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Month: January 2013

Journalists should question instead of spread racism and prejudice

Posted on January 17, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Journalists are one group that have helped to spread and reinforce our prejudices and racism of other groups. There’s nothing surprising about this considering that journalists, like the media that employs them, mirror in part what the public feels. 

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Ilta-Sanomat is one tabloid resonsible for spreading racism in Finland during the 1990s. This billboard tells us that Somali refugees will stay put in Finland.

Even if this may be the case, the difference between a sharp and mediocre journalist is how well he or she can question and expose abuses in our society. The job of the media is to be a watchdog and ensure that our system of checks and balances functions properly.

Too many journalists and the media, however,  forget what their primary role is. Instead of questioning social ills, they have helped to spread prejudice, racism and xenophobia in our society.

Closing one’s eyes to racism or going after such a social ill without teeth is unfortunate because we all lose. The spirit of our laws, like our Constitution, should be our moral shield and benchmark.

Check out section seven of Finland’s  Constitution:

No one shall, without an acceptable reason, be treated differently from other persons on the ground of sex, age, origin, language, religion, conviction, opinion, health, disability or other reason that concerns his or her person.

Even if the highest law of the land tells us convincingly that discrimination is wrong, why do some journalists and the media have a difficult time figuring out what is intolerance and what should our response to such a social ill be?

One of the most racist papers in Finland is tabloids like Iltalehti and Ilta-Sanomat, which markets news like a used car salesman, who would even sell his or her mother if the price were right. Another publication is Uusi Suomi, which helped Perussuomalaiset (PS) politicians like Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari and a long list of others to become household names.

Online publications like Uusi Suomi and tabloids like Iltalehti are responsible for spreading stereotypes like that immigrants are lazy, rape and commit crimes in this country.

A good example of how prejudice and stereotypes of foreigners are maintained and spread by the media is a reent story on Länsi-Savo, teaching Russians how to use the toilet bowl.

Another example that fuels stereotypes and racism in this country is a non-story about banning in Finland the use of the burqa and niqab.

I have never seen a woman wearing such clothing in Finland. I wonder how many of the journalists at Iltalehti have never mind anti-immigration PS MPs, who want to ban the use of such clothes in our country.

Coverage of racism, hate speech and  social exclusion has improved thanks to much better reporting by Helsingin Sanomat, Etelä-Suomen Sanomat, Keskisuomalainen, Savon Sanomat, Kainuun Sanomat, Karjalainen, Turun Sanomat, Kansan Uutiset and others.

These papers have done a good job at doing their job.

 

Why was Finland “tolerant” of Jews when it was an ally of Nazi Germany?

Posted on January 16, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Finns claim proudly – followed by an obvious sigh of relief – that even if we were an ally of Nazi Germany during World War 2, anti-Semitism never reached the same levels as in Hungary, Romania and in other parts of Nazi-dominated Europe. 

While Finland offers an interesting case with respect to anti-Semitism in war-ravaged Nazi Europe, was tolerance the principal factor that kept Finns from persecuting Jews? Could the underwhelming size of the Jewish community and the fact that they were accepted as Finns offer us better explanations?

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Memorial ceremony for Jewish soldiers who fell in World War II presided by Marshal Carl Mannerheim in Helsinki, Finland. Source: Flickr. 

The size of the Jewish community in Finland has been small. In the 1870 census, there were 460 Jews and by 1883 they are said to have risen to 1,000. In 1929, it peaked to 1,763.*

Today there are about 1,500 Jews living in Finland.

The Jews were granted Finnish citizenship in 1918. Finland was the last country in Europe together with Romania to do so.

Even if there appears that Finland tolerated Finnish Jews in World War 2, former Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen formally apologized in November 2000 to the Jewish community for the extradition of eight Jews to Germany in 1942. Only one of the eight survived after they were sent to Auschwitz.

