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La Prórroga: Los sudacas dan consuelo a los “refugiados del euro”

Posted on February 15, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Comment: This beautifully written blog entry by Zulma Sierra, based on a story on Madrid-based daily El País, has a moral:  Treat people, especially immigrants, nicely because those you meet on the way up you’ll meet on the way down.

Zulma writes on La Prórroga about how Spanish “refugees” escaping the euro crisis in their country are having to deal with issues like acceptance and anti-immigration sentiment in countries like Norway. Coming to their rescue are South American immigrants from Bolivia and Ecuador, who appear to be the only people who speak Spanish in Norway.  

 Says a Chilean immigrant ironically: “How many of the Spaniards that are here [in Norway] have criticized in the past immigrants in Spain?” 

________________

por Zulma Sierra

Al principio me resistí a leerlo. Pensaba que era un reportaje más, de los que circulan por estos días, politizando con el hecho de que los españoles tienen que salir de su país en busca de trabajo. Pero pasados unos días me reencontré con él y le di una oportunidad.

Atrapados en el norte me conmovió profundamente y me robó dos sonrisas cómplices.

Y empiezo por explicar las sonrisas, para que después no se piense que soy una Cruela Devil burlándome de los emigrantes a la europea. Cuenta el reportaje que esMauricio, un ecuatoriano, quien ayuda a los españoles sin trabajo y sin techo en un albergue llamado Robin Hood. ¡Sonrisa!

Estamos en Bergen (Noruega), una población con 260.000 habitantes que no sabía lo que era la indigencia, hasta que ha visto crecer, en los últimos meses, el número de “refugiados del euro” (como les llaman aquí): inmigrantes, en su gran mayoría españoles, que no encuentran trabajo porque no saben ni inglés ni noruego y se ven enfrentados a malvivir en las calles.

Pues en el albergue Robin Hood les dan comida y abrigo para espantar el frío de este intenso invierno y es Mauricio -el ecuatoriano- el que les indica dónde aprender noruego, cómo trabajar en negro… en definitiva: cómo sobrevivir.

Luego nos cuentan que a una de las oficinas de empleo de Bergen llegaron 75 españoles en una semana. Ellos esperan pacientemente a que pueda atenderlos Juan Criales, un boliviano que lleva 30 años viviendo aquí. Llegó huyendo de la dictadura de García Meza y ahora es el único que puede comunicarse con los españoles que llegan a esta oficina en busca de trabajo. ¡Sonrisa!

Un ecuatoriano y un boliviano son prácticamente los únicos consuelos que encuentran los “refugiados del euro” en esta fría ciudad noruega. ¡Vaya ironía! Dos representantes de los colectivos que quizás más han sufrido las etiquetas de “sudacas” de una sociedad española desesperada por la falta de empleo y de dinero.

Y mientras leía todo esto pensaba si los españoles que ahora buscan trabajo de lo que sea en Noruega no se habrán puesto en la piel de los africanos, rumanos y asiáticos que, sin saber castellano, llegaron a este país en busca de una oportunidad laboral. Y si no se habrán sentido mal porque algunos medios de comunicación y políticos noruegos les piden abiertamente que se vayan de su país, que no tienen nada qué hacer allí. Y si no habrán caído en la cuenta de que eso de migrar no es una opción, es una necesidad.

Lo dice claramente en el reportaje un señor chileno que también se las ve canutas para comer y dormir: “¿Cuántos de los españoles que hay aquí ahora habrán criticado en su momento la inmigración en España?”

Total que mis dos sonrisas cómplices no tienen nada qué ver con la burla sino con la emoción de saber que, en medio del drama de la migración y tan lejos, los latinoamericanos y los españoles por fin pudieron darse la mano como iguales.

Finland Bridge*: Living in Finland

Posted on February 14, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Adapting to a country like Finland felt sometimes like sojourning on a long and winding path. Despite the many curves and uncertainties, there was one matter that gave me strength to continue on my journey: My lifelong wish to live in this country. I could have never succeeded by myself and without the friendship and support of so many people.

