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Category: Enrique

Foreign train cleaner violently attacked in the Kainuu region of Finland

Posted on March 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A black train cleaner working for VR, the state-owned railways company, was violently attacked on Tuesday by two men in the city of Kajaani, located in the region of Kainuu, according to Iltalehti. The wounds the attackers inflicted on the man are so serious that he will be operated. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-8 kello 21.58.22

Iltalehti repors that the wife of the victim told the tabloid that her husband was attacked on Tuesday at 11:30pm. According to her, her thirty-year-old husband took the trash out when two men surrounded  him. The black man thought that the two men were asking for directions but that is when they started to insult him in a racist manner.

Two Finnish suspects were detained by the police but released. The police is now looking for two foreigners.

Migrant Tales will report more on what happened when it gets more information from its own sources.

 

Is Finland in the anti-racism farm leagues?

Posted on March 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

On a recent Migrant Tales blog entry we wrote about racist harassment and bullying at schools. For some parents, the problem is so serious at some schools that the only solution is to move to another city like Helsinki, where there are more visible minorities and immigrants.

logoSource: The Speak Out project.

Why are we still in the anti-racism farm league if we have to tools, resources  and competence to do much better?

The answer may not please everyone: Our prejudices are one factor holding back our full potential to challenge a social ill like racism. This is understandable considering that racism doesn’t affect us directly since we are white.

In many respects, our attitude towards intolerance is like our view of alcohol in our society. Alcohol is bad but we accept and even tolerate the social problems it brings with it.

Why should we be worried about racism and prejudice?

Because these social ills are contradictions that question the very values that our successful society is based on. Why do we want to return to a period when people in Finland were treated with scorn thirty to fifty years ago due to their social class? Those people who are treated in such a way are immigrants and visible minorities.

We must do better in Finland when it comes to challenging intolerance especially at our schools, which should be places where inclusion, acceptance and respect are promoted, not discouraged.

A high school physical education teacher back in Hollywood, California, told us a long time ago that when we compete we must strive for first place. If we aim for second or third place, we’ll most likely come in fourth or fifth, according to him. “Go for first place because most likely you’ll end up in second or third place,” he said.

Our approach to intolerance and racism should be the same: We should not only strive to neutralize it, but nip it in the bud.  Let’s go for gold when challenging intolerance.

If we don’t aim for zero tolerance, we permit intolerance to live another day at our schools and in our society.

Let’s launch a campaign with the following slogans at our schools: Say no to racist harassment and bullying. 

Migrant Tales (October 1, 2011): Multicultural Finns – “Accepting yourself is the first step”

Posted on March 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. 
Martin Luther King, Jr.

A guest speaker gave on Friday her recipe on how young adolescents from different countries living in Finland could build a space for themselves in society. Two matters struck me from the twenty-one-year-old young woman’s talk: The first and foremost matter is acceptance of oneself and to reach out — if possible — to those who loathe you.

382245_4888595286585_544781931_n

Thank you Nura Farah for the heads-up.

The woman, whose father is a Black USAmerican and mother Finnish, kept the class mesmerized by these two key points.

She said that in Finland and the United States she was always seen as a foreigner. “In Finland people asked me where I was from and in the United States people thought I was from Finland,” she said. “One day it dawned on me that instead of looking for people’s acceptance, I had to first accept myself. It happened on a chat site when I read a comment by a black woman.”

Some may claim that being white in Finland is easier than being a visible minority. Since visible minorities cannot hide from the sometimes hostile stares of society, visible minorities can. Hiding, even denying, one’s identity can, however, have devastating impact on one’s self-esteem.

If one would want to write a shocking book about racism in Finland, all they’d have to do is find Russians who attended elementary and middle school during the 1990s. Apart from being ridiculed at school for having a Russian background by the classmates, this happened with the silent approval of the teachers.

Even if my mother is Finnish, I am happy that I did all my schooling in the United States from grade two. How much ridicule would I have had to take in the Finnish school system in the 1960s and 1970s? At least my otherness was acknowledged, even respected, in the United States.

How do Finnish schools treat cultural diversity?