While the Jewish question never reached the same proportions in this country as elsewhere in Nazi-dominated Europe, would anti-Semitism have soared if the size of the Jewish community were many times bigger?

There seems to be a connection between the recent rise of racism, xenophobia and growth of far-right parties in Finland and the size of the immigrant community. Certainly factors like the economic recession and rising unemployment play important roles as well.

How can xenophobia grow if the immigrant community is minuscule? How can there be anti-Semitism if there are only a handful of Jews?

Sometimes size does not matter. In neighboring Estonia, an estimated half of the Jewish population, which totaled 4,000, died in the Holocaust.  In countries like Poland 3 million Jews perished under Nazi rule.

If we look at history, Finland was far from being “tolerant.” The Restricting Act of 1939 is one of many laws that showed how Finland perceived the world as a threat.

The Jews were in part saved by their acceptance as Finns in the 1940s, but a very important factor must have been their underwhelming numbers.

* Migration Patterns among Jews – Finland. See following link. 

 

Slandering immigrants and visible minorities is disgraceful

Posted on January 14, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A politician of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party has come under fire today for claiming on Facebook that all refugees and asylum seekers are social bums and rapists, reports YLE. Migrant Tales published on Sunday a blog entry citing a ministry of justice researcher, who claimed that certain anti-immigration groups in Finland distort crime statistics in order to attract voters and label immigrant groups. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-14 kello 12.51.16

While the PS city councilman, Mika Hiltunen, appears too lazy to use and exaggerate crime statistics as others from his party, he does show his racism with shameless gusto.

Osmo Kokko, a PS MP from Joensuu, located near Hiltunen’s home town of Kontiolahti, was quoted as saying on YLE that Hiltunen’s comments don’t represent the party’s policy on refugees.

Migrant Tales spoke earlier today to Hannu Niemi  of the ministry of justice, who stood by what he said on Länsi-Uusimaa. He blamed indirectly journalists as well for using immigrant crime statistics to label some national groups.

Reija Härkönen writes a lot about the anti-immigration Counterjihadists of the PS. Two of these are MPs James Hirvisaari and Jussi Halla-aho.

Both MPs, who have been convicted for inciting ethnic hatred, have proven over and over again that they will go to any length to spread their wise tales.

Markku Huusko, editor of Uusi Suomi, wrote in 2011 about how both MPs accused a 17-year-old asylum seeker of raping a young woman in Lammi. All charges were later dropped against the asylum seeker.

Despite the social-media lynch mob instigated by Halla-aho and Hirvisaari, both have yet to apologize for what they wrote.

Niemi said that it’s not his job to raise debate since he is a researcher, but “it’s the journalists who do that.”

Not only do Hirvisaari and Halla-aho have racism issues to deal with like all political parties, but Finnish society, journalists and newspapers as well.

Migrant Tales literary: Pikavippilaulu

Posted on January 13, 2013 by Migrant Tales

 Älä koskee pikavippiin

se ei ole turvallista

ei sinulle, ei minulle,

ei kenellekään.

IMG_9141

Jos sä kosket pikavippiin

älä itke minulle,

ei kenellekään, ei kenellekään.

 

Pikavippi ei ole hyvä!

Pikavippi on karmea!

Pikavippi tuhoaa perheesi.

 

Sanat: Enrique Tessieri ja Sher Hser

Crime statistics are used shamelessly by certain groups in Finland to label immigrants

Posted on January 12, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Hannu Niemi, a Justice Ministry researcher, says that crime rates by immigrants in Finland have been exaggerated by the media, report Länsi Uusimaa and Uusi Suomi. He believes that there is a political aim by some groups to cite national origin in crime statistics in order to label whole groups.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-12 kello 15.36.02

Migrant Tales spoke with Niemi in the spring, when an Aamulehti story written by a freelancer claimed that immigrants are overrepresented in rape crime statistics in Finland.

