Migrant tales
Menu
  • #MakeRacismHistory “In Your Eyes”
  • About Migrant Tales
  • It’s all about Human Rights
  • Literary
  • Migrant Tales Media Monitoring
  • NoHateFinland.org
  • Tales from Europe
Menu

Sandhu Bhamra: “Who do you think you are?”

Posted on July 26, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Sandhu Bhamra*

That was the title under which three young Canadian authors discussed issues of identity, location and language at the recently concluded Indian Summer Festival in Vancouver.

The three, Anosh Irani, David Chariandy and Gurjinder Basran – from different backgrounds discussed how heritage, culture, memories and language shaped their work.

At the end of the talk, I asked if there was a Canadian identity and if yes, how each defined it? I quite liked what each said, but I didn’t really get a definition.

Not to say they didn’t have anything credible to say, but each defined what being Canadian meant to them. They offered a discourse, a rather brilliant one. The audience engaged and every person who spoke added dimensions to my still unanswered question: “What is Canadian identity?”

“Identity is on a spectrum,” offered a good friend. He said his “visible identity” of South Asian heritage was one end of the spectrum and the “Canadian identity” was the other end. He said growing up in Canada and living the western lifestyle, he considered himself at the other end.

But what is this other end? The opposite end of one’s “visible identity”?

He offered a description of this opposite end: the Anglo identity, which he argued was the “Canadian identity”. But when half of Vancouver and Toronto’s population is headed to be “Visible Minorities”, how is the opposite end Anglo?

Or is there an opposite end?

Or to begin with, can identity be really gauged on a spectrum?

And that too national identity?

In a nation where multiculturalism is a policy?

A nation I willingly chose to make home, where I feel loved and protected, where I can raise this question for a dialogue without the fear of being persecuted or worse, beheaded?

I have no qualms about accepting the Anglo-French heritage of Canada, but I also cannot forget that this heritage was built on Aboriginal land and identity. I cannot argue with, or change history. It is what it is. I use the lens of the past to understand the context of my present.

But to understand the present in the context of future, I have no lens.

So the need for this dialogue.

With you.

About our present.

Our present where “Visible Minorities” are projected to be “Visible Majorities” in a few years.

Our present where Aboriginal youth continue to face challenges.

Our present where the law says there is no official culture but the norm says the Anglo culture is the Canadian culture. Again, I am not rejecting the Anglo (or in common parlance, the White identity) culture, but I am saying it cannot define the core identity of a nation where the “Other” has to wrap him or her around it. For a nation to exist peacefully, the “Anglo”, the “French”, the “Aboriginal and the “Visible Minorities” on the so-called spectrum have to have a common footing – one cannot define the other.

How do we do this? That is my question – to self, to academicians, to politicians, to social scientists, and most importantly, to the society, to you.

The friend I mention above did admit that despite his identification with the Anglo identity, he does get asked, “Where is he really from”? Despite self-identification with the Anglo culture as being Canadian, his visible identity takes precedence. Meaning, he rejects his own identity and doesn’t get accepted for his adopted identity.

And that brings me to the oft-repeated question in parties, in playgrounds and at workplaces, “Where are you really from?” Even if you are a second or third-generation non-Anglo “Canadian”, have never visited the birthplace of your parents, or grandparents, you are always recognized as the “Other” and asked this question.

I myself have given answers like “I am really from Vancouver”, then tried getting specific on the area I live in, but till I answer, “I am from India”, the person at the other end doesn’t budge.

In the early days of my arrival in Canada, I used to be annoyed when asked where I am really from. Three years later, I became a Canadian citizen and gave up my Indian citizenship. When I was still asked the same, I was perplexed. Nine years later, I still am asked the same question.

How do I feel today?

For that, I will ask you to read, “Just another Chinese Christian?” by Mr. Justin Tse.

Mr. Tse, a Ph.D. candidate at UBC, frustrated with people’s expectations from him as a Chinese Christian with roots in Hong Kong brilliantly sums up the sentiments of people like me. The best part? Humour is not lost on him.

It’s even more complicated for people who inherit multiple racial and national identities before moving to Canada. Mr. Jayson Go grew up in the Philippines, is ethnically Chinese, but now a Canadian. I went to UBC with Jayson and have been friends with him since. This is one of his recent Facebook status updates:

“Filipinos always say to me, ‘You’re from the Philippines? But you look Chinese!’ Chinese always say to me, ‘You’re not Chinese. What are you? What kind of name is Go?”

