people. It's normal for human beings. But I think also that you can affect your state of mind by your surroundings. To me these surroundings are more appropriate to avoid the stress, or worry, because you have a community."
Most members of Svanholm are Danish. Therefore they are enjoying the Danish welfare system like any other Dane. But these people think that the state of welfare in this community is stronger than it is on the outside, because they have very close neighbors. Mr. Brink said, "if someone is sick or in crisis, every person here helps him."
One reason the members have close relationships with each other lies on having meals together. Members eat lunch and dinner together in a big common restaurant where chefs, who are also village members, prepare fresh 100% organic food, such as vegetables, beans and milk produced in a farm of its own. Mrs. Laegaard said with a laugh, "Thanks to the village chefs, I have never cooked myself for 35 years, even though I am a mom." She added, "In knowing that these kinds of healthy food are prepared by our very neighbors, it feels so good."
- Since the members eat 100% organic food everyday, you must be healthier than other Danes.
"We think so, but we cannot be sure. But I think we can all live to be 100 years old."(laugh)
The villagers farm 100% organic food not just to prepare meals for themselves, but also to make money to manage the community. They sell the food to markets outside, and the profit has enabled Svanholm to break even and buy more lands to farm.
No risk even if they fail

▲American guest Mrs. Katy Lindbald said "The quality of life is very high here."
Finishing the tour around the village, I asked Mrs. Laegaard.
- Svalholm has some characteristics of ideal Socialism that socialistic countries once dreamed of but failed to achieve. What do you think is the difference between Svanholm and failed socialistic countries?
"We chose it by ourselves. Therefore we think the freedom of individual is very important even in this community. That is the big difference."
Indeed, even though 80% of their income goes to the community, members enjoy their maximum level of freedom, within limits. More than half of the adults have a job outside the village. The others who have work in the community finish their work around 5pm and enjoy free time without any disturbance.
Foreign visitors are constantly coming to experience and study this unique community. About 10 to 20 people visit in summer to stay for 2 to 3 months. Mrs. Katy Lindbald, in her late 50's, is one of them. She is an American who served the State of Minnesota for a long time as anassistant commissioner for community development. Now her job is to cook and clean in Svanholm, and she has fallen in love with this community.
"The quality of life is very high here. What I love about this place is the sense of community. The people don't need to have everything. They can share. And this community has a good job. They are not all the same. They do have issues but they are able to talk about them and come to a resolution and live in harmony. And how many times do you sit down in a dinner with a plumber or with your child's day care provider with your electrician, with your cook? Everyone lives together and it's pretty cool."
Why do these people try to experiment with this kind of a special community even though Denmark's government has a good welfare system and Danish society is pretty much equal? Mrs. Lindbald gave an explanation to my key question.
"They don't have to worry about a lot of stuff that we worry about. They don't have to worry about their health insurance. But in the United States, a lot of people work at their jobs just in order to have the insurance coverage. Therefore, I think, in a country like Denmark, they have more ability and better opportunity to experiment and take risks. Because if there's failure they will still be okay. But in the United States, if they failed they would be really in a bad position."
Listening to the answer, Mrs. Laegaard nodded her head and said, "In a way, that was what I thought when I had just finished my education. No risk."
No risk even if they fail! It was the secure welfare system that enabled the birth of a creative experiment. Also because of the welfare system, this experiment could provide a quality of life that is much greater than that of other countries that are getting by. I felt I got the answer why the happiest Danes had been experimenting this kind of community.
In the first article of the serial reports about the <Secret of Happy Danes>, I analyzed the reason for the Danish happiness in 6 keywords: freedom, equality, security, neighbors, trust, and environment. Svanholm had all of those factors, and they boasted better quality of life than those of average Danish society.
After 2 hours of tour, I was waiting a bus to return to Copenhagen, grasping the last scene of Svanholm. What Mr. Brink said to me during the interview was echoing inside my head.
"If Denmark is the happiest country, and if we are the happiest in Denmark, we are maybe the happiest people on this planet. Who knows. (laugh)"
저작권자(c) 오마이뉴스(시민기자), 무단 전재 및 재배포 금지
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