One of the matters that becomes clear from the Aamulehti story, as well as another one by A-Studio in August, is that both aim to label immigrants from certain regions like the Middle East as outright rapists.

Both stories place more emphasis on percentage figures rather than actual volumes, which are low. Apart from playing down or not mentioning that Finns commit the vast majority of rape crimes in this country, the A-Studio story went as far as to claim that the Iraqi community had “a problem” because it had the highest amount of rape suspects.

The total number of suspected rape cases by Iraqi immigrants was seven.

Niemi said that the number of rape crimes committed by immigrants is 1-2 per 1,000.

Even if it is clear that certain politicians and anti-immigration groups exaggerate rape and crime statistics for their own political purposes, there is an important factor missing that may shed light on why crime among 15-24 year olds is higher (over 1,600/10,000 immigrants) than among Finns (under 1,200/10,000) in the same age group. The missing factor is ethnic profiling by the police.

Here is a link that offers a comprehensive view of crimes committed by foreigners.

Are certain ethnic groups in Finland more likely to be stopped and arrested by the police than others?

Knowing the answer to this important question could shed light on the problem.

Niemi says that if the immigrant community’s age structure were the same as the Finns’, crime levels would be about the same in both groups.

 

 

 

 

Länsi-Savo and toilet etiquette for Russians

Posted on January 12, 2013 by Migrant Tales

An article on Friday’s Länsi-Savo, a Mikkeli-based daily, is a good example of how old stereotypes are kept alive in this part of Finland. The article, headlined ABC Juva teaches Russians how to use the toilet bowl, reveals more than anything else our stereotypes and prejudices against Russians. 

Länsi-Savo is the biggest newspaper in Etelä-Savo, a region that is starting to look like a home for senior citizens due to the rapid graying of its population. Even so, foreign tourists and foreign investors could play an important role in the region’s future economic development.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-12 kello 10.07.40The article, which is pretty racist towards Russians, offers us the classic ethnocentric view of the world: Russians (“them”) are so backward that they don’t even know how to go to the toilet.

“Tourists usually stand on the toilet seat Russian style,” said ABC Juva manager Minna Rasa. “We want to instruct them so that our toilets stay clean.”

Rasa states, however, that standing on the toilet seat isn’t “a big problem” but due to cultural differences.

If it’s not “a big problem” why is it being written as if it were one? How many foreign tourists are we speaking of? How does ABC Juva know that Russian tourists stand on toilet seats? Are their hidden surveillance cameras in ABC Service Station toilets?

Let’s talk about toilets…How Finns use outhouses, maybe? Isn’t it disgusting how a person can defecate on top of a pile of urine and feces in the heat of summer?

Instead of making a bid deal about such a problem, why doesn’t Länsi-Savo write about how oligopolies like ABC Service Stations kill competition and rob communities of jobs?

Certainly that would be a much bigger social problem than writing about foreign tourists standing on toilet seats.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pia Gro: So WHY are you here? The case of including Diversity

Posted on January 11, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Pia Gro

I was born a Finnish citizen, yet I was born in Canada. This idea seems to confuse many people. I acquired two citizenships automatically at birth as a consequence of Jus Sanguinis (Citizenship inherited through family ties) and jus solis (citizenship granted by virtue of being born in a land). I lived in Finland for over six years-what feels like my entire adult life, learned the language, also made attempts at learning Swedish) worked, studied, volunteered, ran marathons both domestic and at home under the Finnish flag, and donated blood in this country. Time and time again people ask me when do I expect to return to Canada. I’m confused and sometimes frequently insulted by this question. I can’t help it I am-though I try not to be, it stopped being tolerable after the fifth year of living here. I could speculate about returning to Canada, but my life is in Finland, I wouldn’t know what to return to. On the few occasions I have come back I feel completely alienated and separated of everything. I find it strange that people can’t understand why. I have lived abroad for so long I can’t even legally vote in Canadians elections anymore. It feels after dedicating all I can of my life and soul to Finland, I’m still seen as a tourist, just enjoying life, going to tuomiokirkko and taken tourist snaps on a daily basis, and filing in postcards at café’s.