Now envision this scenario: more than fifty per cent of the population torn between these identities.

I foresee chaos.

And that is why we need a dialogue. We cannot sit comfortably in the coziness of our self-created identities and pretend the Canadian landscape is the same as it was 100 or even 35 years ago and expect every newcomer to the country and the successive generations to just adapt to the existing societal norms.

We as a society need to be sensitive to the richness of experience, language, and culture that the newcomers bring with them, keeping the context of past in mind. We need to remember that these newcomers call Canada home, raise families and the children from these homes are/will be torn between identities.

And we cannot ignore the Aboriginal youth who are growing up with their unique sense of identity in the shadow of the residential school past. As one Aboriginal friend remarked to me that his tribal identity is his first sense of identity. So how was he left out from the “Canadian identity”?

It just means one thing: the present norm of Canadian identity, loosely translated: the Anglo identity, doesn’t hold water. Anymore.

If identity is indeed a spectrum; the Canadian identity needs to be the spectrum itself, not one end. Every community, Anglo, French, Aboriginal, “Visible Minorities”, regardless of racial and ethnic origins, language, or religious affiliation needs to be a band of colour that completes the rainbow, not gravitate towards one end, the Anglo end.

*Thanks for reading. I am a Canadian journalist with transnational experience. An award-winning broadcaster, print and web reporter, I have reported across major media platforms – print, television and web for over a decade. I just started this blog in an effort to deconstruct identity in inter-racial, inter-cultural, patriarchal modern world. For detailed biography and portfolio, visit my website.

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

 

 

Category: Sandhu Bhamra

18 thoughts on “Sandhu Bhamra: “Who do you think you are?””

  1. Yossie says:
    July 26, 2012 at 10:49 am

    Reading all the stuff Enrique comes up really makes me feel he is after destroying the finnish identity as we know it. Its always how we should change into fit the immigrants. How about you think about how you want to destroy other people’s indentity?

    Immigrants always have the home country to go back to where their identity is intact. If you dont like the local culture. Go back home! This is the only country for our culture and identity!

    Reply
    1. Sasu says:
      July 26, 2012 at 11:47 am

      Et tainut ymmärtää artikkelin jujua kun puhut noin. Ongelma ei ole että värilliset/näkyvät vähemistöt kieltäisivät tai haluaisivat tuhota uuden kotimaan kulttuurin. Ongelma on siinä dilemassa, että assimiloituminen valta kulttuuriin vaadittava asia, jotta voisi selviytyä mutta sitten kun olet jos assimiloitunut, sinua silti kohdellaan muukalaisena. Jolloin palaamme kysymykseen mikä riittää.

      Ihan vain että emme unohta muita maahanmuuttajia. Myös itä-eurooppalaisten on assimiloiduttava valtakulttuuriin myös. Mutta koska he ovat valkoisia , homma menee helpommin ja se vielä toimii.

      Reply
    2. Yossie says:
      July 26, 2012 at 12:30 pm

      Sasu

      Varsinkin Suomessa, missä maahanmuuttajia ei ole ollut paljoa ennen kuin viimeaikoina, ei ole yllättävää että ihmiset olettavat eri värisen ihmisen (tai ainakin hänen vanhempiensa)olevan kotoisin jostain muualta. Asialle ei voi hirveästi mielestäni tehdä.

      Jos ei pää kestä sitä että sinulta asiasta kysytään, niin voi olla parempi muuttaa muualle, missä oman näköiset ihmiset on enemmistönä. Eivät ihmiset kuitenkaan sitä ilkeyttään tee.

      Parin sukupolven jälkeen voi tulla takaisin, niin oletuksia tehdään varmasti vähemmän.

      Reply
    3. JusticeDemon says:
      July 26, 2012 at 12:34 pm

      Yossie

      You sound like an old fogey.

      Finnish identity has changed since 1970. How can we move back to the world of Kekkonen, Kekkonen, Kekkonen? How many people under 60 would even want to?

      Life is change and people are continually adapting to it. Your grandparents would be horrified at many of the things that you consider normal, whereas you consider them narrow-minded in precisely those respects (why are you not outraged at modern clothing fashions and musical trends?). Similarly it’s a racing certainty that your great grandchildren will be horrified at your narrow-minded views on cultural diversity. Which of these identities is or was truly Finnish?

