Croatia vs Afghanistan
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Croatia
In Croatia, children spend summers with grandparents in coastal villages โ a tradition so strong it empties Zagreb every July.
This annual migration reconnects urban children with rural family roots, Adriatic sea culture, and intergenerational bonds that define Croatian childhood.
Afghanistan
Since 2021, Afghan girls over 12 are banned from attending school.
The Taliban's return ended two decades of progress in girls' education, affecting 1.4 million secondary-school girls.
Croatia
School starts at age 7. Compulsory education lasts eight years in a single-structure system. Most primary schools run in two shifts โ morning and afternoon โ due to facility constraints. Secondary education divides into gymnasiums, vocational, and technical schools.
Afghanistan
Since the Taliban takeover in August 2021, girls above grade 6 are banned from school and women from universities. Boys' education continues but with revised curriculum emphasizing religious studies. Before 2021, enrollment had risen from near-zero for girls to 3.5 million.
Planning a move from Croatia to Afghanistan?
Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.
Get your playbook โ $99