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Month: March 2013

It’s official: The PS doesn’t mind racists, Nazis and neo-Nazis among its ranks

Posted on March 31, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A Perussuomalaiset (PS) party statement, giving Vaasa councilman Risto Helin a warning about a Hitler clock he gave to a neo-Nazi club in Vaasa, is a good example of political deception. If you read the statement carefully, it says that the party doesn’t mind racists, Nazis and neo-Nazis among its ranks as long as you do this dirty stuff  before becoming a party member.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-31 kello 13.26.57

Read full statement here.

The PS states:  “According to Vaasa’s Perussuomalaiset, racism, Nazism or neo-Nazism have not place in the values of the Perussuomalaiset. The association has given a warning to Helin for what he did two years ago.”

The PS are quite an incredible group. The fact that they become the third-largest party in parliament after the 2011 election from relative obscurity, reveals that they too are capable of Superman feats. Some of their members like Helin become “in a single bound” model politicians and examples to the rest of the community.

The PS could stand for PerusSuperman. Look up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s PerusSuperman!

 

Risto Helin: The PS says it’s ok to hang around neo-Nazi groups

Posted on March 30, 2013 by Migrant Tales

As Migrant Tales correctly predicted on Thursday, Vaasa Perussuomalaiset (PS) councilman Risto Helin got away with a warning from the party for giving a clock with Hitler to an anti-immigration neo-Nazi group, reports tabloid Ilta-Sanomat.

The PS sends a loud and clear message with this decision: It’s ok to hang around neo-Nazi groups and even have the same racist ideas as them concerning Jews, undesirable minorities, real and imagined enemies of the Third Reich.

What the Nazis did was ok.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-30 kello 16.40.19

Vaasa city councilman Risto Helin posing with his neo-Nazi “blood and honor” t-shirt during the municipal elections.  Source: Facebook.

Helin was quoted as saying that he was happy with the decision from the party leadership.

“I have given as a present said clock but it happened way before I was a candidate for councilman,” he said. “You can give Nazi clocks to Nazis and to Stalinists Stalin clocks.”

What kind of message does the PS send when it approves members who openly support neo-Nazi groups? The answer is simple: We don’t have an issue with Nazism and it’s perfectly fine to give Nazi clocks by PS members to neo-Nazi clubs.

Considering the terror and mass-murder that Hitler’s Germany brought on Europe between 1933 and 1945, the decision by the PS to do nothing to Helin is like a slap in the face to the victims that perished under Nazism.

 

Jane Elliott’s blue eyes and brown eyes experiment in racism

Posted on March 30, 2013 by Migrant Tales

After the death of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, an elementary school teacher called Jane Elliott of Riceville, Iowa, carried out an experiment on her third-graders to demonstrate the destructive force that racism and discrimination unleashes. Since the small farming community had no blacks, she divided her students according to the color of their eyes.

brown-eyes_blue-eyes1

Source: Chantellemorrison’s blog.

One of the matters that surprised her was how rapidly each group learned to adapt to their roles of discriminator and discriminated.

The point is pretty clear: Racism exists because it gives you power to control other groups. Those groups that weiled power over other minorities use a destructive and immoral social construct like racism to ensure that your victims conform and “play the game.”

Elliot said at the end of the three-part video on her blue- versus brown-eyed experiment that if you aren’t a racist by the time you graduate from high school, you failed social sciences.

If we put Elliott’s experiment in a Finnish perspective, it’s pretty clear to see where the problem lies: Denial. Add to the latter the social construct of Finnish national identity and it becomes clear that what we have learned about who we are is in conflict with living with other groups that are different from us. This is one of the biggest challenges facing Finland and which will eventually revolutionize the way we see ourselves as a country in this century.

Elliot blames racism and discrimination on ignorance and because we’re conditioned to the myth of white superiority.

She concludes: “I don’t care what people think. Did I make a positive difference in the area of racism and that’s what I want to do.”

Steverp’s blog: It’s official….. Helsinki, here I come!

Posted on March 30, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Comment: For those who have followed Stephen’s life know that he’s been longing to live near his child in Finland. This will now happen. We wish you the best of luck in your new life in Helsinki. 

Here are Stephen’s previous blog entries published on Migrant Tales:

Where I need to be (hopefully with some help from some Finns!)

Immigrant employment: Pessi Ilmari, job hunting & a possible future in Finland

____________

By Steverp

The decision was taken over a month ago & the flight was booked a number of weeks ago …… but yesterday it became ‘official’.

Yesterday I handed my notice in at work, so I officially now have less than 5 weeks at work & exactly 5 weeks (at the time of writing) until I land in Helsinki to start a new chapter in my nomad-like life!