      Didn’t the Finnish government stop the Sex Pistols from performing in Finland in 1978? How do we then explain that they were allowed to perform essentially the same programme at the Messilä Festival in 1996?

      It seems to me that you should take more care over your own identity and stop trying to dictate anyone else’s. There is nothing especially Finnish about failing to move with the times, nor is the typical Finn an interfering busybody who insists that everyone else must march to his tune.

      Reply
    4. Yossie says:
      July 26, 2012 at 12:56 pm

      JusticeDemon

      What the finnish identity is up to finns to determine. What we want to adapt and what not. It is totally different if we choose to adapt something than having immigrants come here and tell us we should accept their ways as being part of finnish identity.

      Or can I take couple of thousands finns and go to Somalia, drink vodka, have sex in the beach in middle of the day during ramadan and claim we are all somalis and somalis should accept these ways as part of somalian identity?

      Reply
      1. Enrique Tessieri says:
        July 26, 2012 at 1:09 pm

        Yossie, culture doesn’t work the way you think. Nobody “tells” anyone anything. People make lifestyle choices in society, which is ok in Finland. There is no-set-culture-fits-everyone-situation. The key question is mutual acceptance, respect and equal opportunities. In short, tolerance over intolerance.

        Reply
    5. Yossie says:
      July 26, 2012 at 12:59 pm

      Crying out loud! how the hell does the moderation work in this site?`Some things gets stuck in moderation while some gets publihed right away. One comment goes through without any checking and some are stuck waiting for moderation.

      There is no logic in here…

      Reply
    6. Yossie says:
      July 26, 2012 at 1:35 pm

      Enrique

      Make your lifestyle choices but dont tell me to accept them as being finnish or call you a finn when your not.

      Reply
      1. Enrique Tessieri says:
        July 26, 2012 at 2:38 pm

        –Make your lifestyle choices but dont tell me to accept them as being finnish or call you a finn when your not.

        Wow, Yossie, like I’m seeking your approval. NOT.

        Reply
  2. Prometo says:
    July 26, 2012 at 12:43 pm

    Finland and Canada have much in common, in uncanny ways. The Finnish and Swedish speaking populations essentially stole the land from the Sami people, whom have inhabited this land called Finland for many tens of thousands of years. Finnish speakers came from the east and Swedish speakers much, much later came from the west. Now, in the 21st century, people from all over the world I coming here to settle down and make their home here. I think its important that all of Finland’s inhabitants rally around the Finnish language as a natural glue that binds the multicultural reality of Finland together. Finnish, Swedish and Sami speakers communicate already de-facto with one another in Finnish, and the same should be applied for newcomers as well. I believe though that we are still many generations away from Finland resembling a Canada or USA where multicultural and multiracial Canadians and US residents are a reality and no one asks (in polite society) them “Where are they from” implying when are they leaving.

    Reply
  3. JusticeDemon says:
    July 26, 2012 at 1:34 pm

    Yossie

    What the finnish identity is up to finns to determine.

    This is rubbish. Are you Tiwaz in disguise?

    Our individual and collective identities are not engineered or consciously chosen. You still sound like an old busybody trying to dictate somebody else’s way of life while paying no attention to the way in which you acquired your own. Take a look at yourself! Are you a carbon copy of your great grandparents?

    There is, in the first place, no discrete entity that we can call “Finns” for this purpose. There are people who live for varying periods mainly but not exclusively in this corner of Europe, and who also travel widely and pursue an extensive spectrum of interests, encountering a very wide range of influences in the process. The net outcome of this ongoing, living process is what we call culture. It changes from decade to decade, and it is certainly not for you or anyone else to dictate that outcome.

    You may not like it – indeed you may detest it – but Finland is becoming increasingly cosmopolitan, diverse and tolerant. Your great grandchildren will point at your views and laugh.

    Reply
    1. Yossie says:
      July 26, 2012 at 1:49 pm

      Very good JusticeDemon

      We have been influenced by many things yet we have decided only to adapt some of it. The russification the russians tried to do didnt quite succeed did it?

      Also I have not noticed finns have been too keen on adopting the segregation of women and men or veiling the women. Of course while people like you are more than keen to adapt such practices and welcome people that practice them with open arms, some of us are not!

      Hell I have right to say what we should adopt and what not!