Posted on March 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

In theory, the answer is straightforward: Finnish schools should respect cultural diversity but a lot depends on the school and the principle.  If we compare how elementary and middle schools treated visible minority students in the 1990s, we hope that matters have improved since then.  But have they? 

races of finland

Cultural diversity in Finland up to the 1970s divided Finns in some history books into the “Nordic and Eastern Baltic races.” This picture was taken from an elementary school book published in 1941.

If our expectations are on the right path and we have the right values as a society to make cultural diversity work, what then is the challenge? The answer is the following: If we don’t have yet as a society a big picture of what immigrants and their children are doing here, it means that we are still walking blindly towards the future with a seeing-eye dog called Chance.

Migrant Tales has documented numerous cases of racist harassment and bullying at Finnish schools from people like Ida, Micha and Abdulah.

Abdulah was seven when he moved from Somalia to Finland in the early 1990s and attended elementary school for the first time in Hyvinkää, a city located near Helsinki.

“I’ve been bullied, called names like the n-word, insulted, kicked and hit hard at school,” he said. “The only way to survive was to be quiet and roll with the punches. There was nothing else I could do because the teachers never believed me. They were always on the side of the white students.”

Not only is the hostile behavior they received from their classmates at school shameful, but more worrying has been the silence of some of the teachers.

I know of one student who, like a gay person coming out of the closet, proudly accepted as a young adult her Russian background. According to her, she was bullied so much at school because of her background, that her former classmates still harass her at her hometown of North Karelia. She has a better weapon against this type of hostility: She is today proud of her Russian and Finnish heritage.

If somebody would like to expose the ogre of racism in this country, I am certain you’d find it in the tales of those immigrant children who attended Finnish school  in the 1990s and even today.

It saddened me to hear that the mother of a black child from my hometown of Mikkeli, moved to Helsinki because of the racist bullying her child got at elementary school.

What did his classmates say? Every insult in the book to reinforce that he was different from his classmates and to destroy his self-esteem.

Part of the global fame that the Finnish educational system has enjoyed in recent years comes from the high scores achieved on the PISA exam, which focuses on young people’s ability to use their reading, mathematics and science skills.  How would Finnish schools fare if they had to resolve and adapt to diversity at school?

Would their scores be as impressive if they had to resolve and adapt to cultural diversity at school?

The Finnish National Board of Education’s core curriculum for primary and pre-primary education is a reflection of our noble values as a Nordic state. The existing curriculum, which was published in 2004, states the following: “The values and aims of the curriculum hinge on human rights, social equality, democracy, biodiversity, maintaining environmental sustainability as well as the acceptance of multiculturalism.“

It is incredible but pupils who aren’t your typical white Finn, even though they were born or have lived most of their lives in this country, are called at schools students with immigrant backgrounds, or maahanmuuttajataustainen.  The interesting question to ask is why this label, which in my opinion promotes social inequality, is used in the first place if many of these children are Finns with different ethnic backgrounds.

If Finland has the laws and the resources to build a successful culturally diverse society in this century, what are the challenges we face?

The biggest one are our prejudices and the tools we use to confront them.

How can we integrate people into our society if we are rejecting them with our prejudices?

Thus the laws and what happens on the ground at school reveal our expectations and reality concerning cultural diversity.

The fact that we still hear dear little about the racist bullying and harassment at Finnish schools reveals a wider problem we haven’t yet tackled as a society.

Haglund continues to challenge Soini on his broken campaign promises on racism

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The rift between Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman Timo Soini and Carl Haglund, head of the Swedish People’s Party, reveals an ongoing David and Goliath duel where Soini is showing his true autocratic colors. Haglund challenged Soini last week to an open debate on racism after the PS leader was grilled on HARDtalk about this festering issue.   

Soini said in 2009 that he would sack any member from the party, especially an MP, if they were convicted for ethnic agitation.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-5 kello 23.05.46

As a result of Haglund’s challenge, Soini has refused to sit at the same table with him never mind have a debate about racism, according to Helsingin Sanomat. The PS leader even refuses to answer questions from journalists about the matter.

“He made a clear campaign promise, which he hasn’t kept,” Haglund was quoted as saying on Helsingin Sanomat. “After that he hasn’t accepted to comment about the criticism concerning his broken campaign promise but only repeated [in public] that he’s not a racist.”

Haglund, who is defense minister as well, said that the reason why the bigger parties haven’t challenged Soini on his broken campaign promise and racism  is because they fear the PS will continue to eat away at their support.