The sting of this of these questions come from the suggestion that I’m not included, in spite of participating politically, economically, socially, educationally in society, its not taken seriously. The question is to what extent do immigrants, mamu’s, second generation Finns, migrants, ex-pats have to participate in society until they are included, how does one escape the fringes of society.

People, upon hearing that I truly love being in Finland and feel at home here, grill me on many every aspect of my life: who I’m in a relationship with, have I dated Finns, where my family lives, how old was I when my mother died, who is my family is still alive and where are they, is it really colder in Canada, why am I studying here, and the classic: do I feel more Canadian or more Finnish. (Keep in mind people ask me this question even before I know their first name, like being different here means all aspects of your private life become public). The last question, on what am I, always leaves me in an identity crisis. Sometimes I feel I have to jokingly comment that if I were to answer that I would need to spend a night crying under a table in my underwear in order to finally come up with an answer. This is a euphemism of mine for saying that there is no right answer: it doesn’t work that way. I do feel very Finnish, and I am, but I am still often seen as the Canadian.

Sometimes I get exhausted answering these questions and wonder whether to take the questions as plain curiosity or an interrogation to my allegiances. What more do I have to prove? I feel constantly forced to push my Finnish identity more and more, I’m even considering taking on my mother’s maiden name so I can have a, “so now do you believe moment?” I get also frustrated when people act surprise that I vote in elections. People were surprised I was able to vote in municipal elections-and one don’t even need citizenship to vote in that. Others, including some family members of mine, act offended as a way of saying I’m not Finnish enough to have a say in their politics, like my votes will destroy their system. Of course I vote: it’s my civic duty. Even before I moved to Finland voting papers would be sent to my home, as they are to many Finns living abroad. One thing I always loved about Finland is how organized their diplomatic missions were at organizing oversea votes.

All this is a daily part of my life, it does leave me a reclusive, and I don’t always like meeting new people, as I’m tired of explaining my life to everyone. But I feel I don’t really have a right to complain: not every girl decides to move permanently to the other side of the world on her own at 19. I try to be proactive and patient, but I do find it confusing, and try to not be offended and tired by it. My plight is a joke in comparison to those who are faced with real and often violent cases of racism. I wonder whether I really have a reason to complain, these days I start informing people on diversity and it’s perfectly normal to live in a country where one is citizen. I just suffer from the systematic form, I’m overlooked for jobs, and employement as I’m seen as a risk, I could leave at any moment. Doesn’t matter if I stayed here for more than six years working in some of the most abusive and oppressive environments to make ends meet, if I were to actually get a real job I’d just flee. Its better to hire the Finn that does nothing but complains about the country and plans to move to France the first chance they get-the winters are easier there.

In Canada such discussions, the questions that is, would be considered offensive and ignorant, it’s a nation where it’s normal and encouraged to have multiple identities (and homes) in the world. Yes, one can be in two places at the same time, and with newer media it’s easier than ever. However it doesn’t mean one is any less of a citizen because of that: home often is where my feet lay.

The main part of this discussion is that as tired as I am of this. As offended as I get: none of this is a problem. It’s not meant to be offensive, but its just something new. I’m chasing rats in my head at every question pondering my background I blessed to come from such a multicultural country, and family that I do think twice about the issues. I believe in diversity, I believe it with all my heart. I call it a belief, because I feel sooner or later whether someone likes it or not diversity will come knocking at your door, at your work in your family. It’s pointless and perhaps harmful in the long run to resist diversity. I’m just wondering, as I’m trying to explain with my own case, when will diversity be considered normal?

Rasismin kieltäminen on uusrasismia

Posted on January 11, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Syrjinnän ja rasismin ilmiöt ovat universaaleja, ja Suomessa näkyvät ongelmat esiintyvät myös muualla mutta ehkä eri kontekstissa.