When I moved back to Finland in December 1978, one of the matters that struck me wasn’t the freezing temperatures but how few foreigners lived in the country. At the time there were under 10,000. Many of them weren’t “real” foreigners since they were native Finns who had become naturalized citizens of another country.

I had many personal reasons for moving back to Finland. One of these was to live in a country that was at peace with itself and was not waging war against other nations. My country of birth, Argentina, wasn’t a very promising prospect to build a home and family since it was ruled at the time by a ruthless military regime that had no respect for human rights. Probably the most important reason of all for moving back here was those wonderful summers I spent in Eastern Finland with my grandparents during my childhood and adolescent years.

Those two-and-a-half months I was with my relatives were like entering a totally different world compared with the mad rush of Los Angeles and Buenos Aires. In summertime near Mikkeli, time literally came to a near-halt.

While I could not place my finger on it, there was something that bothered and concerned me about my new home country. Many years later I figured out what it was. It was the near-total disregard by some Finns, the authorities and laws for my fragmented Finnish ancestry. The law stated that only the children of Finnish fathers had citizenship rights.

You could have probably guessed that my first big disappointment took place at the Finnish Immigration Service, which was then called the Aliens’ Office. A cantankerous official snapped back at me for asking her why I had to go through so much red tape to get a residence permit if my mother was Finnish.

“In our opinion, you are not a Finn,” she said with all the weight of the law. “We are not interested if you are engaged to a Finnish woman, what counts is your mother, who is a Finnish citizen.”

It was a devastating knock-out blow by the official that not only left me in pieces but raised questions about my Finnish identity. Was I a Finn?

Fortunately the law changed in 1984, when my first child was born. Children of Finnish mothers were now granted citizenship as well.

My first big break

Despite the difficulties of readapting to life in Finland (I had lived here for three years as a child), another important matter that helped me pull through those first years was my goal to become a journalist and writer.

I was so convinced that writing was the profession I wanted to pursue that I gave up everything.

Before moving to Finland, I had seen my share of hatred, war and strife to last a lifetime. Writing for me not only a way to express myself but more importantly shielded me from the hostility and indifference of the world. It was a more effective way to change and influence things around you than to seek change through violence.

My writing career began slowly and humbly. I started to publish in small regional newspapers in Finland and I spent much of my spare time writing poems. My first big break came when I was down to my last Finnish mark, unemployed, near-hopeless and seriously thinking about moving back to the United States. Pirjo Pölönen, managing editor of a home magazine called Kodinkuvalehti, published a feature I had written on a Finnish colony in Argentina. It wasn’t the semi-ghost colony that interested her but a timely question that the story asked: Will you Finns accept us?

I almost fell on my back when she told me how much the magazine would pay me for the feature.It was ten times more than what the regional newspapers paid.

There was hope and now proof that I could make a living as a journalist in Finland.

Our new identity

Today, over three decades later, I now understand what were behind those crude words of the Aliens’ Office official who told me that I wasn’t a Finn. I never really believed her because nobody never mind a law can erase who you are. The real culprit wasn’t the Aliens’ Office, but decades of war, hatred and fear that had made Finland suspicious of the outside world, even of itself.

A young woman who spoke to a group of young students last year summarized what I had felt for over three decades in this country. The woman, whose father is black and mother Finnish, said: “The first and foremost matter is accepting who you are and, if possible, reach out to those who loathe you.”

With the rise of an anti-immigration and populist party in Finland in the April election, Finland is going through a critical phase of its history. We could call it “the cultural diversity phase” since Finns are slowly learning to accept and respect other people of different ethnic backgrounds asequal members of society. There is no longer nor was there ever a so-called prototype Finn. We Finns come from many ethnic backgrounds today as we did before.

Even if we speak proudly about the heroism of the men and women who fought against a formidable foe in the Winter War, many Finns with culturally diverse backgrounds are facing a different yet similar kind of war on a daily basis.

It is a war of survival but most importantly for acceptance and respect.

*The column was published in Finland Bridge (1/2012). 

Demand your right to be a Finn on your own cultural and ethnic terms

Posted on February 14, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

One of my biggest problems I had in challenging institutional racism in Finland was that I accepted being a member of such an order of things. Even if I had every right to claim Finnish identity from my mother’s side, I did not do so because I reinforced with my silence the stereotypical and even racist views that some Finns held about people like me.  

