diaspora

Bhutanese Community in Denmark

Last updated: 8 July 2026655 words

Denmark hosts a small Bhutanese refugee community of several hundred people, settled around Copenhagen and across Jutland and Zealand through asylum arrivals and family reunification, organised through the Bhutanese Community Denmark.

The Bhutanese community in Denmark is a small refugee population estimated at several hundred people, distributed across municipalities with concentrations in the Copenhagen metropolitan area and in smaller cities and towns across Jutland and Zealand. The community is Lhotshampa, ethnic Nepali-speaking Bhutanese displaced from southern Bhutan during the refugee crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s.[1]

Denmark was not among the countries participating in the organised UNHCR third-country resettlement programme for Bhutanese refugees. Arrivals have come primarily through individual asylum applications, family reunification and, in some cases, secondary migration within the European Union.

Settlement History

The first Bhutanese refugees arrived in Denmark in the late 1990s and early 2000s after leaving refugee camps in Nepal or transiting through India and other countries. Applicants were housed in asylum centres operated by the Danish Red Cross before being granted residence and allocated to municipalities across the country.[2] The dispersed settlement pattern meant Bhutanese families were often placed in smaller towns and rural areas where they were among very few non-European residents, creating both integration opportunities through close contact with Danish neighbours and isolation from other Bhutanese families. The community grew slowly through the 2000s and 2010s as further asylum claims were processed and family reunification brought relatives from Nepal and India.

Community Life and Organisations

Despite geographic dispersal, the community has established organisational structures connecting members across the country. The Bhutanese Community Denmark (BCD) coordinates cultural events, provides informal support networks and serves as a point of contact for members navigating Danish institutions, relying heavily on social media and messaging platforms to bridge physical distances.[3]

Cultural events are organised nationally, with members travelling from across Denmark to attend. Dashain, the most significant annual gathering, is typically held in a hired hall in or near Copenhagen, drawing families from Jutland, Funen and Zealand, with Hindu religious observances, cultural performances, music and communal meals. Tihar, Teej and other festivals are celebrated on a smaller scale, sometimes within regional clusters of families. The community has developed relationships with Danish multicultural organisations and with the established Nepali community associated with former Gurkha soldiers and their families, which provides social networks and practical support.

Integration and Employment

Danish language acquisition has been one of the community's most significant challenges and achievements. Danish presents particular difficulties for adult learners, but many members have achieved functional or fluent proficiency, and children who attend Danish schools are typically fluent and often serve as interpreters for their families. Initial employment for many was in cleaning, food production and warehouse work; over time some have moved into more skilled positions, and younger members who completed Danish education have entered a wider range of careers.

Challenges

Denmark's integration policies, among the most demanding in Europe and progressively stricter over the past two decades, have created anxiety around residence-permit renewals, citizenship eligibility and integration benchmarks. The country's broader political climate around immigration is experienced by some members as unwelcoming.

The small size and dispersal of the community pose challenges for cultural maintenance: children in small Danish towns may have limited contact with other Bhutanese families and few opportunities to practise Nepali, while elderly members without Danish proficiency face particular isolation in rural areas. The long, dark Scandinavian winters have been cited as a significant adjustment for people from the subtropical climate of southern Bhutan or the Nepali Terai, with seasonal affective disorder and winter isolation noted by community health workers.

Achievements

Community members have obtained Danish citizenship, purchased homes and established small businesses, and young Bhutanese Danes have enrolled in Danish universities and vocational colleges in healthcare, information technology and business.[4] The community maintains connections with Bhutanese diaspora groups in neighbouring Norway and with the larger European Bhutanese community centred in Manchester, in the United Kingdom, providing transnational social support and cultural exchange.

References

  1. "Asylum." New to Denmark (Danish Immigration Service).
  2. "Asyl." Danish Red Cross.
  3. "About." Danish Refugee Council.
  4. "Medborgerskab (Citizenship)." Ministry of Immigration and Integration, Denmark.

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