When a multicultural squat gets busted, old friendships and utopian dreams unravel. Buried rivalries and individualistic agendas soon threaten the very foundations of their community. As danger closes in, what kind of new social contract can they form, when modern leadership has taught them nothing but to fear the unknown and the different?
A metaphor for Europe, Sharing celebrates our collective history in all its glory and grief. From the birth of democracy, the joys of Erasmus and one fantastic techno scene to its most painful episodes of blood-shedding wars, social apathy and isolationism. It examines our political inheritance and the impact of high-level politics on small interactions between common folks.
Reflecting on notions of mental health and class inequality, it asks two of the most burning questions of our times: what is privilege? Can one ever unlearn what they’ve been taught?