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Institute of Race Relations: Roma – fascism’s first victims, again

Posted on November 15, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Liz Fekete

Anti-Roma violence draws strength from fascist ideas that linger on in mainstream European thought.

On 15 September, a Roma man from Romania, homeless in Sweden, died of injuries sustained on 31 August, when a fire broke out at a Roma temporary tent camp in Högdalen, southern Stockholm. We will probably never know whether the man, who has not been named, was the victim of a tragic accident, or whether his tent was deliberately set on fire by racists who, in months previous, had been very vocal on social media disseminating information on the location of Sweden’s temporary Roma encampments. The reason why the truth may prove elusive rests with police officers who, on arriving at the scene of the fire, assumed that it had been caused by the carelessness of the Roma themselves. The Roma had other views, but by the time they persuaded the police to act like investigators and keep an open mind, the damage had been done. As it took the police several hours to cordon off the charred campsite for a forensic examination, what might have been a murder scene was compromised, and vital forensic evidence lost.

lady-in-front-of-burnt-traveller-trailer-300x154

Irish Traveller in front of a trailer destroyed in an arson attack.

THE LEGACY OF FASCIST IDEAS

Given all we know about far-right hated of the Roma, current and historical, why would the police be so quick to rule out a racial motive?

In order to understand the unexceptional tunnel-vision of the Swedish police, it is perhaps necessary to turn to mainstream culture, to consider the ways that Roma, Gypsies and Travellers are discussed on social media, in newspapers, TV, in educational materials and textbooks. (Consider the current protests in Madrid over the twenty-third edition of the dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy which defined a ‘gypsy’ as ‘one who lies and cheats’.)[1] Not only is there widespread cultural ignorance of the lasting impact of the Holocaust on Roma communities, but also a lack of insight into the ways in which mainstream discourses today replicate, albeit (in most, but by no means all, cases) in muted form, the fascist thinking of the 1930s. At least half a million and perhaps as many as 1.5 million Roma died in the Porajmos, or the Great Devouring, as the Holocaust is known amongst the Roma. While the Nuremburg Laws of 1935 marked the Roma out, alongside the Jews, for the Final Solution, the Roma and Sinti had already been decimated through the Nazi’s social hygiene programmes. At the centre of Nazi ideology was eugenics (improvement of the genetic stock), the ideas surrounding which were not unique to fascism but grew out of Social Darwinism, a mainstream ‘science’ in Europe and the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Nazis were to drive the logic of eugenics forwards to its ultimate barbaric limits. Certain categories of people – the criminal, degenerate, homosexual, idle, feeble-minded, disabled and insane – were selected for forced labour or concentration camps. For the Nazis, they were ‘deviant’, ‘asocial’ and ‘workshy’, summed up in Hitler’s phrase ‘life unworthy of life’ (Lebensunwertes Leben). Under the 1933 Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring, Roma and Sinti were selected for compulsory sterilisation and, later, in 1939, for extermination under the Action T-4 forced euthanasia programme. In this way, Roma were treated by the Nazis, as both a social and genetic threat to the ‘master race’, and then, after the Nuremberg Laws, as a ‘racial threat’ . But given that in today’s post-Holocaust Europe, scientific racism is no longer acceptable, it is the social hygiene component of fascism that lingers in modern attitudes towards the Roma. The legacy of fascism is evidenced in our failure to hold to account those who, directly or indirectly, refer to the criminal culture and deviant lifestyle of the Roma.

It should also be remembered that sterilisation programmes persisted in many European countries, long after the end of the second world war. Even in the so-called egalitarian paradise of Sweden, from 1935-1976 the state forcibly sterilised some 60,000 women under a eugenics programme designed to rid the country of inferior racial stock. Meanwhile, the universal failure of European societies to recognise Roma suffering during the Holocaust, meant that textbooks and education materials were not readily scrutinised for anti-Roma content (witness the Spanish dictionary scandal, mentioned above). In fact, in Germany the Porajmos was only officially acknowledged in 1982 and only in 2011 was a Roma representative officially asked to speak at the German Holocaust Memorial Day.[2]

SOCIAL FASCISM IN EASTERN EUROPE

All these failures ensured that hostility and violence against the Roma continued in the post-war period, with barely a ripple of mainstream protest. There were pogroms against the Roma in Hungary and Romania in the 1990s, with the Romanian police actively participating in the most infamous of the attacks in Hãdãreni in 1993, during which three Romani men were killed and eighteen Romani houses were destroyed.[3] During a 14-month period in 2009-10, Hungarian neo-Nazi serial killers murdered six Roma and engaged in countless other attacks, including arson, in nine small towns and villages in central and eastern Hungary.[4] The social hygiene ideas of the Nazis, the equation of Roma lifestyles with social degeneracy, as well as the over-breeding that threatens the ‘racial stock’, linger on across much of eastern Europe, painfully affecting the marginalised and impoverished Roma. In the Slovakian town of Kosice, the Magnificent Seven Party (7 Stato?ných, and, yes, they actually wear cowboy hats), are calling for ‘gypsies’ to be rounded up and put on flights to Europe, and for sterilisation programmes (albeit voluntary, whatever that means in this context) for any Roma women who remain.[5] Between 1971 and 1991, the sterilisation of Roma woman, often during a Caesarean section or an abortion, and without their knowledge, was state practice across Czechoslovakia.[6]

Out of the mouths of respectable politicians, as well as judges, come the same social stereotypes, the same discriminatory words . In April 2014, a judge in a court in Gyula in Békés county, Southeast Hungary, rejecting a bid to dissolve the paramilitaries of the Szebb Jövõt Vigilante Association (closely linked to Jobbik and the previously dissolved Hungarian Guard), summed up by declaring that ‘Being a Roma should not be primarily interpreted as a racial category, rather as a way of life led by a group of people who stand apart from the traditional values of majority society, and whose lifestyle is characterized by the avoidance of work and the disrespect of private property and the norms of living together.’ Meanwhile, on 2 August in the Czech Republic , Tomio Okamura, previously an independent senator loosely aligned with Christian Democrats, but now leader of the breakaway far-right Dawn of Direct Democracy, chose the occasion of Roma Holocaust Day to describe the Lety concentration camp (where Roma were interned during the Nazi occupation, with many sent on to Auschwitz) as a ‘labour camp for persons who were avoiding proper work’, and where people died of old age and ‘diseases they brought with them as a result of their previous travelling lifestyle’. Now, Facebook pages are spring up across the Czech Republic with names and slogans such as ‘We demand impunity for shooting gypsies’, ‘We don’t want to feed the Romani population’ and ‘We Demand the Public Execution of the Executive Director of Romea’.

WESTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE – IT’S NO JOKE

Anti-Roma hatred is reaching vile levels. But the most shocking aspect of the hate is the tacit support given by respectable politicians – across Europe, from South to North, from East to West – for views that may fall short of denouncing the Roma as a ‘racial threat’, but replicate the Nazi view of Roma as delinquent and workshy and a social threat to Europe.

It’s far too simplistic to label this an eastern European post-Communist problem, (with the snide undercurrent that you can’t expect more from the economically and socially backward East). Vile comments, most often passed off as humour, emanate from the mouths of our supposedly more enlightened western and northern European politicians on a daily basis. Witness the UK’s Maidenhead Conservative councillor’s recent comment (a misplaced joke he claims), at a council meeting, that one way to speed up the council’s evictions of Travellers, would be to ‘Execute them’.[7] Or the comments of Gilles Bourdouleix, the deputy mayor of a constituency in the French Maine-et-Loire region, who remarked, during a confrontation with Roma at a camp in Cholet, that ‘maybe Hitler did not kill enough Gypsies’. (A misunderstanding, his comments aimed at no one in particular, he protests!)[8]

It is in France, where Facebook pages call for the elimination of the Roma, that violence has, according to the League of Human Rights, reached ‘pathological’ levels.[9] The League blames government policies and high-profile eviction programmes. One particularly horrendous incident occurred in June 2014, when a 16-year-old teenager from Romania, known as Gheorghe C, only narrowly escaped death after suffering life-threatening injuries, including a fractured skull, following an ‘attempted lynching’. The teenager was kidnapped from a Roma encampment in the Pierrefitte-sur-Seine area, north of Paris by a gang of hooded men and tortured in the basement of a housing estate in the Seine Sans Denis area, north of Paris. Finally, unconscious, his body was discovered dumped in a shopping trolley left on the side of the national motorway. His violent treatment was greeted with expressions of support on many online portals.

But this is only one in a catalogue of violent attacks across northern and western Europe which, like in Sweden, have centred on Roma living in tent-encampments and other easily-identifiable living spaces. Not a week goes by without the reporting of another disturbing incident. To take just a few of the most recent: in September 2014, in Germany, in the Silberhöhe neighbourhood of Halle, neo-Nazis took over an online rant against the Roma. It started out on Facebook but fascists upped the ante, infiltrating protests, and spraying swastikas and racist comments on buildings, roads and sidewalks.[10] In October, in Ireland, multiple Facebook campaigns appeared around the theme of ‘Get Roma criminal gypsies out’, (Roma were described on posts as ‘cockroaches’ and ‘c***s’). Shortly after, Roma families had to be evacuated from their Waterford home, after around sixty people gathered outside their house, chanting ‘Roma, out, out, out’ and other obscenities.[11] The Pavee Point Traveller and Roma centre is mobilising support for the families.

It’s the same story in France and the UK, where the National Federation of Gypsy Liaison Groups’ most recent report, on Gypsy, Traveller and Roma integration, highlights abusive media coverage and overtly racist statements from local and national politicians as cause for concern. The report carries a photo of the burnt out caravan of a Traveller family forced out of their home.

‘THE HOMELESS DEAD’[12]

But to return to Sweden, and the death of the Romanian Roma man in Högdalen. The police, reporting themselves to their own ethics committee for their handling of the fire,[13] have now admitted that they were unaware of the social media campaign to identify Roma encampments, as well as previous incidents, when Roma had had their tents cut with knives, for instance, or a caravan was set on fire. As one solidarity campaigner I spoke to said, ‘The Roma witnesses believe that the fire was an act of arson, though no one had seen the attacker or attackers, and we now find ourselves in the unfortunate situation that total clarity will probably never be reached on this.’ Meanwhile, the name of the Romanian Roma man who died has not been reported. This will most likely go down in the records as just another death amongst the ranks of the European homeless, a growing proportion of whom, according to the European Federation of National Associations Working with the Homeless, are migrants, and an unknown number Roma.[14]

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

RELATED LINKS

IRR Briefing Paper: From pillar to post: pan-European racism and the Roma

European Roma Rights Centre

Pavee Point Roma and Traveller Centre

National Federation of Gypsy and Traveller Liaison Groups

Roma Feminist Association for Diversity (AGFD)

FEANTSA

Europe Roma

References: [1] The protests are being organised by the Association of Feminist Gypsies for Diversity. See ‘Gypsies protest over dictionary definition’, Guardian (30 October 2014). [2] See Ian Hancock, The Pariah Syndrome (Karoma, 1987). [3] The 21-year search for justice for the victims is ongoing. In July 2014, following a case brought by the ERRC and Romani Crises, the Cluj Napoca Court of Appeal found the government had failed to honour previous commitments made to the victims and the community of Hãdãreni. See a European Roma Rights Centre press release (29 July 2014). [4] No government official visited any of the victims’ families or offered an apology. Finally, in the autumn of 2014, the government agreed compensation for those who suffered bodily injuries, or lived in a common household with either the victim or with the person injured during the attacks, or was a close relative. Many of the victims were left disabled for life and with psychological problems, forced to live in the most desperate conditions, without money for medication or food. See Deutsche Welle (2 August 2014). [5] ‘Slovak plan to give Gypsies free flights to the UK’, Croatian Times (16 October 2014). [6] See ‘Forced sterilisation of Romani women – a persisting human rights violation’, Romedia Foundation (7 February 2013). [7] Maidenhead Advertiser (22 October 2014). [8] He was subsequently convicted of hate speech and expelled from the French Union of Democrats and Independents. See ‘French mayor who claimed Hitler “did not kill enough” Roma gypsies avoids jail’, Telegraph (12 August 2014). [9] ‘Forced Evictions in France: absurdly stubborn, stubbornly absurd’, European Roma Rights Centre (7 April 2014). [10]  ‘Hetze gegen Roma. Polizei verstärkt Präsenz in Silberhöhe’, Mitteldeutsche Zeitung (20 July 2014). [11] ‘Ireland: Waterford anti-Roma protests criticised as “cowardly and racist”’, Irish Times (27 October 2014). [12] For an excellent discussion about the problems of trying to account for the homeless who are dying in their droves, see Lise Grout, Cécile Rocca and Christophe Louis, ‘Counting and Describing “The Homeless Dead” – a vital activity to better understand the dead and better help the living’, in Homeless in Europe (magazine of FEANTSA, Winter 2012/2013). [13] ‘Police report themselves over fatal fire at Roma camp’, Radio Sweden (22 September 2014). [14] See ‘Homelessness amongst Immigrants in the EU – a service provider’s perspective’, FEANTSA (June 2013).

The Institute of Race Relations is precluded from expressing a corporate view: any opinions expressed are therefore those of the authors.

Do you think David Cameron should be given ‘a medal’ for immigration?

Posted on November 15, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Finnish Prime Minister Alexsander Stubb continues to surprise us. This time he proposed giving the UK, or Prime Minister David Cameron, ‘a medal’ for immigration. Taking into account how Cameron sees himself threatened by the UKIP and how he’s caved in to anti-immigration and anti-EU rhetoric, the distinction proposed by Stubb is odd to say the least. 

Cameron’s anti-immigration rhetoric is nothing new.

One of the matters that becomes clear in Martin Barker’s The New Racism (1981) is that the same anti-immigration sound bites are used today. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher claimed before the 1979 general election on BBC Radio 4 that Britain was being ‘swamped’ by immigrants and alien cultures.

Remember when Cameron warned how Britain was going to be swamped by Bulgarians and Romanians that on January 1, 2014? Such claims were totally false.

Why do politicians make such irresponsible statements that victimize whole groups? Is it because they lack backbone and seek political gains at any cost? Is it because immigrants and minorities are easy targets to bully publicly?

Näyttökuva 2014-11-15 kello 1.10.07

 

Read full story here.

 

I never could understand how a country that was a colonial and imperialist power like the UK is so touchy about immigration. Since Cameron is into populist anti-immigration rhetoric, certainly we can make a case for the abuse of hundreds of millions of people under colonialism. What about its complicity in the slave trade?

Whatever happened to that Subb before the 2011 parliamentary elections, when he took a strong stand against the xenophobia, racism and ignorance gripping the debate on immigration and immigrants in Finland?

Should we give the Finnish prime minister ‘a medal’ for forgetting that intolerance and populist anti-immigration rhetoric, parroted by Cameron, have little to do with our Nordic values?

 

 

Defining white Finnish privilege #14: Losing sight of the real issue

Posted on November 13, 2014 by Migrant Tales

One of the matters that has always surprised me in Finland is that if you speak out against intolerance and racism, you are sometimes seen as the rude one, not the one making the inappropriate comment. Apart from playing down a social ill like intolerance, we too often lose sight of the real issue: the victim. 

There are many factors that make us play down racism. One could be that we don’t want to rock the boat and get involved because intolerance doesn’t affect us directly. The issue is too complicated and hairy.

Take for example a recent case in Lieksa where parents don’t want their children to be taken to and from school by Somali drivers because they ‘don’t speak Finnish well enough.’

Näyttökuva 2014-11-12 kello 21.06.30

Read full story here.

 

The taxi owner, who hired the Somali drivers, claims that the parents’ motives are racist. The parents deny that their actions have anything to do with the drivers’ skin color or nationality.

But what about if both have some complicity in the matter and that we’re losing focus on the real problem?

‘I highly doubt that the man who hired the [Somali] drivers did so because he’s a good Samaritan,’ a Joensuu source told Migrant Tales. ‘Certainly there are racists among the parents but then again has anyone asked if the man who hired the drivers pays them less money [than white Finn driver] in order to maximize profit?’  

Definition #14

While we still don’t know all the facts, white privilege appears to be written all over the most recent case in Lieksa: Parents can demand one thing and the owner of the taxis can say another. Nobody asks the Somali drivers their opinion.

Thus white privilege permits us to miss the real issue at play: suspicion, prejudice and exploitation of migrants.

It’s not always an open-and-shut matter. White privilege permits you to lose sight of the real issue because it is convenient. It allows you to forget the victim, or the taxi drivers, as is the case in Lieksa.

See also:

  • Defining white Finnish privilege #1: I have it and you don’t
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #2: Third culture children versus “pupil with immigrant background” 
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #3 No history, no doctrine, no heroes and no martyrs
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #4 Holding the short end of the stick
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #5 It’s ok to be a racist
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #6 Not having a voice and the media
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #7 A definitive guide
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #8 Underrated and less intelligent
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #9 Mohammad Ali’s insight
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #10 I can victimize and make up any story I like about migrants because I’m white
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #11: Case Teuvo Hakkarainen
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #12: Case Tom Packalén
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #13: Case Matti Putkonen

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

Lieksa, Finland: Parents don’t want their children to be driven to school by Somali taxi drivers

Posted on November 12, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Leiksa, a far-flung town in eastern Finland, has attracted a lot of bad publicity in recent years from Perussuomalaiset (PS)* councilmen who demanded a ‘Somali-free’ meeting room to a migrant taxi driver that was assaulted recently,  is once again in the news for all the wrong reasons. A group of parents from the town of 12,000 inhabitants don’t want their children to be driven to and from school by Somali taxi drivers. 

The parents claim that the taxis that the children are taken to school haven’t passed the annual vehicle safety and roadworthiness test or have alcohol ignition locks required by law.

Some parents have filed complaints to the police and threatened to boycott the taxis if the drivers aren’t changed and that the cars have passed the annual vehicle safety test.

Pauli Meriläinen, the owner who hired the Somali taxi drivers, denies the accusations made against him.

‘The whole fuss started when I hired by mistake migrant taxi drivers,” he was quoted as saying on Joensuu-based Karjalainen. ‘Right after that the problems began. Parents started to made up these accusations.’

Näyttökuva 2014-11-12 kello 21.06.30

 

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

 

One of the parents told YLE Pohjois-Karjala that the parents don’t feel comfortable with the Somali drivers because they don’t speak sufficient Finnish.

‘This has nothing to do with the color of their skin or their nationality,’ the person said. ‘In the agreement it states that [Finnish] language proficiency must be sufficient but in this case it isn’t.’

The parents of the children accuse Meriläinen of using the ‘racism card’ to not resolve their two demands: change the drivers and the roadworthiness of the taxis.

‘I wonder what the union thinks if parents demand that I change the drivers?’ Meriläinen said. ‘Is that a reason to layoff [these drivers]? The [taxi] drivers [are qualified and] have driven buses in Helsinki.’

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

Anonymous migrant: Known – unknown

Posted on November 12, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales’ insight: Anonymous is one of the many readers that not only visit our blog but contribute their stories and poems. I’m not at liberty to disclose her identity but can vouch for her story. We have been in touch countless of times on the phone and she has told me her six-year ordeal in Finland many, many times. 

I am honored to publish her poems and insights of life in Finland. Having power over others gives you certain privileges like not questioning yourself. But being marginal opens up a different world that Anonymous’ poems bring.

One of my favorite writings by Anonymous is Against all odds human spirit cannot be crushed. 

IMG_4585

__________________

By Anonymous

KNOWN-UNKNOWN

A fate of life hanged in the balance. Nothing to ease the suffering. Devoid of any means of sustainance. Left to ponder on unknown fate rest on the assumption that nobody will be aware nor figure out her plight as she is kept under surveillance 24/7. In the event becomes an invisible victim. She exists… known but her plight unknown…

 

WOUND-UNWOUND

incident ripped open healing wound

past suffering sutured by mound

re-opens and gushes blood without a sound

where does it end…

but leaves a trail a around

to where the acts of revenge surround

to the heart of discord- pattern -bound

where does it end…

destroy every ounce of effort with pound

slash existing roots of hope without sound

and any progress made and found

where does it end…

induce a fall down against enemy with hound

not to be able to pick herself from ground

for it will take a miracle this time around

where does it end….

Reija Härkönen: Mitä pitää tapahtua, että kansa herää?

Posted on November 11, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Reija Härkönen

Hämärässä tilassa on piikkilanka-aitojen välinen kuja. Kuja on kokonaan lusikoitten ja haarukoitten peitossa. Historiaa vähänkin tunteva näkee heti, mistä on kysymys: keskitysleireille viedyiltä juutalaisilta riistettiin kaikki omaisuus, monilla perheillä mukaan haalittu arvotavara olivat hopeiset aterimet. Tästä mennään keskitysleirille. Teos sijaitsee saksalaisen Dortmundin kaupungin modernin taiteen museossa, Ostwallissa.

MO_Vostell_Thermoelektrisches_Kaugummi_1970

Vanhempi rouva, joka istuu ovensuussa valvomassa näyttelyesineitä, huomaa, että pysähdyn vähän pitemmäksi aikaa katselemaan näkymää. Hän tulee vierelleni, ja kertoo, että jos haluan, voin kävellä kujalle. Ei saa koskea -kasvatus on lujassa, ja varmistan vielä, että olen ymmärtänyt oikein. Kun sitten lähden muutaman metrin taipaleelle, rouva työntää vanhanaikaisen pahvisen matkalaukun käteeni. Hitaasti astelen kalisevien lusikoitten päällä piikkilangan viertä pitkin. Matkalaukustani alkaa kuulua ääniä, kuin vaikeaa hengitystä. Minunko?

Palattuani oppaani kertoo, että Wolf Vostell on tehnyt teoksen vuonna 1970. Hän oli ollut huolissaan siitä, kuinka natsi-Saksan aikaiset aatteet jälleen olivat nostaneet päätään sen aikaisessa Saksassa. Puhuimme siitä, kuinka taiteilijat ovat herkkiä vaistoamaan, mitä yhteiskunnassa on tapahtumassa ja myös reagoivat herkästi ikäviä asioita esiin nostamalla.

Saksan kielen taitoni on melko vaatimaton, mutta jostakin sanat nyt löytyivät. Huoli oli yhteinen ja kauhulla puhuimme siitä, mitä on jo tapahtunut vaikkapa Unkarissa ja Kreikassa ja mitä on meneillään itse asiassa koko Euroopassa.

Dortmund on tänään vireä monikulttuurinen kaupunki. Sodan aikana kaupunki oli mm. Puolan Zamoscin ja Belzecin keskitysleireille kuljetettavien ihmisten kokoamiskeskus, yli 40.000 ihmistä kuljetettiin tätä kautta. Myös kaupungin oma, vähän yli 4100 hengen juutalaisyhteisö katosi sodan aikana lähes täysin, osa keskitysleireille, jotkut pääsivät pakenemaan muihin maihin.

Olimme tietysti täsmälleen samaa mieltä, kuin lähes kuka tahansa aikalaisemme: ihmisen ihonvärillä, etnisyydellä, kielellä ja kulttuurilla ei kerta kaikkiaan ole väliä, eikä niistä voi normaali ihminen mitenkään löytää oikeutusta toisen ihmisen vihaamiseen ja tappamiseen. Mutta miksi sitten menneisyyden kaiut ovat niin selvät?

Pala nousi kurkkuun meillä molemmilla, kyynel silmänurkassa läksin kulkemaan museon muille osastoille. Rouva toivotti minulle kaikesta huolimatta mukavaa tutustumista näyttelyyn. Vähän ajan kuluttua hän etsi minut uudelleen käsiinsä. Hän tahtoi antaa minulle pienen lahjan, kauniisti kuvitetun museo-ohjelman. Sielumme olivat kohdanneet. Yhteinen huoli oli yhdistänyt meidät.

Meillä kaikki eivät vielä ole tiedostaneet, mitä Suomessa ja muualla Euroopassa on meneillään. Jotkut vähättelevät asian tärkeyttä, toiset vetoavat siihen, että Suomessa suojelupoliisi sanoo, että äärioikeistolainen liikehdintä on meillä vähäistä. Onko se vähäistä silloin, kun se on jo niin pitkällä, että sitä ohjataan eduskunnasta?

Eikö pitäisi huolestua toden teolla viimeistään nyt, kun syrjäytyneiden lasten katuväkivallan herättäessä huolta suomalainen kansanedustaja ehdottaa suojeluskuntamallista katupartiointia etnisen väkivallan kitkemiseksi ja ilmoittaa tehtävään vapaaehtoiseksi natsimielisen järjestönsä? Tai kun toinen kansanedustaja, itsekin poliisi, ilmoittaa, että poliisi on voimaton ja lasten harjoittama katuväkivalta on rasistista rikollisuutta etnisiä suomalaisia kohtaan? Huomasiko kukaan sitäkään, kuinka äärioikeistolaisen falangin kiihottaminen on tehonnut Lieksassa? Puheet alkavat realisoitua väkivallaksi.

Onhan niin, että tällä kertaa ihan tavallinen, keskiluokkainen kansa ei vaikenemalla mahdollista pahuuden etenemistä? Unkarista on jo osa sivistyneistöä ja taiteilijoita joutunut pakenemaan ja erilaiset vähemmistöt ovat ahdingossa. Onko meillä mahdollista toimia niin, etteivät uusfasistisen populismin harjoittajat saa vapaasti, ilman minkäänlaista vastustusta, ajaa ihmisvastaista agendaansa?

Vai annetaanko meillä asioiden edetä niin pitkälle, että jälkeenpäin sanomme vain: “Me emme tienneet”?

Alkuperäisen blogikirjoituksen voi lukea tästä.

Tämä blogikirjoitus julkaistiin Migrant Talesissä luvalla.

 

http://www.verkkouutiset.fi/politiikka/Suomen_Sisu_monikultturismi-26763

http://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/artikkeli/242894-poliisikansanedustaja-jengihyokkaykset-ovat-rasistisia

http://www.iltasanomat.fi/kotimaa/art-1288761380421.html

 

 

Migrant Tales (July 3, 2014): Is ‘Heikki the drunk’ Finnish or Swedish?

Posted on November 11, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Migrants’ Tales insight: This story is interesting when looking at the Fazer gigolo tv commercial in Finland, which reinforces stereotypes about certain migrants and minorities in this country. An all-white board of the Council of Ethics in Advertising, which gets all of its funding from the private sector, will have a difficult time understanding what some minorities may feel about such commercials. 

Check out the story below about ‘Heikki the drunk’ and how it offended some Swedish Finns. 

Are the two related? Certainly they are. 

____________________

Some Swedish Finns are up in arms about a children’s book published in Sweden that pictures a wino called Heikki, according to YLE in English.  The character in the book, who is lying in a bush next to a plastic bag full of beer, was too much for Swedish Finn Sirpa Lamminpää, who filed a complaint to the Discrimination Ombudsman.  