      Reply
  4. JusticeDemon says:
    July 26, 2012 at 1:48 pm

    Yossie

    Make your lifestyle choices but dont tell me to accept them as being finnish or call you a finn when your not.

    This eagerness to exclude others is one of the key features of the authoritarian mindset. It doesn’t matter what you accept. You can disapprove as much as you like if that’s what turns your crank, but ultimately you are not the arbiter of Finnishness. I realise that this really burns you up inside, but the plain fact is that your views are hopelessly old fashioned.

    Kekkonen, Kekkonen, Kekkonen…

    Picture a foul-mouthed grumpy old man getting patiently spoon fed by a nurse whose parents or grandparents were born in Somalia: the only meaningful form of human contact that you get since your children left home and your wife left you. This is the world that you are making for yourself. The outcome of spending your entire life systematically rejecting anything that does not match up to your own preconceived notions of what is acceptable.

    Reply
  5. JusticeDemon says:
    July 26, 2012 at 2:24 pm

    Yossie

    We have been influenced by many things yet we have decided only to adapt some of it. The russification the russians tried to do didnt quite succeed did it?

    …

    Hell I have right to say what we should adopt and what not!

    How ironic.

    The Russian influence remains noticeable in many aspects of public administration in Finland, especially when based on the underlying structural assumption that individuals are subjects to be ruled rather than clients to be served.

    This factor also gives a special flavour to authoritarian thinking in Finland. The desire for cultural uniformity and top-down control of individual behaviour patterns is very heavily influenced by the ideals of the Russification programme. Indeed the Finnish national movement was largely conceived as a reaction to that very programme, and inevitably absorbed those ideals.

    Yin and Yang.

    Of course you are free to stamp your feet and yell what you want, but even as you do this for one objective there are a million other changes happening with your tacit consent. Like a train journey, you are free to do the crossword, check out the sports section or roll up your newspaper and use it as a flyswatter, but every time you look outside the view from the window has changed and when you finally do get off the train, then you will be in a place that is very different from your point of embarcation.

    Reply
  6. Jssk says:
    July 26, 2012 at 10:19 pm

    Finland and Canada have much in common, in uncanny ways. The Finnish and Swedish speaking populations essentially stole the land from the Sami people, whom have inhabited this land called Finland for many tens of thousands of years.

    Saami is a baltic-finnic language. The baltic finns entered this land called Finland when the continental ice retreated, Saami inhabitated the north and Finns inhabitates some areas in the south. There was no “land stealing” by finn tribes. Finns and fennoswedes are natives here just like Saami.

    Europeans entered north america and took the land more or less systematically from the natives. So dont try to compare finnish tribes to european colonisers.

    Reply
    1. Enrique Tessieri says:
      July 27, 2012 at 4:09 pm

      Jssk, Saami is a Fenno-Ugric language. To be frank with you, this I-came-first argument really makes me wonder. Sometimes I wonder if these guys are hundreds of years old because they say there were here for x generations.

      This I-came-first is a racist and ethnocentric ploy to exclude others socially.

      Reply
  7. Jssk says:
    July 28, 2012 at 2:14 am

    Jssk, Saami is a Fenno-Ugric language. To be frank with you, this I-came-first argument really makes me wonder. Sometimes I wonder if these guys are hundreds of years old because they say there were here for x generations.

    This I-came-first is a racist and ethnocentric ploy to exclude others socially.

    Well there was a mistake in my post, its actually north finnic, very close to baltic though.

    Theres no point in endless “originality” debate but there is certain factors that make a group of people natives to the area they inhabit.

    Reply
    1. Enrique Tessieri says:
      July 28, 2012 at 9:10 am

      –Theres no point in endless “originality” debate but there is certain factors that make a group of people natives to the area they inhabit.

      Yes, Jssk, and with your thinking, those so-called natives determine when they will accept others. This, in my opinion, is one of the big reasons why integration doesn’t work when you have people who are always stating that they, the so-called natives, have more rights than others. They do that to control those who cannot claim the same thing. On top of that, they accuse them for not adapting enough. It’s a tragedy and scandalous.