Migrant Tales asked the same question and gave roughly the same answer as Haglund on a March 3 blog entry.

We responded:  “The answer [why the big parties are so silent] is pretty obvious. There are two answers to this question: the biggest parties are too afraid to do so and/or silently agree with many of the populist policies of the PS.” The silence of the biggest parties has not undermined the PS’ popularity but helped it grow.

Thanks to the PS and its leader Soini, we have today given a political voice to a record number of racists, Islamophobes, immigrantphobes, isolationists, anti-EU supporters, male chauvinists, homophobes, neo-Nazis and Holocaust deniers. Certainly that’s something to be worried about if you are attempting to build a society based on acceptance and harmony.

Is this is the brand of “Christianity” that Soini wants to promote in Finland?   We certainly hope it isn’t but that’s what it looks like.

Migrant Tales raises its hat once again to Haglund for pressing Soini for some answers on his broken election promises.

 

 

 

Say no to stereotypes because they are the fuel that myths and prejudice feed on

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

“Stereotypes have some truth to them” has some truth to it but not in the way people think. That truth is not about the stereotyped but the stereotyper.

Julian Abagond

The quote by Abagond not only exposes the stereotyper for what he or she is, but how racist myths and  views of other groups are maintained. In a country like Finland, which has had few immigrants in the past, it’s easy to understand why  stereotypes have flourished: nobody challenges them never mind the victim. 

STEREOTYPE3

In Finland I could say: “I’m Finnish, I don’t like sauna, I’m against going to the countryside and I hate stereotypes. Source: http://iesutebo2ing.blogspot.fi/2012/10/stereotypes.html

It’s a bit like if all of your workmates were men and your view of women was sexist, or based on stereotypes. Making jokes about women to reinforce your and the group’s chauvinism is possible as long as there aren’t any women sitting at the same table.

The same goes for gays who haven’t come out of the closet yet. People may make a homophobic comment or joke as long as the coast is clear.

The same applies to immigrants and other minorities. As long as there aren’t any of these people around, it may encourage some to make a racist joke or reinforce one’s myths with the help of  a stereotype.

I’ve been in too many situations where racist and homophobic jokes have been made. At first I didn’t laugh but now I speak out against them. I  say politely that such a comment is inappropriate or that you cannot generalize about people in such a way.

Whenever we generalize about a group with the help of stereotypes, we spoon-feed and help racism grow. Those who generalize, and thereby reveal their prejudice, may feel emboldened to do so because there aren’t any immigrants or minorities nearby.

Put one immigrant into the mix and the situation changes.

Thus the best way to rob racism of its precious air comprised of stereotypes and generalizations, is to deny its residence where you are.

I’ve been at meetings where people have generalized about other ethnic groups in a rude and denigrating fashion.

What to do?

Say politely but firmly: “You cannot generalize that way. People in the nineteenth century spoke that way about other groups.”

Result: You have denied a stereotype its space and its ability to survive another day.

Holocaust toll was much higher than believed – what will the deniers and Counterjihadists now say?

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Don’t look for intolerance in complex and distant places because it sits and hides right under our noses.

A story on the Huffington Post, reveals that researchers from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum found over 40,000 Nazi death camps and ghettos that existed during Adolf Hitler’s reign of terror between 1933 and 1945. The total is much higher than previously believed, reports The New York Times.

Even if Counterjihadists claim to be pro-Israel, that is only lip service to hide their intolerance for diversity. If they ever got rid of the Muslims from Europe like their modern “final solution,” their next target would most likely be the Jews.

While the terror that the Nazi regime sowed is clear to most sensible people and the proof is out there in ever-greater quantities, there are some who are still in denial about the horrors of fascism and the Holocaust. Those who play down such atrocities committed against the Jews, Roma and other minorities in World War 2, can be found in parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) of Finland.

One of the matters that has always struck me about Counterjihadists, Holocaust deniers, populist right-wing radicals and anti-immigration politicians, is how they believe that history can be rewritten and forgotten to suit their opinionated ignorance and hatred.

Their denials are the brush that’s supposed to whitewash the truth.

Let’s look at a few of the many PS politicians what they think about fascism and the Holocaust so we don’t forget who they are.

