This picture below on the wall of the Mikkelin Klubi. located 230km north of the capital Helsinki, was one of the main reaons why I quit my membership. Everytime I inquired about the infamous picture of Heinrich Himmler with Carl Gustaf Mannerheim, I’d get a knee-jerk response: “it’s history (so it’s ok).”
Even if this may be the case, the picture is displayed without any context like why are Himmler and Mannerheim toasting together and what was the country’ relationship with what Nazi Germany? What about complicity in the “Final Solution,” the genocide committed against the Jews, Roma and other enemies of the Nazi regime?
Himmler is not the only war criminal on the wall of the club. You will also find Alfred Jodl, found guilty on all four counts (conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity) and sentenced to death. In my opinion, the pictures on the wall of the club display history but it is done without context, which makes it problematic. If you wish, you can pay tribute to the sinister alliance between Finland and Germany and be a closet Nazi if you wish.

The text above reads: “Heinrichs, Airo, Himmler, Marshall, Ehrfurt (sic), Nenonen, Lundqvist and a German visitor at the Mikkeli Club in fall 1942.” In 1942, Operation Reinhard, which aimed to liquidate Polish Jewry, was in full swing.
Treblinka was one of the many extermination camps of Operation Reinhard, the deadliest phase of Nazi Germany’s intention to commit genocide against the Jewish people.
Those pictures and our justification for joining the Nazi cause in World War 2, could explain why Finland is incapable of tackling its growing racism problem. Hannah Arendt famously called it the banality of evil.