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Read more about documentary film
Read more

Recent Posts

  • A promising result about the Perussuomalaiset
  • Reijä Härkönen: Kokoomuksen valtuustoryhmässä Helsingissä on rasisteja
  • It’s the elephant in the room, stupid!
  • The cyanide capsule of the authoritarian ruler
  • (Finland Bridge 1998): Talking to others faraway

Recent Comments

  1. Ahti Tolvanen on Europe is toothless and lost
  2. Ahti Tolvanen on Helsinki Noir: A play reflecting troubled times
  3. JTM on If you went back 200 generations, how many grandparents would you have?
  4. Angel Barrientos on Angel Barrientos is one of the kind beacons of Finland’s Chilean community
  5. Jorge Serendero on Angel Barrientos is one of the kind beacons of Finland’s Chilean community

Archives

  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007

Categories

  • ?? Gia L?c
  • ????? ?????? ????? ???????? ?? ??????
  • ???????
  • @HerraAhmed
  • @mondepasrond
  • @nohatefinland
  • @oula_silver
  • @Varathas
  • A Pakistani family
  • äärioikeisto
  • Abbas Bahmanpour
  • Abdi Muhis
  • Abdirahim Hussein Mohamed
  • Abdirahim Husu Hussein
  • Abdirisak Mahamed
  • About Migrant Tales
  • activism
  • Adam Al-Sawad
  • Adel Abidin
  • Afrofinland
  • Ahmed IJ
  • Ahti Tolvanen
  • Aino Pennanen
  • Aisha Maniar
  • Alan Ali
  • Alan Anstead
  • Alejandro Díaz Ortiz
  • Alekey Bulavsev
  • Aleksander Hemon
  • Aleksanterinliitto
  • Aleksanterinliitto ry
  • Aleksanterinliitto ry:n hallitus
  • Alex Alex
  • Alex Mckie
  • Alexander Nix
  • Alexandra Ayse Albayrak
  • Alexis Neuberg
  • Ali Asaad Hasan Alzuhairi
  • Ali Hossein Mir Ali
  • Ali Rashid
  • Ali Sagal Abdikarim
  • Alina Tsui
  • Aline Müller
  • All categories
  • Aman Heidari
  • Amiirah Salleh-Hoddin & Jana Turk
  • Amin A. Alem
  • Amir Zuhairi
  • Amkelwa Mbekeni
  • Ana María Gutiérrez Sorainen
  • Anachoma
  • Anders Adlecreutz
  • Angeliina Koskinen
  • Anna De Mutiis
  • Anna María Gutiérrez Sorainen
  • Anna-Kaisa Kuusisto ja Jaakko Tuominen
  • Annastiina Kallius
  • Anneli Juise Friman Lindeman
  • Announcement
  • Anonymous
  • Antero Leitzinger
  • anti-black racism
  • Anti-Hate Crime Organisation Finland
  • Anudari Boldbaatar
  • Aspergers Syndrome
  • Asylum Corner
  • Asylum seeker 406
  • Athena Griffin and Joe Feagin
  • Autism
  • Avaaz.org
  • Awale Olad
  • Ayan Said Mohamed
  • AYY
  • Barachiel
  • Bashy Quraishy
  • Beatrice Kabutakapua
  • Beri Jamal
  • Beri Jamal and Enrique Tessieri
  • Bertolt Brecht
  • Boiata
  • Boodi Kabbani
  • Bruno Gronow
  • Camtu Suhonen
  • Carmen Pekkarinen
  • Çelen Oben and Sheila Riikonen
  • Chiara Costa-Virtanen
  • Chiara Costa-Virtanen
  • Chiara Sorbello
  • Christian Thibault
  • Christopher Wylie
  • Clara Dublanc
  • Dana
  • Daniel Malpica
  • Danilo Canguçu
  • David Papineau
  • David Schneider
  • Dexter He
  • Don Flynn
  • Dr Masoud Kamali
  • Dr. Faith Mkwesha
  • Dr. Theodoros Fouskas
  • Edna Chun
  • Eeva Kilpi
  • Emanuela Susheela
  • En castellano
  • ENAR
  • Enrique
  • Enrique Tessieri
  • Enrique Tessieri & Raghad Mchawh