Many of us Finns with international backgrounds are a Perussuomalaiset (PS) party’s worst nightmare. Everything about us defies their bigoted and even racist view of the outside world and, importantly, who has the right to be accepted as a Finn.

You will find amongst us tens of thousands of people from all walks of life and backgrounds: blacks, whites, Orientals, Amerindians, Southern Europeans, Middle Easterners, young, old, blondes, people with dark hair, bald people, short, tall, thin, obese, gays, lesbians, Jews, Catholics, Lutherans, Muslims and atheists.

Despite our different backgrounds, there is one matter that unites us as a community: Finland.

Even if my journey to discover my Finnishness on my own terms took many decades of searching, I sincerely hope that your journey to discover your Finnish identity will be much shorter than mine. Don’t give in to those who loathe you by excluding you with their spiteful arguments or those who try to rob you of one of your most precious matters: your identity.

Even if it sounds inconceivable, there are people in this country who still believe in 2012 that everything must be done to keep Finland an only white society. We must not allow them to carry out their treachery.

History is another culprit that reinforces institutional racism and reinforces our strong sense of “us” and “them.” It seems that we are constantly praising those who are dead and wars that ended many decades ago. We speak of these heros and wars as if they are the only great accomplishments that this country ever made.

Every time we travel back in time to former wars and glorify late marshals and generals, we end up emphasizing our suspicion of those people and countries that wanted to put us in harm’s way.

Even if I respect the people who fought in those wars, we must learn move on and look to the future.

The sooner we do this the better.

A possible cartoon depicting white privilege in Finland

Posted on February 13, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

The cartoon below pictures pretty well how white privilege works in the United States, according to Bicultural Mom. How would the same cartoon look if we’d draw it for Finland? 

Would white Finn be looking at the black person from a much higher height and state: “We are a good country that believes in social equality (tasa-arvo). You have a right to most of our social services but we’ll deny you one very important matter.”

There is a pause of silence and then the white Finns speaks:  “I will keep that a secret from you because you are supposed to figure it out.”

The white Finn looks away from the black person and whispers to you: “That secret is equal opportunities.”

The image above is one of many anti-racism cartoons that you can find on Ampersand by Barry Deutsch.

Do we know any artists out there who would like to do cartoons for Migrant Tales?

Thank you Glenn Robinson’s Community Village Daily Activist for the heads up! 

UN and ECHR stop Finland from deporting torture victims

Posted on February 13, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

The European Court of Human Rights and the UN Committee against Torture have stopped the deportation of a number of asylum seekers in Finland in the last months, reports Helsingin Sanomat. Calls by different NGOs to the end to such deportations appears to have had an impact. 

Finland has had a dubious record on asylum seekers that stretches back to the cold war years, when Finland returned Soviet citizens back to the former USSR as well as today gays and torture victims to countries where such people may face imprisonment or death.

If you are interested about these types of asylum seekers who are returned and put in harms way in their home countries, tune into TV1 at 9:30 pm today.

The cold war era could shed some light on why some Finns see immigrants and refugees as a threat. How can we have empathy for asylum seekers if we returned such people to the Soviet Union and had no regard for their human rights?

Just like more Finns are raising their voices against racism in Finland, the same should be done concerning the deportation of gays and torture victims.

Finland is a good country that should uphold human rights, not act arbitrarily and with total disregard for the safety of those that seek shelter from persecution.

CEO Whalroos claims the social welfare system marginalizes Finns

Posted on February 12, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Björn Wahlroos, chairman of the board of banks Sampo Group, Nordea and forest group UPM-Kymnmene, was quoted on Sunday’s Helsingin Sanomat as stating that the   present social welfare state system is the main culprit for marginalizing Finns. He said that outgoing President Tarja Halonen had put a dent in the credibility of the executive branch by polarizing Finnish society. 

“During Halonen’s mandate the [credibility of] presidential institution has suffered,” he said. “I wouldn’t [go as far as to] state that she was not fit to be president, but her position has been different from what the people expressed in the parliamentary election.”