A politician who made his questionable political career on spreading racism and hatred is PS MP Jussi Halla-aho.

What did he say?

  • “It’s quite justifiable to claim that the Nuremberg trials are a farce. Their guilt was decided beforehand and the convictions were carried out for absurd reasons.”
  • “Retroactively opposing the Holocaust is nicer and easier than getting involved in solving present-day problems. It is nice to accuse the Germans because it’s what everyone does. Armenians are irrelevant because Armenians don’t own Hollywood and the American media.”*

Halla-aho was convicted in June 2012 by the Supreme Court for ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion.

PS Kotka councilman Freddy Van Wonterghem, who claimed in May 2011 on Iltalehti that even though excesses happened during World War II, the Holocaust was an “exaggerated” fabrication by the former Soviet Union.

An appeals court upheld in February Van Wonterghem’s ethnic agitation conviction.

What did Van Wonterghem write? He said it was ok if Saudis kill a Muslim woman because that person would not give birth to anymore Muslims.

On a Migrant Tales blog entry on Uusi Suomi, Van Wonterghem had no regrets about what he wrote.

And then there’s a long list of others who are dazzled by far right ideology and who don’t hide their admiration for fascism.

PS MP Juho Eerola’s far-right and anti-immigration views are well-known. He once wrote in a blog entry that he liked Italian fascist Benito Mussolini’s economic system because there was full employment.

His aide, Ulla Pyysalo, applied for membership in the neo-Nazi Kansalinen Vastarinta.

Eerola didn’t want Pyysalo to resign. He said he’d be more worried if she’d apply for membership in a far-left group.

PS MP Jussi Niinstö, who chairs the defense committee, showed his political colors in the fall of 2011  when he quoted in parliament Nazi playwright Hans Johst’s Schlageter, “Wenn ich Kultur höre … entsichere ich meinen Browning” (“Whenever I hear of culture… I release the safety-catch of my Browning”).

Niinstö substituted the word “culture” in Johst’s play for parliamentarism.

Heidi Kuittinen is a PS politician from Kirkkonummi, located near Helsinki. She is another Holocaust denier: “Hitler’s mother’s father was apparently related to the Rothschilds. The six million dead have been proven to be a hoax anyway. The amount of Jews in Europe before and after the war just doesn’t match with the numbers of the supposed holocaust.”’*

Occasionally the PS shows its romanticism of Nazism as a group. The PS of the western Finnish city of Pori launched their municipal election campaign with a former Nazi catch phrase: “One city – one leader.”

The Nazi motto was: Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer (One People, One Nation, One Leader).

Here’s what a former PS member, Atte Pulli, was quoted as saying recently: “SIEG HAIL! …Oops, I slipped. I’m drunk.”*

And another one by Amon Rautiainen, a Kotka city councilman: “People are too uptight with Nazism, if someone has a Totenkopf on a shirt or somebody questions the amount of people killed at concentration camps, you’re immediately branded with Hitler.”*

Rautiainen is being investigated  by the police for suggesting that Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen and Economy Minister Jutta Urpilainen should be killed and Muslims boiled alive, according to YLE in English.

In the face of playing down Nazism, fascism, the Holocaust and, of course, racism, it’s important that we the voters do not forget who these PS politicians are and what they really stand for behind their populist sound bites.

* Original source: truefinns.tumblr.com

Finnish police find list of hundreds of “enemies” at neo-Nazi’s home

Posted on March 4, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The Finnish police, who are investigating neo-Nazi Kansalinen Vastarinta (KV) activists for storming a book event on the far right in Jyväskylä in late-January, have found over 300 photos and personal information of “enemies” on one of the suspect’s memory stick, according to the police. 

Writes YLE in English: “The [memory] stick contained details about the religious and political convictions of people he regarded as political enemies. The information was kept under different categories, including ‘right-wing’, ‘left-wing’, ‘Jews’, ‘race traitors’ and ‘elite clubs.’”

The illegal list of people , which included Jews, was reported in the Israeli media, according to JTA.

The KV openly spreads anti-Semitism by glorifying National Socialism, the political ideology of Adolf Hitler’s Germany that reigned terror between 1933 and 1945.

JTA reports that Finnish Jews, which number about 2,000, have been told to exercise caution in disclosing  information about the events on Facebook and other social media sites.