Katsokaa seuraava video ja korvatka seuraavat sanat:

America = Suomi

GOP (Republican Party) = mm. Perussuomalaiset

Black crime = maahanmuuttajien rikollisuus Suomessa

 

Cultural diversity in Finland: A letter from Ida, Abdulah and Joseph

Posted on January 11, 2013 by Migrant Tales

COMMENT: Migrant Tales has always been interested in publishing the experiences of Finns with multicultural backgrounds. The letter by “Ida” below is one of the first we ever published on this blog in September 2008.

There are others ones aboutSomali-Finn Abdulah, Living in no-man’s land, and Joseph, What being Finnish means to me.

While all of these people come from different backgrounds, their experiences in Finland are pretty much the same since all three of them have had to struggle with racism and rejection.

The question isn’t whether racism is alive and well in our society, but what must we do to challenge this social ill that threatens us.

__________

By “Ida”

I am an immigrant. Sometimes I feel so frustrated in Finland that I just wanted to ‘give it back to the society’. Hence the crime. People like me (hypothetically) acting out of frustration. If the mentality here is that no foreigners are good and only a tiny fraction of people like Juha, the social worker, understands and/or appreciates diversity it doesn’t help much because the general society isn’t open=minded. I would even call racist.

If a person like Juha comes to ask me how do I like it in Finland, I wouldn’t want to hurt his feelings. A guy who works so hard for us. What do you expect me to say? that I am so frustrated that I can leave this second to another place where I feel more comfortable?

I would reverse those numbers. 95% prejudiced and 4% nonchalant, 0.5% don’t care, 0.001% welcoming (and the rest 0.499% lost in statistics).

Good welfare system is like a double-edged sword for immigrants. We are taken care of but we are also blamed for using them. And so you have to be ever-thankful that you are here, Finland. Because you are given shelter and food, now you can take this mental abuse in the form of institutionalized racism.

Any CONSTRUCTIVE comments?

Denying racism is the new racism

Posted on January 11, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The more we debate racism, the more our ignorance is exposed in the raw.* This is a good matter because when we begin to see the light at the end of this debate, we can start wiping off our ignorance and replace it with knowledge. Even so, denial is still rampant. Bill Maher said: “Denying racism is the new racism.”

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-11 kello 9.00.02

 The biggest shock to ethnic purists  is the discovery that the Garden of Eden never existed in their country. How come Adam & Eve are “white?”

Even if we live in the Internet age, our views about ”others” is still stuck in places where computers haven’t been invented.

I was watching an A-Talk show on Finnish television Thursday about racism. One of the guests said that victims of racism didn’t have any right to claim such harassment as “racist.”

A beg your pardon?!

Even if such denial may surprise some, it’s more common than people think.

Apart from denying that such a social ill exists, the lack of knowledge that some have about racism is shocking.

Tabloid Iltalehti quotes a university academic, who enlightens us with the following fact: cultures mix, everything we claim to be homemade was borrowed from somewhere else.

Give me a break! A tabloid has to quote an academic to tell me something I should have learned in the first grade?

While it may be a shock to some ethnic purists that the Garden of Eden never existed in their country, we must ask why racism and other anti-social behavior are so widespread in our society. Is it here where racism is exposed and takes the driver’s seat?

How come some politicians, who should know better, still cling tooth and nail to their prejudices and intolerance? The only answer I can come up with is that they profit from such anti-social behavior.

You may rightly ask how can anyone profit from racism?

In society there are a limited amount of resources like jobs and these must be selfishly guarded. Racism is an effective weapon to exclude others from such resources.

The big lie about this biased societal order of things is that it costs tax payers an arm and a leg.

It’s always cheaper to educate and include people in society than to deprive them opportunities.

*Thank you JusticeDemon for the heads-up. 

 

 

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