What is Whalroos implying? Does he claim that while 81% of Finns did not vote for an anti-EU and anti-immigration party, the Perussuomalaiset (PS), the president should jump on the populist bandwagon and echo what 19.1% of Finns voted for?

Since Whalroos represents the conservative model of our society, or the epitome of capitalist greed for some, his views have a lot of relevance to Finns but especially to immigrants and minorities.

If more social inequality is going to occur in Finland in the years ahead due to the diminishing role of the welfare state, the impact on Finns, immigrants and minorities will not only come in benefits but in a totally new set of values. This, I believe, is the central issue. What are those new values that will guide us in an ever-growing dog-eat-dog society?

One of the first matters to fly out of the window in Whalroos’ economic model for Finland is social equality (tasa-arvo).

But concepts such as social equality have little meaning for immigrants, minorities and Finnish with international backgrounds if they do not exist in practice. Even if we have to take Wahlroos’ claims with a pinch of salt, he is right in claiming that the present social welfare system does marginalize some people, especially immigrants.  City officials and politicians use social welfare services to sweep under the rug serious social problems like acceptance of immigrants.

Moreover, Whalroos, a former activist of the communist party when he was a student, simplifies things and stumbles on the same problem that other conservatives make: Less control of the economy will resolve all of our society’s problems.

If you want to see what kinds of societies economic liberalism has created, visit the United States and other countries like Argentina. You will rapidly get a good idea of how neo-liberal capitalism  has fueled social inequality, poverty at the cost of higher dividends for shareholders.

While Whalroos speaks highly of President-elect Sauli Niinstö, it is unclear if the new president will be as outspoken as his predecessor on issues like social inequality and racism.

A poll by MTV3 of the presidential candidates showed that Niinistö agreed with PS chairman Timo Soini and Sari Essayah of the Christian Democrats that the far right did not pose a threat to Finland.

There is hope if racism thrives on ignorance and isolation

Posted on February 11, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

If racism thrives on ignorance and isolation, then there is hope but a lot has to be done. Instead of lowering oneself to the diatribe and hatred of anti-immigration groups, we must strive to find solutions. People who spread racism are by no means infallible. Racism is like Dracula. Not only does it live on by infecting the person, it cannot stand the light of day. 

Another weakness that racism has is that it is a loner and likes isolation.  That is why it loves attention sometimes because it is a chronic narcissist.

Our blogger, Asian, correctly pointed out that one of the challenges facing visible minorities in Finland is institutional racism. It is another silent culprit acting behind the scenes hindering integration and people from tapping their potential in our society.

Here is a good description of how institutional racism works in our society:  “Institutional racism is that which, covertly or overtly, resides in the policies, procedures, operations and culture of public or private institutions – reinforcing individual prejudices and being reinforced by them in turn.”

The suggestion by a former student that apart from accepting ourselves, we should strive as well to extend our hand of friendship to those that loathe us, is a very effective way of challenging such a social ill.

There is a lot of hatred out there in countries like Finland: the election in April and their sugar-coated arguments that constantly attempt to fool us by hiding the real face of racism by arguing the complete opposite.

Despite the challenges, our aim is not to run to a corner and become like those that want to confine us in prisons where we lose sight of things like purpose. Our aim is to be stronger than hatred.

We must come up with solutions. And there are many good ones out there from many of us. One of these made recently on Facebook was by Abdirahim Husu Hussein, a Center Party member, who is an example to many. He said: “I also think that we need [to strive for] 10% representation in all the municipalities [in the October municipal election].”

In other words, more immigrants and Finns with international backgrounds should seriously consider running for city council. This is crucial, especially during these times when an anti-immigration party has become one of the biggest in Finland.

Joining a political party is one solution out of many.

If we look at ways to get more power and recognition in Finland, it will certainly not happen as long as we remain passive and offer excuses like “Finland isn’t my country.”  Finland is our home. We must therefore show leadership by offering solutions. In simple English it means empowering yourself and taking control.

We will continue to be kicked around as a group as long as we don’t demand our rights and simultaneously extend our hand to those that loathe us.

If we don’t do anything we have nobody else to blame than ourselves.

