Multiculturalism: one culture, two cultures, three countries, four (potential) languages. I am not sure how to think about multiculturalism. If both branches of your family are multicultural, then great. If both branches are unicultural, mmhhhh. It depends on how much you identify yourself with each branch. It depends on much time you spent as a child in each branch. It depends on whether you speak the languages of both branches… Identity problems may arise if you don’t feel equally comfortable in both branches, which, obviously, expect this from you because they strongly identify themselves with their own culture. Identity problems may also arise if both branches are not really open for multiculturalism, thinking that their own culture is the only right one. In one branch, wine is the best thing on earth, in the other one, they would never taste one single drop of wine. But what’s sad, is that both branches wouldn’t accept or respect the other one. Not necessarily due to misseducation. Big cities are multicultural – to a certain extent. Try to live there. Avoid unicultural villages – you may (endless) try get involved in whatsoever kind of extracurricular village activities, people won’t bother.