Two 73-year-old twins have met on a bridge linking Norway and Sweden every
weekend throughout the pandemic, each keeping to their side of the border due
to pandemic restrictions.
They haven’t been allowed to have each other over to
their homes for a year now because of COVID-19. But every week, whatever the
weather, Ola and Pontus Berglund stay well behind a thin, yet impassable line
on the ground, bringing camping chairs, thermoses, sandwiches and plenty of good
cheer.
“We’re not allowed to cross the border. I have to stay
one metre away on my side and he has to stay back one metre on his side,” Ola
explains, the little Norwegian and Swedish flags they’ve attached to the bridge
fluttering in the wind.
“So basically there has to be two metres between us,”
he says, pushing his chair back, suddenly aware that he is too close.
At his feet, painted on the road, is a simple white
line, the words “Norge” and “Sverige
“The pandemic hasn’t stopped
us”
The pandemic has put a halt to the identical twins’
weekly visits to each other’s homes.
Ola lives in Halden, in southeastern Norway, where he
moved almost 40 years ago for love, while Pontus lives a half-hour drive away
in the southwestern Swedish town of Stromstad.
Instead, they come together here, at a distance, on
the old Svinesund bridge that straddles a fjord between the two countries.
They’ve celebrated their 72nd and 73rd birthdays this
way on April 20th.
“It’s very strange but it’s become a need, a pressing
need, because we used to see each other every week and we wanted to continue
that,” says Pontus from the Swedish side.
“The pandemic hasn’t stopped us from seeing each other
and for us, that’s a victory.”
While the local restrictions have changed over the
months as the virus situation has evolved, the border has remained closed.
The closure has angered Norwegians – many of whom own
summer homes in Sweden, where life is cheaper – to such an extent that they
sued the Norwegian state to get it to lift the mandatory quarantine required
when they return home.
Pontus (L) and Ola Berglund meet each other on May 1st. Photo: Petter
Berntsen / AFP
“A little party”
The few motorists who use the bridge usually smile or
wave at the two grey-bearded gents sitting in their chairs.
Ola, a former nursing assistant who now spends his
time making scenery for a theatre, and Pontus, an artist and amateur
ornithologist, have become local celebrities, with some people driving up to
five hours just to take their photograph.
“That’s not very important to us. The important thing
to us is to be able to get together and talk about whatever we want,” says Ola,
sporting a red bow tie to mark Labour Day on May 1st.
From their privileged perch, the two have, on
occasion, found themselves in the role of benevolent smugglers – like the day
when they delivered a puppy born in Sweden to its new family in Norway.
That’s their fondest memory, they say.
In over a year, they’ve only missed their weekly
rendezvous three times, because of stubborn police who wouldn’t let them onto
the bridge.
Otherwise, they’ve kept to their schedule through
blizzards and heatwaves, simply dressing for the weather.
Before the vaccination rollout, many elderly people
reported feeling a sense of isolation during the pandemic, as a result of
having to shield themselves from the virus.
“Each meeting has been a little party,” says Pontus,
who is divorced. “For me who lives alone, it’s really important to see Ola.
Without that I’d be depressed.”
Does he miss hugging his brother?
“Yes,” he says with a contagious laugh.
“So sometimes I hug myself, since we’re identical.”
Article by AFP’s Pierre-Henry
Deshayes.
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