Over the last couple of weeks there have been many a sleepless night, & I’m sure there are many more to come. The worry about the lack of money, finding somewhere to live, looking for a job, the thought of having to get myself in countless places once in Finland so that I can obtain a residency permit & then be able to claim benefits etc should I need to – which, looking at the current job situation, is quite likely.

But, despite the worries & challenges, it feels like a weight off my shoulders. Things will no doubt be tough for the first couple of months & maybe even beyond that, but the thought of being near Pessi & actually seeing him properly every week completely outweighs all the possible pitfalls.

Over the last few weeks I’ve ramped up my search for a new job & somewhere to live. Finland is still a place where contacts & networking mean an awful lot, so I’ve made a conscious effort to get in touch with certain people in certain companies/industries for work, as well as opening lines of engagement through various blogs, forums & groups in the hope I can find somewhere decent & cheap to live initially. The joys of the internet have led me to meet some great people who have offered advice, information, help & even a helping hand when it comes to somewhere to stay – all very much appreciated! The ex has also been a great help – offering information, answering random questions, being a translation service & also agreeing to pick me up from the airport on my arrival & letting me stay at hers on the the first night – all of which will make my arrival that much easier & more enjoyable. I’d probably be lost, or at least panicing & stressing more, if she wasn’t being so helpful.

The moving preparation began last week. I moved out of my place & have come back to my mum’s place for the remainder of my time in the UK. Money is one of my main worries, so doing this saves me a good couple of months rent, so although it can at times be a bit of a struggle, it’s well worth it. Over the last week I’ve spent time in the loft getting rid of all the stuff I’ve been saving in case I ever needed it again. The de-cluttering process is liberating in some ways – getting rid of all the crap you hold on to for no real reason. Huge amounts have been given away to people & charity & binned. I’ve replaced a few key things & tried to down-size where possible. My life now consists of a suitcase & a holdall that I’m living out of, & a few more things that are still in the loft & that I may see again one day once settled etc in Finland.

So, for now, back to the loft to shift another box & then back to what seems like endless emails to companies & people to sort out somewhere to live & keep plugging away at trying to find that elusive job that I so desperately need/want!

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

What separates our counterjihadists from jihadists?

Posted on March 29, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Anjem Choudary took part in a talk in Helsinki Thursday about freeing Muslim hostages. The Muslim cleric has said a lot of controversial things in the past like Islam will overrun Europe and that Prime Minister David Cameron and U.S. President Barack Obama should be killed. He’s even predicted that a “tsunami” of Muslim immigrants will sweep Europe. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-29 kello 19.32.35

While the national media gave ample space to the cleric’s visit, Finland’s notorious Islamphobists like Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP James Hirvisaari, Olli Immonen and Juho Eerola were eerily quiet and didn’t invest a word on their Facebook pages to Anjem Choudary.

Even PS MP Jussi Halla-aho, who was sentenced for ethnic agitation, was silent about the visit.

The only Islamophobic association that tried without luck to stir up some controversy was the Finnish Defense League. Two posts with a few “likes” and the usual nutcase comments was all that they could muster.

It’s easy to figure out why Finland’s counterjihadists are so quiet: Asking the authorities to ban Anjem Choundary from attending the talk would be synonymous to shooting themselves in the foot. If they [PS] can spread hate speech and intolerance why can’t others?

Fortunately we have strong democratic institutions in Europe that are under siege not by people like Anjem Choundary necessarily but by counterjihadist groups like Suomen Sisu, Suomalaisuuden liitto and the PS, which has given a platform to people to spread intolerance.

Who is the biggest terrorist to have struck recent times at the heart of our European democratic societies? His name is Anders Breivik, a white Norwegian who admired the Islamophobia of the English Defense League, the PS and mentioned Halla-aho in his manifesto before murdering 77 innocent victims.

If we ask Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg what our reaction to intolerance should be after 22/7, he said that the country had become “more tolerant, [and] more careful not to judge people” by ethnic origin.

What unites our counterjihadists from jihadists?

Intolerance.

 

Finland’s and the PS’ three mentors: See No Evil, Hear No Evil and Speak No Evil

Posted on March 29, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The latest scandal in the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party concerning  a councilmen who gave a clock with Hitler and swastikas to a neo-Nazi club in Vaasa, is another worrying example of how low we have stooped as a nation since the April 2011 election. Contrary to what some populist anti-immigration politicians may claim, we are not being threatened from abroad but from our own backyard.   

3904059792_588374e1a3

 See No Evil, Hear No Evil and Speak No Evil are quite popular in Finland these days. Source: Flickr.

Even if Finns speak proudly about the courage they showed during the Winter War (1939-40) when they were vastly outnumbered against the Red Army, some show remarkable cowardice when our society comes under attack from social ills like racism, prejudice and intolerance in general. Finland is not being led by a marshall like Carl Mannerheim, but by three monkey generals: See No Evil, Hear No Evil and Speak No Evil.