Three men with bottles and knives barged in on January 30 a book presentation in the central Finnish city of Jyväskylä on far-right extremism. One of the three men who stormed the event is still at large, according to the police.

Meanwhile, a decision by the Etelä-Karjala police to cancel a similar book event in the southern city of Kotka has raised questions about freedom of speech and the right to assembly in Finland, reports Helsingin Sanomat. According to the organizers, the fire department wouldn’t give the green light to the event because the fire-rescue plan wasn’t turned in before the two-week deadline.

The organizers said that a fire-rescue plan was not necessary since it is only needed if  an event has more than 200 spectators.

 

Swedish People’s Party chairman challenges (without luck) PS head Soini on racism

Posted on March 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales raises its hat to Swedish People’s Party chairman, Carl Haglund, for challenging Perussuomalaiset (PS) Timo Soini on Helsingin Sanomat to an open debate about racism. Apart from immigrants and visible minorities, Finland’s Swedish-speaking population, which number about 291,000, has been under near-constant attack by the PS. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-3 kello 22.33.09

It is unfortunate but understandable in today’s Finland that only a small party like Haglund’s is the only one openly challenging Soini on a crucial issue like racism. If the PS ever won an election that would make Soini the country’s next prime minister, the country’s Swedish-speaking population would, like immigrants and other minorities, have the most to lose.

The reaction of some PS MPs reinforces the latter.

PS MP Reijo Tossavainen, who suggested in May 2011 with Teuvo Hakkarainen that Finland should close its borders to asylum seekers, slammed Haglund’s attack on Soini  as “childish.”

Haglund recently asked on Helsingin Sanomat a timely question: Why is he the only one challenging Soini on racism? Why are the other parties so silent?

The answer is pretty obvious. There are two answers to this question: the biggest parties are too afraid to do so and/or silently agree with many of the populist policies of the PS.

Even if the PS can be called Finland’s Immigrantionphobe Party in the same way as The Independent called the Ukip, Soini’s followers are  ostensibly anti-EU and want to relegate Finland’s second official language, Swedish, to the dustbin of history.

Haglund correctly pointed out last month when Soini appeared on BBC’s HARDTalk that the PS leader shamed Finland because he treated, as he usually does, racism with kid gloves.

Soini has refused to comment on what Haglund said and has made it clear that he doesn’t want to be seen with him in public.

Whatever Soini may want to say, he got caught off guard by BBC’s HARDtalk journalist Stephen Sackur.

One of the these situations was when Soini attempted to defend PS MP Hakkarainen and his use of the n-word in Finland which is “completely unacceptable and racist.”

Soini: “I said [to Hakkarainen] don’t use that kind of [racist] language.”

Sackur: “Why didn’t you fire him?”

Soini: “Why should I?”

Saucker: “Because if people use that sort of completely derogatory word towards people of a different race it suggests that they are racist.”

Soini: “Yes, but he hasn’t said he’s a racist and I don’t believe he is a racist.”

Anti-gay vote in Finland was a vote for intolerance

Posted on February 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The vote to defeat the draft bill that would have legalized gay marriage by the legal committee of parliament sets not only a dangerous precedent but reveals Finland’s ever-hardened stance not only against gays, but against all minorities.

If there were a Hall of Shame for MPs, its members would consist of those who voted against the gay-marriage bill: Anne Holmlund, Markku Mäntymaa, Kari Tolvanen of the National Coalition Party; James Hirvisaari, Arja Juvonen, Kaj Turunen of the Perussuomalaiset party (PS); Arto Pirttilahti, Ari Torniainen of the Center Party; and Peter Östman of the Christian Democratic Party.

Other likely infamous “candidates” would be PS MP Jussi Halla-aho, Juho Eerola and a long list of others.

A vote in favor of gay rights would have been a vote for greater rights and acceptance of  all minorities in Finland.

Why is Finland still the only Nordic country that hasn’t legalized gay
marriage? Is it because the third-largest party of parliament is the 
anti-immigration PS?  

Or has the PS strengthened, reinforced and emboldened the intolerant stand of MPs from other parties?

Wednesday, February 27, was a shameful day in Finland revealing that we have a long way to go to make our country a more tolerant place for everyone.

 

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