It's hard for some to see racism when you are a white Finn

Posted on February 10, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

What does Finnish white privilege mean? Does it mean controlling almost all political, economic and social power in Finland? How do we address the issue?

One matter is certain: immigrants and visible minorities in Finland will never be able to challenge such a social ill by themselves. White Finns, Finns with international backgrounds, minorities and immigrants must unite and challenge racism and exclusion that threaten our society more than ever today.

Racism Review writes about such a campaign launched in the United States: “The focus of the campaign is very clearly on white people and this makes sense given the demographics of the region where the campaign is posting billboards.  The Twin Ports (Duluth, MN and Superior, WI) is a predominantly white community (89%).”

Sounds like a place in Finland.

“When race becomes a problem for anybody that is in our community it’s out problem,” says Don Nass, Twin Ports mayor. “We have a role in addressing it.”

Martin Éric asked about the Russian community in Finland, which faces a lot of discrimination in this country. A good point. We have visible and invisible minorities that face prejudice in this country.

Should we start a similar campaign in Finland to address this social ill that has for too long roamed near-freely in our society?

Could we start with a poster as the one above and publish it everywhere possible? Not interested?

If you still are uncertain about launching such a campaign, we must try harder and come up with a better campaign idea that will awaken and mobilize people to act.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=S6YPmqyOHrY#!]

The message of the campaign is simple: We are against racism in Finland. Integration through acceptance, respect and equal opportunities will not only strengthen our society but cost less to tax payers.

Labor immigrants in Finland: Who exploits whom?

Posted on February 9, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Remember when some politicians pointed the finger accusingly at labor immigrants because they would fuel racism? Remember how these politicians claimed that immigrants would work for a pittance and thereby drive wages down? A story published by Kauhajoki-lehti reveals how Swedish construction group Skanska exploited its employees at a construction site by paying them 4-euro hourly wages  and a bowl of rice every day.

A story by Kansan Uutiset claims that such workers made 3 euros an hour and worked 12-hour shifts.

So who is to blame? The worker or the company? What about those who should be regulating such sites to ensure that everything is done legally?

Most of the immigrant workers in question are from Estonia, Kosovo, Russia and Poland.

Taking into account such cases, and there are many of them out there in Finland, it’s clear that some companies will exploit immigrant workers if given the opportunity. This doesn’t happen to Finns on such a scale because they are organized.

Unions should take care of immigrant workers as much as they do their own nationals.

Does this happen? Kauhajoki is a good example that it doesn’t.

Politicians in Finland who "shop" for your anti-immigration vote

Posted on February 9, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Everyone needs to think, first of all, of themselves when it comes to education like an immigrant. How does an immigrant think? He thinks, nothing is owed me. I don’t have a place waiting for me at Harvard. I better understand the world I’m living in and boy, I better work harder than the next guy because I’ve got nothing else going for me. Thomas L. Freidman

The level of debate in Finland concerning immigrants and cultural diversity is still far from Freidman’s quote. Politicians who denigrate and insult immigrants and refugees as “welfare shoppers” hide the real motive behind their ludicrous claim: They are shopping for your vote.

What has happened to some of us? Those very values that made our country a good place to live in weren’t certainly built on greed. I personally enjoy being a member of my community and helping others. Many people in this country feel the same way as I.

One of the matters that I have noticed in the ongoing one-sided debate in Finland on immigrants and immigration is that some take criticism personally. They may ask: “How dare this person, who isn’t even a white Finn, dare criticize my country?!”

Nothing could be further from the truth. People who debate openly and question a social ill like racism and prejudice are should be seen as this country’s true “patriots.” Since when was apathy and spreading racism a constructive society-building process?

Such attitudes not only reveal the person’s low self-esteem but their arrogance. Some of them picture Finnish culture and Finland as something frail ready to wilt and die if it comes in contact with the outside world.

The crucial matter that stops some from overcoming their reactive arguments is acceptance of  “others.”  As we have stated on this blog previously, acceptance should be a mutual process.

A warning to all those that continue to spread urban tales about immigrants and minorities. What they write today will be read in the future. Do some of them want to look like a Finnish version of the Klu Klux Klan or someone who had a vision of the future?

We at Migrant Tales have chosen the latter route.

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