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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

Julian Abagond: What they do not teach you about anti-racism at American high school

Posted on February 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The reason why I reposted this blog entry By Julian Abagond is to show how a country can down play the role of racism in its history. History erases history, right? Now consider a country like Finland, which doesn’t have such a terrible legacy. It must be pretty easy then to minimize the existence and impact of such a social ill our society.  

What do they teach about anti-racism at Finnish high school? Even if our history is different from the United States, racism has its roots in our history as well. Its  face has been very clearly shown in the first decade of this century. The spectacular rise of the Perussuomalaiset party in the 2011 election is a good example of its ever-growing clout.  

Migrant Tales

_______

By Julian Abagond

declaration-of-independence-rough-draft

America has a proud history of anti-racism – like the Declaration of Independence, abolitionists, Nat Turner, the Underground Railroad, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, the civil war, the Gettysburg Address, Emancipation, the Radical Republicans, Reconstruction, Ida B. Wells, Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr, the civil rights movement, Malcolm X, the Black Panthers, Angela Davis and so much else.

But since 1890 it has been played down or lied about in American high school history books.

Why?

texas

  1. White teachers in the South: Those who write history books for high school try to appeal to white teachers in the South, particularly in Texas, to sell more books.
  2. High school history avoids ideas, especially “divisive” ones like anti-racism. It is way easier to teach names and dates – partly because they are so boring!
  3. To talk about anti-racism would mean talking about racism – which is also played down and avoided.
  4. A white racist view of Black History which writes it off as unimportant because it is “only about blacks”, a sort of sidebar to Real American History.

 

For example:

john-brown-painted-in-1937

  • John Brown (pictured right) is written off as a madman, religious nut, fanatic, etc. Yet writers whom Americans are taught to admire in English class. like Emerson and Thoreau, admired him! Not that anyone at high school is going to tell you that.
  • Abraham Lincoln, whatever his faults, fought his own racism and freed the slaves. That inner battle with his own racism is never shown.
  • The civil war, before 1970, was taught as being mainly about states rights and preserving the union, not about freeing the slaves. Lincoln, even now, is misquoted to that effect.
  • The Gettysburg Address: students used to have to learn it by heart. Now most history books do not even print it in full! And those that do barely talk about it. Even though (or, more likely, because) it wonderfully sums up the Union cause in the civil war, tying black freedom to the Declaration of Independence.

carpetbagger

  • White Reconstructionists, who worked for making the races equal in the South, sometimes putting themselves in great physical danger, like by teaching black children to read, are called carpetbaggers (pictured right) and scallywags – terms lifted straight from white racist propaganda of the time.
  • The civil rights movementbecomes pretty much just Rosa Parks not giving up her seat on the bus and Martin Luther King giving a great speech about being colour-blind, thus ending racism – and any further need for anti-racism!
  • Martin Luther King, like Lincoln, wrote profoundly about race and America, but, as with Lincoln, little of it is used. Both King and Lincoln condemned America for its racist crimes – also left out.
  • The Black Panthers – the Texas school board requires they be put in a bad light because they were for “violence”.

Thanks to the overthrow of Jim Crow in the South by the civil rights movement, high school history books are better now than in the 1950s, but there has beenlittle change since at least the late 1980s.

Source: Some of this comes from chapter 6 of James Loewen’s Lies My Teacher Told Me (2007). Unfortunately he mainly just talks about anti-racism by white people!

Read original story here.

 This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

 

On human dignity

Posted on February 6, 2013 by Mark

Jussi Halla-ahoDo all humans have the same value and are all humans deserving of dignity? These are the questions asked by Jussi Halla-aho (hereafter J-Ha) in an old but now infamous blog post from 2005. J-Ha contended that only instrumental value is measurable and truly meaningful and that it is common sense to see the value of human beings and their deserving of respect as fitting naturally to a hierarchy.

The idea of a universally ‘equal’ value or right to dignity, in contrast, he says, cannot be measured, so there is no way of knowing if a person is in possession of it.  It seems blisteringly obvious to me that this principle of equal value or entitlement to be treated with dignity was presented as an essential goal rather than being a description of reality and which was adopted to better regulate a State’s relationship with its citizens. More on that later. He writes:

“The claim that everyone has equal value [equally deserving of respect] requires that a person’s value is a known and measurable quantity. If it cannot be measured, there is no way to determine to what extent each individual is in possession of it. Certainly human value can’t be an externally given, cosmic property – or at least can’t be proven to be that.”