  • Enrique Tessieri & Yahya Rouissi
  • Enrique Tessieri and Muhammed Shire
  • Enrique Tessieri and Sira Moksi
  • Enrique Tessieri and Tom Vandenbosch
  • Enrique Tessieri and Wael Che
  • Enrique Tessieri and Yahya Rouissi
  • Enrique Tessieri and Zimema Mhone
  • Epäluottamusmies
  • EU
  • Europe
  • European Islamophobia Report
  • European Islamophobia Report 2019,
  • European Union
  • Eve Kyntäjä
  • Facebook
  • Fadumo Dayib
  • Faisa Kahiye
  • Farhad Manjoo
  • Fasismi
  • Finland
  • Fizza Qureshi
  • Flyktingar och asyl
  • Foreign Student
  • Fozia Mir-Ali
  • Frances Webber
  • Frida Selim
  • Gareth Rice
  • Ghyslain Vedeaux
  • Global Art Point
  • Great Replacement
  • Habiba Ali
  • Hami Bahadori
  • Hami Bahdori
  • Hamid
  • Hamid Alsaameere
  • Hamid Bahdori
  • Handshake
  • Harmit Athwal
  • Hassan Abdi Ali
  • Hassan Muhumud
  • Heikki Huttunen
  • Heikki Wilenius
  • Helsingin Sanomat
  • Henning van der Hoeven
  • Henrika Mälmsröm
  • Hser Hser
  • Hser Hser ja Mustafa Isman
  • Husein Muhammed
  • Hussain Kazemian
  • Hussain Kazmenian
  • Ibrahim Khan
  • Ida
  • Ignacio Pérez Pérez
  • Iise Ali Hassan
  • Ilari Kaila & Tuomas Kaila
  • Imam Ka
  • inside-an-airport
  • Institute of Race Relations
  • Iraqi asylum seeker
  • IRR European News Team
  • IRR News Team
  • Islamic Society of Norhern FInland
  • Islamic Society of Northern Finland
  • Islamophobia
  • Jacobinmag.com
  • Jallow Momodou
  • Jan Holmberg
  • Jane Elliott
  • Jani Mäkelä
  • Jari Luoto
  • Jegor Nazarov
  • Jenni Stammeier
  • Jenny Bourne
  • Jessie Daniels
  • Joe Davidow
  • Johannes Koski
  • John D. Foster
  • John Grayson
  • John Marriott
  • Jon Burnett
  • Jorma Härkönen
  • Jos Schuurmans
  • José León Toro Mejías
  • Josue Tumayine
  • Jouni Karnasaari
  • Juan Camilo
  • Jukka Eräkare
  • Julian Abagond
  • Julie Pascoet
  • Jussi Halla-aho
  • Jussi Hallla-aho
  • Jussi Jalonen
  • JusticeDemon
  • Kadar Gelle
  • Kaksoiskansalaisuus
  • Kansainvälinen Mikkeli
  • Kansainvälinen Mikkeli ry
  • Katherine Tonkiss
  • Kati Lepistö
  • Kati van der Hoeven-Lepistö
  • Katie Bell
  • Kättely
  • Kerstin Ögård
  • Keshia Fredua-Mensah & Jamie Schearer
  • Khadidiatou Sylla
  • Khadra Abdirazak Sugulle
  • Kiihotus kansanryhmää vastaan
  • Kirsi Crowley
  • Koko Hubara
  • Kristiina Toivikko
  • Kubra Amini
  • KuRI
  • La Colectiva
  • La incitación al odio
  • Laura Huhtasaari
  • Lauri Finér
  • Leif Hagert
  • Léo Custódio
  • Leo Honka
  • Leontios Christodoulou
  • Lessie Branch
  • Lex Gaudius
  • Leyes de Finlandia
  • Liikkukaa!
  • Linda Hyökki
  • Liz Fekete
  • M. Blanc
  • Maarit Snellman
  • Mahad Sheikh Musse
  • Maija Vilkkumaa
  • Malmin Kebab Pizzeria Port Arthur
  • Marcell Lorincz
  • Mari Aaltola
  • María Paz López
  • Maria Rittis Ikola
  • Maria Tjader
  • Marja-Liisa Tolvanen
  • Mark
  • Markku Heikkinen
  • Marshall Niles
  • Martin Al-Laji
  • Maryan Siyad
  • Matt Carr
  • Mauricio Farah Gebara
  • Media Monitoring Group of Finland
  • Micah J. Christian
  • Michael McEachrane
  • Michele Levoy
  • Michelle Kaila
  • Migrant Tales