Hear No Evil is not only a good buddy of the PS, it’s a close friend of Finland’s political parties, the media and general public. Whenever anyone plays down racism, most likely that person or group has had a chat with Hear No Evil.

The one that should know better but prefers to be quiet is See No Evil. Instead of bringing out our good side and courage, Speak No Evil humbles us into opportunistic silence.  It’s a bit like your executioner who chops your head off. Since your good manners constrain you from speaking your mind, the only thing you can say after they behead you is, “Thank you, thank you!”

The third monkey, See No Evil, is probably the leader of the pack. This character brings out our cowardly behavior.

See No Evil was most likely responsible for Finland’s political earthquake in April 2011, when the PS won its historic election victory.

There were many factors that brought the PS to power. Two important watersheds,however, were Prime Minister Jyrki Katainenn infamous “debating immigrant issues in this country didn’t make you a racist,”  and Social Democratic Party (SDP) Economy Minister Jutta Urpilainen’s  maassa maan tatalla (In Rome do as the Romans do) statement.

Since the National Coalition Party and the Social Democrats feared the rise of the PS would rob them of votes, they decided to flirt with their populism instead.

That was a huge mistake that Finland is paying high price today.

Reading about Hitler and swastika clocks in Vaasa is a part of that political blowback.

The PS shamefully supports neo-Nazism with its silence

Posted on March 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Finland is one of the few countries I know in Europe where you can openly support a neo-Nazi group and Nazism and be elected to city council. The only catch is that you belong to the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party and state that your are neither a racist nor a Nazi like Vaasa city councilman Risto Helin does.

Helin admits on YLE in English, which cites the original article on Image magazine, giving the clock with Hitler to an anti-immigration neo-Nazi group in Vaasa that calls itself Kerho, or The Club.

“I don’t see anything wrong with it,” Helin told Yle’s Swedish-language news on Thursday. “I’m not racist and not a Nazi.”

The Vaasa city councilman got elected in October. One of his campaign stunts was being pictured with a neo-Nazi blood-and-honor t-shirt.

PS MP Maria Tolppanen, who sits on the Vaasa city council, said she was “shocked and disturbed” by the news and would bring the matter up with the party leadership in Vaasa and Helsinki.

Should we hold our breathes?

Even if sensible people shun anything that comes close to Nazism, this appears not to be a problem for the PS leadership. Isn’t Timo Soini a Catholic?

Helin’s Hitler clock shouldn’t surprise us because two PS members’ names were uncovered by hackers in 2011 for applying for membership in Kansalinen Vastarinta, a neo-Nazi association. Both PS members, Ulla Pyysalo, PS MP Juho Eerola’s aide, and Tuomas Okkonen, who got elected to Lumijoki’s town council, are still members of the party.

How is this possible? Because fascism, counterjihadism and neo-Nazism are alive and kicking in the PS.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-28 kello 16.22.46

 

PS councilman Risto Helin’s Hitler clock, which he gave to a neo-Nazi group in Vaasa.

 

 

 

 

If I were a cartoonist: Timo Soini, the mad political chemist

Posted on March 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

If I were a cartoonist is a new series that aims to inspire other readers with artistic talents to depict Finnish politicians as well as other national and international personalities for what they are. Migrant Tales would be more than happy to publish your work. 

Timo Soini: The mad political chemist.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-28 kello 9.51.41

 

Here’s the idea: On April 2011 Perussuomalaiset chairman Timo Soini (the mad chemists above) discovers a winning brew: anti-EU and anti-immigration sentiment. He mixes both brews and, presto: historic election victory. The bigger flask is a brew of anti-immigration and the smaller one of anti-EU sentiment.  Source: Google Images.

Council of Europe: No hate speech movement

Posted on March 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

This campaign, No hate Speech Movement, is long overdue and in great need. It’s a good matter that we are waking up to this menace even if politicians shamelessly play it down. The reason why hate speech exists is because we permit it. In Finland we have politicians who have been sentenced for hate speech. Some of them are Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, Kotka city councilman Freddy Van Wonterghem and others. 

Hate speech has reached such epidemic proportions that their representatives sit in parliament and in city councils throughout the country.

If I were on television with some of these characters, I’d demand an apology for their insults and for promoting hate towards good people who live in this country. Understanding that this will not happen, I’d take the advice of a friend and tell them before leaving the show: “You are ugly and you smell. Look it up on Google.”

Another important way to challenge hate speech is to be part in this important campaign. I’d learn what is hate speech and vow never to remain silent again.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-28 kello 8.32.45

 

Here’s the official video:

 

Growing up in Finland as an immigrant – a personal story!

Posted on March 28, 2013 by Mark

D4R is a regular poster in the comments on Migrant Tales. We are very grateful that he has shared some of his experiences of growing up and dealing with discrimination in Finland. Here is the first part of a long comment he made on one post, which deserves to be read by as many people as possible.

D4R is currently studying in further education and has made huge strides in finding ways to move forward from his difficult experiences, in spite of having had his educational opportunities previously undermined by daily racism.

His idealism is remarkably strong and clear, and his message is one of tolerance and understanding, in spite of the fact that he was often shown neither of these.

He has our deep admiration on MT for his strength of character and his determination to avoid bitterness and to build bridges of understanding.

D4R: Growing up in Finland was one of [the most] challenging things that I have faced during my life time. (excuse my poor English language writings) When I came to Finland I was a small boy; I started school at age of around 8. I have faced hardship in school and outside of school coming from people who were hating my ethnicity.

I have been jumped on and called names by people of different type of ages; they could have been adults or kids, woman or men, it was horrible. I remember at school when we kids were in the class and the teacher wasn’t in the class, kids used to shout at me like you’re a welfare leecher, that I’m a bum, and this was coming from kids who were 8 years old.

At that time I could not understand why were they calling me a bum. No way could they figure that out; these all were things they had heard from their parents; it was stuff that’s being discussed at their homes. All these things deeply affected me mentally and it was taking a toll on me physically. I was getting sick every short period of times, the abuse was continuous at school. I was being bullied almost every single day.

Sometimes when my parents send me to school I just went to the park and spent the rest of school time there alone so I could avoid going to school and facing the abuse I was getting there daily. One day my teacher called us at home and told my parents that I was being absent from school and they held a meeting with my parents, and so we went there to meet the teachers.

In there we discussed about me why was I being absent and why was I not focusing on anything at school. I just can’t understand how come nobody understood my problems; they all blamed me and nobody paid attention to the negative environment I was in at the time. How can you function and concentrate on anything when you’re being taken as a target, you’re being called names every day, when you get jumped on by several people just because of your ethnicity.

Honestly, it was like in the jungle with a pack of animals, no mercy. There were a few kids who were kind to me; I guess their parents were raising them properly, but most of the kids put me through hell. This abuse continued through my teenage years, and every time I made a complaint I was told that they’re going to do something about it but with no results, the kids and teenagers were freely abusing me.

Every year that passed by was getting worse than the previous one, and my grades were degrading to a point where my parents were getting concerned about me; they could figure out what was really happening to me. My personality changed, I become isolated even at home. I was in pain and nobody was there to understand my pain. I used to come home and shut myself in my room. There was nobody that I could talk to, they couldn’t care less at school and my poor parents didn’t know what was wrong in me; even if they knew, what could they do about it? Nothing.

Every morning when I had to go to school I was depressed, I was depressed to go and meet those evil people who just feast on my torture and I had to no option but to stand and take that torture and abuse, and this continued throughout my elementary school.

Now somebody will say, this is the same as school bullying, but no, this is not like school bullying; this is worse than that, especially when you’re being targeted and your spirit detroyed. Again, someone is going to say, why did you come to this country or stay here, but this is easier said than done.

When my parents brought me to this country, they did not know where they were coming to and what will be the environment for their kids. I truly can understand the frustration my parents had and the concern; it wasn’t easy for them either, we were just unlucky to face these things.

I didn’t do well at school because I wasn’t receiving the proper environment; I was in a bad and hostile environment. I can understand what a lot of visible immigrants go through; I don’t know if nowadays the situation is different than in my time, but I want to encourage visible youths to stay strong and talk with their parents at home if they are having similar kinds of problems that I had, because I know it will destroy them as it destroyed me.

It will have an effect on their education, their personalities, basically everything; it will destroy them. I could have done better at school if somebody could have figured out my problems at school and helped me. Finland is a safe country to live for most people but there are some serious problems for visible immigrants.

I strongly believe and hope things will get better in this country for all kinds of people. We’re all human beings; we should treated one another with respect and not degrade and destroy, I guess that’s too much to ask for some people’s human nature, to not destroy other people’s lives.

We all have one life, treat each other as you want them to treat you; if you don’t want people to treat you bad, don’t treat people that way. You wouldn’t want people to call you names and degrade you, so don’t do it to them.

People may look different than you, they may have different skin colour to you, but they have feelings just like you do, they get hurt and offended, please understand that. If you destroy your environment, you’re destroying yourself too. I think we as human beings should increase tolerance and peace in this world not intolerance and hatred, because that leads to violence and nobody is safe then, not you or me.

People who spread separatism, racism, prejudice, intolerance are dangerous people and we shouldn’t allow them to receive power; they don’t serve you or me, they serve themselves. I’ll leave peace to all you and happy Easter day

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