And

“The only measurable and therefore definitely real human value is an individual’s instrumental value. Individuals can justifiably be hierarchically ordered by the extent to which the absence of their abilities and knowledge from a community would weaken it.”

J-Ha thinks of value (meaning both value to society and their deserving of respect) as something that people have only in relation to what they give to the community. This primacy of community is a key theme in fascism, and it appears he draws some of his ideas on this matter from early fascist writings (see 1942 Finnish National Socialist Party manifesto). He frowns on any other conception of value or dignity, on the basis that subjective value or value bestowed by ‘cosmic’ forces cannot be proved and also that in the instrumental sense, he cannot accept that a murderer has the same value as an engineer.

He expresses contempt for those that would defend the idea that humans have in any sense an equal right to be treated with dignity, which is the basis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

“Egalitarian nonsense is the result of too many people with lots of energy and too little of consequence to do”

I have several objections:

Let’s start by putting forward my own premises. 1) People have value and dignity in themselves, 2) People are valued by others, through relationships, and 3) People add value to society, as a responsibilty of citizenship, 4) Society adds value to people, as a responsibility of the State to the citizen to enable healthy living. J-Ha acknowledges only the third premise as having validity, for the reasons already stated above: a narrow concept of value/dignity as only instrumental value and that interpreted only as value to the community.

1) Having a value or dignity in and of oneself is a two-fold matter. By and large, we value ourselves, or recognise the value at least in living a life as free of suffering as would be realistically possible, and we recognise our own right to be treated by others with dignity. This isn’t just an act of vanity to be dismissed as a negative or selfish egotism; rather, common sense tells us that a healthy appreciation of our own value is the basis for a healthy valuing of other people (see Kant’s Categorical Imperative – thanks JusticeDemon for the heads up on that). It is also a defence against the abuses of other people, as it provides the moral clarity and consistency that makes clear when one is being abused. Recognizing the subjectivity of another and being empathetic to their suffering begins in one’s relationship to oneself and the sense we have of our own value. This is significant because people without a healthy self-esteem generally have poor empathy and can treat others without dignity.

The other element is that people have value and dignity because we collectively see a value in them through the recognition of a universally shared subjectivity. And remember, calls for equality or treating all persons with dignity typically grow out of experiences of suffering and empathy, and the realisation that some suffering is just not necessary or justified. Society has improved because of this key recognition of the value in an individual’s subjectivity and their right not to be violated by another, their right to dignity. These are concrete things that have given rise to important rights.

2) Being valued by others (one to one) is important. In a pragmatic sense, although we recognise that people should earn love, trust and respect, we also acknowledge that a basic minimum ‘unearned’ respect is both an important starting point in relationships and an important ingredient in reconciliation when misunderstandings or wrongs inevitably occur. The value of ‘positive regard’ has long been recognised in psychiatry as aiding in psychological healing, even in situations where a client is a mix of victim and offender, which is typically the case.

Positive regard, goodwill—call it what you want—is not a measurable value; it is an assumed value in the sense that we encounter strangers whose ‘value’ (to us or to society) we cannot yet assess, but we typically start with some good will. This serves to highlight that value (as respect) is possessed as both an intrinsic right or freedom (as the right to dignity), but also something extrinsic, something we are given, as part of a relationship, and something we should not take for granted. The overlap in these two ‘values’ is significant in regulating the ‘minimum’ standard of behaviour. When problems escalate, it is typically because the ‘minimum’ standard has been violated. The two types of ‘value’ are intrinsically bound together. When asking where or from what value arises, it is important to recognize that it is both intrinsic (coming from within, inherent) and extrinsic (coming from without, measurable to a degree).

Valuing as part of a relationship one to one, which is subjected to ups and downs, moods, circumstances, actions etc, is fundamentally different to the universal value that underlies our subjectivity or our relationship with the State (see no.4). We can differentiate them as the value of a person’s freedoms/rights (inviolable, inalienable) and the value of our reputation/social status (subject to opinion and fashion).