  • Migrant Tales Literary
  • Migrantes News
  • Migrants' Rights Network
  • MigriLeaks
  • Mikko Kapanen
  • Miriam Attias and Camila Haavisto
  • Mohamed Adan
  • Mohammad Javid
  • Mohammad M.
  • Monikulttuurisuus
  • Monisha Bhatia and Victoria Canning
  • Mor Ndiaye
  • Muh'ed
  • Muhamed Abdimajed Murshid
  • Muhammed Shire
  • Muhammed Shire and Enrique Tessieri
  • Muhis Azizi
  • Musimenta Dansila
  • Muslimiviha
  • Musulmanes
  • Namir al-Azzawi
  • Natsismi
  • Neurodiversity
  • New Women Connectors
  • Nils Muižnieks
  • No Labels No Walls
  • Noel Dandes
  • Nuor Dawood
  • Omar Khan
  • Otavanmedia
  • Oula Silvennoinen
  • Paco Diop
  • Pakistani family
  • Pentti Stranius
  • Perussuomalaiset
  • perustuslaki
  • Petra Laiti
  • Petri Cederlöf
  • Pia Grochowski
  • Podcast-lukija Bea Bergholm
  • Pohjois – Suomen Islamilainen Yhdyskunta
  • Pohjois Suomen Islamilainen Yhyskunta
  • Polina Kopylova
  • Race Files
  • racism
  • Racism Review
  • Raghad Mchawh
  • Ranska
  • Rashid H. and Migrant Tales
  • Rasismi
  • Raul Perez
  • Rebecka Holm
  • Reem Abu-Hayyeh
  • Refugees
  • Reija Härkönen
  • Remiel
  • Reza Nasri
  • Richard Gresswell
  • Riikka Purra
  • Risto Laakkonen
  • Rita Chahda
  • Ritva Kondi
  • Robito Ibrahim
  • Roble Bashir
  • Rockhaya Sylla
  • Rodolfo Walsh
  • Roger Casale
  • Rostam Atai
  • Roxana Crisólogo Correa
  • Ruth Grove-White
  • Ruth Waweru-Folabit
  • S-worldview
  • Sadio Ali Nuur
  • Sandhu Bhamra
  • Sara de Jong
  • Sarah Crowther
  • Sari Alhariri
  • Sarkawt Khalil
  • Sasu
  • Scot Nakagawa
  • Shabana Ahmadzai
  • Shada Islam
  • Sharon Chang blogs
  • Shenita Ann McLean
  • Shirlene Green Newball
  • Sini Savolainen
  • Sira Moksi
  • Sonia K.
  • Sonia Maria Koo
  • Steverp
  • Stop Deportations
  • Suldaan Said Ahmed
  • Suomen mediaseurantakollektiivi
  • Suomen Muslimifoorumi ry
  • Suomen viharikosvastainen yhdistys
  • Suomen viharikosvastainen yhdistys ry
  • Suomi
  • Supermen
  • Susannah
  • Suva
  • Syrjintä
  • Talous
  • Tapio Tuomala
  • Taw Reh
  • Teivo Teivainen
  • The Daily Show
  • The Heino
  • The Supermen
  • Thomas Elfgren
  • Thulfiqar Abdulkarim
  • Tim McGettigan
  • Tino Singh
  • Tito Moustafa Sliem
  • Tobias Hübinette and L. Janelle Dance
  • Transport
  • Trica Danielle Keaton
  • Trilce Garcia
  • Trish Pääkkönen
  • Trish Pääkkönen and Enrique Tessieri
  • Tuulia Reponen
  • Uncategorized
  • UNITED
  • University of Eastern Finland
  • Uyi Osazee
  • Väkivalta
  • Venla-Sofia Saariaho
  • Vieraskynä
  • W. Che
  • W. Che an Enrique Tessieri
  • Wael Ch.
  • Wan Wei
  • Women for Refugee Women
  • Xaan Kaafi Maxamed Xalane
  • Xassan Kaafi Maxamed Xalane
  • Xassan-Kaafi Mohamed Halane & Enrique Tessieri
  • Yahya Rouissi
  • Yasmin Yusuf
  • Yassen Ghaleb
  • Yle Puhe
  • Yve Shepherd
  • Zahra Khavari
  • Zaker
  • Zamzam Ahmed Ali
  • Zeinab Amini ja Soheila Khavari
  • Zimema Mahone and Enrique Tessieri
  • Zimema Mhone
  • Zoila Forss Crespo Moreyra
  • ZT
  • Zulma Sierra
  • Zuzeeko Tegha Abeng
© 2025 Migrant tales | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme