Wives Wanted in the Faroes
The Faroe Islands are facing a shortage of women of marriageable age. Many of them have left and not returned so men are now travelling to south east Asia looking for love.
Men in the Faroe Islands are having to look far beyond their shores for marriage. The remote, windswept archipelago between Norway and Iceland, with close ties to Denmark, has seen an influx of women from South-East Asia who have come to marry Faroese men. In recent years the islands have been experiencing a declining population. Young women in particular have been leaving the islands, often for education, and not returning. One complaint from them is that their close-knit community has too conservative and masculine a culture where sheep farming, hunting and fishing are still dominant. For some women Faroese society is simply too small, too constraining. There are now approximately 2,000 fewer women of marriageable age in the total population of 50,000. In response, some men have been looking elsewhere for partners, from countries like Thailand and the Philippines. For Crossing Continents, Tim Ecott meets these foreign women adjusting to life in this isolated group of islands where the elements are harsh and the language impenetrable.
John Murphy producing.
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- Thu 27 Apr 2017 11:00麻豆社 Radio 4
- Mon 1 May 2017 20:30麻豆社 Radio 4
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Crossing Continents
Stories from around the world and the people at the heart of them