Rights and freedom begin with birth, with the universal and equal innocence embodied in the total dependence of a newborn. It is absurd to say one baby deserves better treatment than another. And yet the reality is that kin relationships already establish a hierarchy of privilege and care one to one, and hence we value people differently. It is all too easy to carry those biases of ingroups and outgroups (family vs. not family) onto the political stage, but the universal right to dignity emerging from the  innocence of life’s beginnings is a more coherent moral starting point for assigning ‘core’ value to human life. In simple terms, it’s not so fickle. In the political sense, it is generally regarded as more appealing that society not be led by mafias, where privileged families rule through power and terror, and your fate is decided by which family you have the fortune or misfortune to be born into.

3) People add value to society in all sorts of ways, many of them being invisible to the wider world; countless people are not recompensed or recognised for sincere and significant contributions in life. For someone born to poor or difficult circumstance, just avoiding repeating the mistakes, abuses or crimes of the previous generation can itself be a major success, but such an achievement would be overlooked if we apply J-Ha’s notion of instrumental value. One can be a good and kind person but achieve no greater public distinction than cleaning toilets in McDonalds. How is this to be measured against a successful and wealthy boss that leaves misery in his wake and carnage in his personal relationships, but whose transgressions are hidden from public view? Moreover, if we take a snapshot of a person’s instrumental value today, it is no reliable prediction of their instrumental value in ten or even twenty years hence. Adding value to society can rightly be viewed as a responsibility of citizenship, but this must never be a means to undermine a person’s inherent right to be treated with a dignity (beginning with being treated as a subject and not an object).

4) Valuing of citizens by society is something new in the broad sweep of history. It is normal now to talk of the responsibilities of the State, though much disagreement exists around how and in what things the State should be involved. And yet, at the basic level, there is general consensus in the West at least on what the State is NOT allowed to do, and that includes violating citizen rights.

That human rights and the principle of the equal value for human life emerged out of the ruins of a Europe ravaged by war perpetuated on the wheels of rampant nationalisms (competing values off national identity), forceful authoritarianism, and evil persecution of minorities and vulnerable people should not be forgotten. Indeed, the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was a success in that it managed to overcome the differences of over fifty nations, arriving at a consensus that would serve humanity for decades and quite likely centuries into the future. ‘

Many who were present at the first signing remarked on the incredible feeling of solidarity that transcended national diplomacies and which had not been seen before, nor has it been seen since. The idea of equal value was certainly not a reality of the time, it was a stated goal, an aspiration, an instrument to focus minds, hearts, energies and resources towards a more peaceful and just world. These are no small things and the benefits have followed slowly but demonstrably.

Being valued by society implies a high standard of treatment of individuals by societal institutions. It implies the protection of rights and freedoms, and a process of recompense and justice for the wrongs of others. For J-Ha, having a high value seemed to imply mainly enjoying a good reputation among one’s peers. He is reluctant to give equal value (here measured clearly as reputation) to murderers and to productive and honest citizens. But he’s looking in the wrong place if he is looking for universal values in public reputations.

The equal value or right to dignity comes from universal rights that ensure the murderer is treated equally fairly whether he is an unemployed schizophrenic or an engineer that drank too much and battered his wife to death, and equally with dignity, not because the person earns respect, but because the State must preserve its own moral integrity. You can acknowledge and respect the right to be treated fairly and with dignity even when a person has done terrible things and it does not for a second imply that you value the actions or beliefs of that person. Justice must strive to be morally above reproach if it is to have the moral authority to carry out its purpose.

J-Ha pins his colors squarely to the ‘instrumental value’ mast. But for me, that’s even more abstract and subjective a notion than value derived from innocence and subjectivity. For example, we could measure the instrumental value of individuals by measuring their salary or their tax contributions. And having done this, we then create a league table of citizens, with the most wealthy then being given the most human rights and so on down the ladder to the scum (a favourite word of J-Ha’s) at the bottom. J-Ha denies that any consequences follow naturally from his analysis and promotion of this hierarchy, but history tends to show a bloody outcome where this kind of idea has been politicised. Moreover, I start to wonder why he makes such an analysis if there is no actual concrete consequences that would follow. While he doesn’t mention denying rights to those in the ‘scum’ pool, others among the PS and Suomen Sisu ranks are quite happy to.

When the State begins to punish minority populations for being ‘the dangerous outsider’, with all that that implies, the State quickly becomes heavy handed and corrupt. Such abuses dehumanise state institutions and those that work in them, a danger we must be ever watchful for.

A recognised equality of human value sets a standard for State actions towards citizens that works to keep the State honest and free of corruption.

And it’s not about rewarding the bad behaviour of citizens with soft treatment, but about containing the moral rot in society as and when it appears. When freedom is recognised as the greatest prize of a modern democracy, then denial of freedom is the most severe punishment a state can impose for severe crimes while maintaining its own moral authority. When the State has a moral justification for abusing its citizens, it’s generally a slippery slope down to hell.

The difficulty J-Ha overlooks with instrumental value is that poor people lack all sorts of resources, including education, health, opportunity, support, finance, security, awareness, and even political influence. Without these resources, the possibilities and likelihood of contributing positively to society (and adding to their own instrumental value) is severely curtailed. A hierarchy once imposed is self-perpetuating, leading to the injustices of birth, where one person receives a totally inferior treatment from Day 1 onwards.

It is exactly this kind of injustice that has led to efforts to establish ‘universal rights’, which are instruments that bring greater equality, such as the right to education in Finland – which has improved social mobility – or universal day care, or the right to equal treatment in health care.

J-Ha complains that an idea like universal equality is an idea destined for the dustbin of history, like the ideas that:

“The Sun revolves around the Earth”, “The Pope is infallible”, “Women don’t have a soul”, or “Masturbation causes shortsightedness”. (Wow, was that a knob joke?!)

His idea is that a person’s contribution to society gives the true value of their worth, and this he expresses almost exclusively in terms of occupations (he doesn’t have much time for artists, by the way). But in measuring instrumental value, he might as well be describing a photographic negative of inequalities, patriarchy, the privileges of the 1%, persecutions of minorities or any other of the host of factors that work to oppress segments of society. The implicit assumption seems to be that those with the privilege or success have always earned it and have always contributed positively to society in every sense. Such a view would be simplistic and naive in the extreme. But then again, he is merely a linguist by trade, and not a sociologist.

Instrumental value isn’t going to give us a final and unbiased arbitrator in deciding an individual’s deserved, intrinsic or potential value. It’s just going to tell us how the cookie happens to crumble on that particular day. It doesn’t set goals and it doesn’t begin to address injustices or exploitations. J-Ha glosses over this difficulty, instead offering instrumental value as some kind of gold standard for society’s core values, and distracting us by contrasting the positive value of doctors, engineers and soldiers with that of murderers and the like. I had to smile at that particular intellectual ‘risky shift’; did he simply forget to mention that, for example, rapists are just as likely to be engineers, doctors and especially soldiers (32% of offenders have upper-class occupations)? And his failure to mention any of the specifically female-dominated industries (nursing, education, day care, services etc) in his list of valuable occupations was of course equally innocent.

“Until someone demonstrates to me how everyone has equal value, I shall consequently consider difference of kind to lead to difference of value, and that everyone has a different amount of value.”

Rather than focus on interpreting the equality of human value to be some ridiculous notion that all people’s actions or character must be seen as being of equal value, he should focus on the idea that this kind of principle of equality was never intended to define or regulate personal relationships and social status, but rather to regulate the relationship of the State to citizens, where the State carries a responsibility to ensure equal opportunity to people, equal treatment of people in courts of law, equal right to vote, equal right to receive equal, equitable, and comparable public services, and to ensure that society does not discriminate against people on dubious and pernicious grounds. The desire for equality was born out of struggle, not out of energetic idleness, as he flippantly suggests.

The universal value of human life is an abstract concept, yes, an aspiration and a goal, but it is nevertheless important in shaping modern societies. It likewise serves as a check on the powers of the State, preventing or minimising corruption and overreach.

In the very same post, he dismisses the work of politicians (and artists and clerics) as being superfluous. One really wonders why he ever decided to become an MP. Was it to plot the overthrow of politicians? He wouldn’t be the first fascist who ever tried that.

Translations taken from Sam Hardwick’s blog post on the same article.

PS’ Eerola now claims that Jyväskylä stabbing was probably staged

Posted on February 2, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Juho Eerola said that Wednesday’s attack by suspected neo-Nazi thugs at a book presentation in Jyväskylä was probably staged in order to sell more books, reports Turun Sanomat citing STT.  

Kuvankaappaus 2013-2-2 kello 0.10.03

Two of Äärioikesto Suomessa’s (Far right in Finland) three authors, Li Andersson and Mikael Brunila,  were present at the event but weren’t hurt. One man, who attempted to prevent three men from gaining entry to the event, was stabbed, write YLE in English.

The man was taken to the hospital but his injuries were not serious.

Police now say that both sides were armed but declined to specify what kinds of weapons were being used.

Criticism against the police has been mounting.  Uljas, a University of Eastern Finland student publication, claims that the police were aware that far right members were going to be sent from Joensuu to the book event in Jyväskylä.

The police chose not to do anything.

While what happened Wednesday was condemned by all parties because it infringes on freedom of speech and the right to assembly, PS vice president Eerola gave advice the following day how neo-Nazi Suomen Kansalinen Vastarinta activists should crash such an event the next time.

“The next time don’t look like ”patriots” when you plan to enter such an event. Don’t go as a group but be [inconspicuous] in the crowd,” he wrote.

Friday’s Helsingin Sanomat published Eerola’s comments. He later apologized for not expressing his ideas more clearly.

While the PS MP may regret publicly what he said, it’s a common tactic used by the party’s members to express their far right or racist views. After they make an inappropriate statement they disclaim it by stating that it was  “sarcasm” or  that their statements “were taken out of context by the media.”

Eerola said that the what happened in Jyväskylä was staged in order to sell more books.

”It surprises me that whenever this type of far right violence happens it always happens at an event with Dan Koivulaakso or Li Andersson,” he was quoted as saying. ”Nowhere else does it happen in practice. It’s the right, good advertising for their book so that where they’re giving a talk on how dangerous the far right it’s where the far right strikes.”

Politicians like Eerola, whose ties with fascism are well known,  should look at the mirror before making such outrageous statements.

His aide, Ulla Pyysalo, was embroiled in a scandal in 2011 when it become public that she had applied for membership in the neo-Nazi Suomen Kansallinen Vastarina (SKV).

Eerola as well as PS MPs like Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, Olli Immonen and many others have victimized and lynched on social media immigrants. All of them have built their political careers thanks to fear-mongering and the social media.

UPDATE: Here’s a link that lists (in Finnish) nine attacks by the SKV.

Pia Grochowski: The other side of ethnic cuisine

Posted on January 31, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Pia Grochwoski

This month Six Degrees magazine ran multiple features on the theme of ethnic food and restaurants, “Dining with an Ethnic Twist: The popularity of ethnic restaurants in Finland continues to grow swiftly”. The proportion of ethnic restaurants in Finland continues to grow, making up 20% of the restaurant sector in Finland. It is worth noting many of these restaurants are also immigrant owned. Much of this is celebrated in that locals now have the chance to enjoy ethnic food closer to home: for vegetarians like myself it can become quite easy which restaurants to select when going out. Much of this is seen as supported as a representation of multiculturalism. What however is not talked about is the segmentation of the restaurant industry. Having worked a few years in the restaurant industry in Finland myself some key elements must be discussed before this is celebrated.

First of all, the restaurant industry is highly unregulated in terms of labour laws. Non-Finns working in these industries are often not appropriately informed of their rights, many of them can spend their entire days working in a restaurant that they don’t own. When I would meet colleagues after work some of them barely could orientate themselves in Helsinki as they never had the chance to leave their workplace. Others due to limited language ability are not capable of describing the abuse they face, or learn what is appropriate and decent working conditions. Immigrants can be easily exploited in the restaurant industry. They are also less likely to have the social ties or linguistic ability to direct a complaint. I do take care to watch for key elements of labour law abuse when visiting a restaurant, low prices, a single lonely worker running the whole place can be a telltale sign.

Secondly, there is an ethnic hierarchy in the industry. Immigrants make up a large portion of the restaurant sector, but similar too many other places in Finland face a glass ceiling. If you ever have the chance to go to a restaurant in central Helsinki, be it Italian, Finnish or other; much of the front end staff (wait staff, bartenders, host and hostesses) are Finnish or white. Finns working at ethnic restaurants (other than Finnish owned ethnic restaurants) are few and far between, this is a representation of differential pay increments. Ethnic restaurants often offer lower salaries. Back room staff (cooks, chefs, food-runners, dishwashers, cleaners) tends to be more diverse. I have rarely seen anything but an African-origin dishwasher. What surprises me about many I have spoken to is how well educated they are and their high language ability in Finnish and English. They could do much more than working as a dishwashing for less than 10€ and hour. The reason why they aren’t the elephant in the room we are all speaking of. There are few exceptions, however its apparent to me that many higher end restaurants seem to prefer a white face up front.

Which brings me to my final point. While there are some few changes being made up front: what is clear here, and what can’t be ignored is a clear barrier to immigrants in this sector-like many others. Many, if they want to advance in the sector would have to start their business: and hope it’s a success. This is facilitated by starttiraha, its one of the few avenues that is clearly open for immigrants to escape the dead end jobs in the restaurant business. The large portion of kebab shops for example aren’t are manifestation of Finnish demands for lean cuts of meat on bread: but rather a representation of a large portion of immigrants, particularly from the Middle East, unable to access decent employment by other means. Popularity and an interest in ethnic food make the starting up of ethnic restaurants more likely to be a success or lead to a sustainable livelihood.

Before celebrating the creation of ethnic restaurants, one should look at the social forces behind the fact that 3% of the population makes up 20% of a particular sector. One that is well documented to be one of the most exploitive.

How do you challenge racism?

Posted on January 24, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Challenging a social ill like racism is no easy task. In countries like the United States, slavery was legal in some states for a very long time, between the sixteenth and nineteenth century.  Despite the Emancipation Proclamation (1863) and the Thirteenth Amendment (1865), it took a Rosa Parks in December 1955 to ignite the Civil Rights Movement. 

Racial inequality is still a widespread problem in the United States.

Must we wait hundreds of years for immigrants and minorities in Europe to be treated as equals?

In Finland, for example, the Romany minority has waited for half a century for social equality.

There was a distressing story on Jyväskylä-based Keskisuomalainen about a young dark-skinned twenty-year-old woman who was in a toilet. One of the white Finnish women standing in line exclaimed upon seeing the black woman: “I’m not going to [sit on the same toilet bowl] as that n-word,” she said speaking to a woman behind her. “You go ahead if you dare.”

The insults by the woman in a Jyväskylä toilet didn’t stop here:  “You can fucking go where you came from. I can’t stand people who live off my taxes and leech in this country and live like insects.”

The sad matter of the story is not only the loudmouth racist, but the woman who wrote about what happened on Keskisuomalainen. She didn’t speak up on the spot and tell the racist woman that what she was saying was out of line.

Challenging a social ill like racism isn’t easy. I therefore raise my hat to the woman for at least writing about what happened. I’m certain she’ll never forget what she heard in that Jyväskylä toilet because what she heard is disturbing. Racism not only hurts its victims but some of its bystanders like the rest of society.

Racism can rally some pretty “colorful” people as the video clip below shows.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PL1jDcAHkc8&feature=player_embedded#!

The English Defense League is a dangerous organization. One of its followers claims that he’s marching against “Muslamic law” and “Muslamic ray guns.”*

How do you challenge racism?

By raising your voice and expressing your disapproval if somebody speaks or treats anyone n a racist way.

Since racists are cowards, a strong show of disapproval of their behavior can make them think twice before they think again before opening their mouths.

* Thank you Mikko Kapanen for the heads-up.

Migrant Tales in Greek

Posted on January 19, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Blog entries that are published on Migrant Tales get sometimes mentioned in some major publications like Time, Sveriges Radio, YLE’s Suora linja and others. One of the most recent reposts was by UNHCR in Greece, located in one of Europe’s hotbeds of xenophobia.  

The work we do on this blog got mentioned  (in Finnish) on Re Vera as well.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-19 kello 7.56.40

UNCHR of Greece reposted one of Migrant Tales’ posts about integration and diversity in Europe.

Sensible people understand that there is little time to pat oneself on the back in Europe these days when it comes to challenging the rise of racism, xenophobia and far-right parties that loathe cultural diversity.

When racists claim to want to “debate” cultural diversity issues, what they are really saying is “let’s talk about how to water down and justify outright discrimination and social exclusion of whole groups based on ethnic and cultural background.”

Are certain inalienable civil rights, like equal treatment before the law, “debatable?”

Look at what is happening in countries like Greece, Hungary and in other parts of Europe and the so-called “debate” taking place in such places.

The rise of far-right ideology, which bases its world view on prejudice, racism and social exclusion, is nothing more than our failure as a region staring back at us. It exposes how we have failed to come to grips with the horrors of our history and our darkest side.

The ideology that brought us mass wars like WW2, which cost the estimated lives of about 60 million people, still hides behind our racism, our prejudice and our xenophobia.

We must do more to nip this type of anti-social behavior in the bud.

If we fail in this important task we will be sowing the seeds of future wars that will end up consuming us without remorse.

 

 

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.

 

 

 

 

Police college of Finland: are they perpetuating hate?

Posted on December 21, 2012 by Mark

lieWhat an irony. You would think that the publishing of hate crime statistics would be an annual opportunity to raise the profile of hate crime and also to renew efforts to prevent it. But no, the forums are alive with spurious interpretations of what it all means and even attempts to show that Somalis are in fact more racist than Finns. Can it be true?

One effect of hate crime statistics being published in Finland is that it brings up once again the unwelcome question of whether Finns are more racist than other nations. This isn’t my question, by the way, but it is one that Finns tend to dwell on, as if there were an acceptable level of racism that a country is allowed to have!

What has also been happening is that international comparisons are made for the statistics within Finland, so that means looking at the different nationalities living in Finland, and providing a league table of the racists among them.

This isn’t just something you will find in the hate forums though. On page 58 of the 2011 Police report (recently published by the Police College of Finland and the Ministry of Interior’s Police Department), the researchers themselves provide their own league table (Table 12) detailing racist crimes by foreigners per 1000 head of population, with Somalis top of the list on 10 per 1000 head of population, followed by Iraqis on 8. A quick calculation gives an equivalent rate for Finns of 0.1 per 1000 head of population. Wow, aren’t the Finns so much better than those dirty foreigners? Ugh, well, no actually! Quite the opposite! But you’ll have to bear with me, I’m afraid, because you see, they haven’t bothered to inform the reader just how useless and distorting this kind of statistic actually is.

Several figures for rate per capita are possible here. For example, we could look at those racist crimes that do not involve provocation by another racist. We could also look at the age group 15-34, as this is where the biggest problems lie (66% of racist crimes) and it’s also the segment of the population that is most different in proportions for the different nationalities (see below). Narrowing the focus doesn’t change any of the fundamentals in the argument, by the way.

These simple adjustments give us the figures of 0.028 attacks per capita by Finns aged 15-34, and 0.14 attacks per capita by Somalis of the same age.

It still looks grim for the Somalis, doesn’t it? But calculations made per capita are horribly flawed.

They ignore the fact that many Finns will seldom or never encounter a black immigrant, while the same is not true for black immigrants meeting white Finns.

Let’s put it plain and simple. If 1000 in a 10,000 Finns actually get to meet a Somali (or any other visible foreigner), and one of these Finns is a racist who decides to assault the foreigner, then it’s all too easy to claim that only one in 10,000 are racist because only one in 10,000 assaults showed up ‘per capita’, when in reality, it was one in 1000 Finns who got to encounter a foreigner and were racist. The opposite effect works for Somalis, who will likely encounter people of a different race many times daily.

Let’s show the maths

Two population groups, A and B, where A is a minority and B is a majority. Let’s set the rate of racism at 5% for both Group A and Group B, so we would therefore expect the per capita crimes to be the same. If they are not, then something is wrong with using per capita rates to define rates of racism.

Two key assumption, a racist assault can only be committed by someone who encounters someone else of a different race or ethnicity. One kind of racist is someone who has great difficulty in encountering someone of another race.

Group A – minority
N = 100 (total population of minority)
n = 100 (number of population encountering people of another race)
C = number of crimes per year = 5 (i.e. 5% of n)
per capita rate = 0.05 (based on C/N)

Group B – majority
N = 2500
n = 250 (number of population encountering people of another race)
C = number of crimes per year = 12.5 (5% of n)
(1) per capita rate = 0.005 (based on C/N, i.e. not taking account of n)
(2) per capita rate = 0.05 (based on C/n, i.e. taking account of n)

The first calculation for the per capita rate of racist crime in the majority population (1) is 10 times greater that for the minority than the majority population, even though WE set the rate at EXACTLY THE SAME LEVEL, i.e. 5%, so as to control for it. In equation (2), the rate of encounter has been factored in and it delivers the correct rate of crime per capita.

Conclusion, the rate of encounter can have an enormous effect on statistics of rates of racist crime per capita.

if we used calculation (1), we would be throwing up our arms and saying that the Finns are getting attacked so much more and that the Somalis are ten times more racist, because when you do the maths, that’s what you get (exactly like the Finnish Police have suggested we use the statistics).

Finnish racists when they exist simply have less opportunity to express their racism and so to appear in the statistics. Using the ‘whole population’ therefore waters down the ‘per encounter’ rate and hugely underestimates the rate of racism of the majority population.

To discover the true rate of racist crime, we must adjust for the fact that minorities are by definition rare and encounters with them are likewise rare for the majority population, while for the minority, encounters with Finns are commonplace. We must take account of rates of encounter to arrive at anything like a comparable per capita rate. Hate crimes are available in part to estimate rates of racism. It should be absolutely clear where the per capita figures are horrendously flawed in estimating rates of racism. Common sense, folks.

In other words, adjusting for the Somali minority in the age group 15¬-34 would give us a rate that is 227 times smaller than it currently is and a long way behind the rate for Finns.

Finns = 0.012 attacks per interracial encounter
Somalis = 0.000083 attacks per interracial encounter

Of course this isn’t the end of the story. There are numerous other factors that can also impact disproportionately on the statistics, including the higher percentage of young adults as a percentage in the age group aged 15-35, who are most likely to be involved in street assault. For Finns, they constitute about 23% of the population, while for Somalis, they constitute 40%. This would artificially inflate the Somali figure even further.

The idea of league tables per capita that compares minority populations or by implication the majority population is inherently flawed and is in my view an extremely cynical abuse of statistics where there is no explanation of the drawbacks. The work of a racist researcher? Or perhaps a totally incompetent one. Either way, it’s not good enough.

These issues are too important to think that people haven’t stopped to ask themselves what are the underlying assumptions in these statistics and how are they likely to be used, or to have actually monitored how the statistics are being used in the public debate. One look at the comments here or on some of the hate forums reveals just how eager racists are to make use of the police report to disparage immigrants.

Why do we have a league table, if not to make foreigners look bad and to make Finns look better than they are or to hide the true extent of racism in Finland? The idea of a league table is abhorrent and extremely misleading. It’s worse than that, it’s lying.

What adds to the injury is that people rely on these statistics to create profiles of particular national groups as being much more racist than they actually are, and much more racist than Finns.

So, hate crime statistics that are presented in such a way that they actually perpetuate hate crime!

Surely not, Finland, surely not!!!! Tell me I’m wrong!

PS. this article has been edited for the sake of clarity.

Hate crimes increase in 2011 in Finland: And now, what?

Posted on December 20, 2012 by Migrant Tales

What do the 918 suspected hate crime cases in 2011 in Finland tell us about ourselves as a society and what should our reaction be to such a social ill? And now, what?

Considering that the majority of crimes go unreported, it’s clear that hate crimes reported to the police are only the tip of the iceberg of a much wider problem.

l_1084-medium1

This tabloid billboard from 1996 states that the Somalis are not going to move from Finland. The majority of hate crimes reported last year were against Somalis.

Migrant Tales has written previously about how difficult it is to report hate crimes in Finland. Some policemen don’t even believe that racist harassment should be reported.

One policeman in Mikkeli told a group of immigrants that racist harassment is a minor affair. It’s like when he gets hassled in his hometown by the locals, who remind him that he is a policeman.

A recent report on hate crimes in Wales showed how people adapted to such abuse.

Heaven Crawley, director of the Centre for Migration Policy Research at Swansea University, said that they endure “everyday racism.”  Adapting to such harassment could encourage one to not use public transport, cover up one’s skin so people cannot tell a person belongs to a minority, young women may prefer not to wear the hijab because it targets them for racist abuse.

While the Police College of Finland report is a shameful chapter for a society like ours that bases its values on social equality, Nordic democracy and tolerance, the biggest culprits are not those who commit hate crimes but those who still turn a blind eye to such a social ill.

While the hate crime report by the Police College of Finland showed a 7% increase from 2010, not a single politician spoke out or expressed concern about the report.

It is very difficult for the majority of Finnish politicians to speak out against racism, hate crimes and intolerance in general as long as one of Finland’s largest political parties, the Perussuomalaiset, promotes intolerance and is the refuge for anti-immigration extremists.

What keeps us as a society from speaking out and condemning a pathological disorder like racism, which is at the root of the majority of hate crime cases?

Are we afraid to admit that intolerance is an issue – or are we quiet because deep down inside some of us still think that racism is ok?

 

 

 

 

 

 

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