YLE in English reports that the Discrimination Ombudsman will not take the case since “perceived prejudice” in printed books is falls under the jurisdiction of Swedish Chancellor of Justice.

Illustrator Gunna Grähs defends the character by stating that Heikki is a Swede.

“Perhaps she [Lamminpää]  is simply upset about the character being an alcoholic,” Grähs was quoted as saying. “Only one thing links him to Finland, and that is his name. In my opinion Heikki’s is a case of social class, not nationality.”

Grähs has a good point. Sweden is culturally diverse and a person with a name like Heikki can be a Swede.

Even so, the commotion about Heikki shows that Sweden is still a far ways off from being a post-racial society.

Risto Laakkonen, who is outspoken on migrant rights in Finland, said that any type of stereotyping is wrong and shouldn’t be tolerated.

 

Näyttökuva 2014-7-3 kello 11.42.19

 

Read full story here.

 

Laakkonen was active in a campaign in the 1970s to change the way that the Swedish media pictured Finns. Whenever a crime was reported by the media the first national group that came to mind as the culprits were Finns.

“With [then] Ambassador Max Jakobson we got in touch with all the editor-in-chiefs and managing editors of all the newspapers and television channels and told them that this type of stereotyping isn’t good since you’re labeling people who are working in this country,” he said. “The portrayal of Finns as the culprits ended pretty rapidly.”

Laakkonen said that in Finland it was impossible for the media to be racist towards migrants since there were so few back in the 1970s. He said that Finland’s media caught up to the Swedes in the 1990s.

“Things were actually much worse than today before when you had openly [fascist] groups [like the IKL 1932-44] that talked about Finns as a tribe and influenced this type of thinking to be taught at schools,” he said. “The Perussuomalaiset* are small fry when compared to the past.”

Laakkonen said that human rights and tolerance are like a tree that must be watered.

“The tree will die if you don’t water it,” he said. “All you need is 10% of the population to be awake and active [for human rights] for things to change.”

 

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The names adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings. 

 

Migrants’ Rights Network: Yes, migrants are net contributors, but they are also our partners in challenging inequality and injustice

Posted on November 10, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales’ insight: Another fine essay by Don Flynn, which brings to mind recent claims by the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party that migration costs the country up to 2 billion euros. The estimation is only a guess by the PS and which forget to calculate that the majority of migrants in Finland work, pay taxes and consume. They conveniently forgot to mention as well a recent OECD report that migration had boosted Finland’s economic growth in 2011 by 0.16%, including pensions. 

_____________

Don Flynn*

Don_web_0

We heard last week that recent migrants have contributed £20 billion to UK revenues. But the real gains from migration will come when newcomers can take their place in the fight against inequality and xenophobia.

Näyttökuva 2014-11-10 kello 18.03.41

Read full blog entry here. 

 

Last week’s report from academics at University College London on the fiscal impacts of migration to the UK is just the latest in a whole sequence which has made the case that, far from being a charge on the tax payer, the migration that developed over the course of the 2000s, has brought in a cohort of net contributors.

We can expect that this steady accumulation of evidence supporting the view that migration does generate positive effects is to open up space in the political mainstream for the argument that immigration policy should incline towards openness rather than closure. Advocacy in support of groups like international students and skilled migrants has already advanced to the point where it has the ear of leading ministers with Vince Cable at BIS being particularly outspoken.

Arguments in favour of more openness on immigration policy represent both opportunities and challenges for groups working to support the rights of migrants. Opportunities in the sense that they undermine the ‘commonsense’ presumption that society is better protected when it imposes strict control over the movement of non-nationals; challenged because so much of the discussion revolves around the election of the types of migrant for whom borders will be relatively open.

MRN has always resisted the idea that a simple formula is available which will assist state functionaries in a decision-making process about who is the ‘good’ immigrant, as opposed to the undesirable. The slogan which the Home Office has raised to official status, branding its policies as aiming to select ‘the brightest and the best’ seems especially inane as the evidence accumulates that the gains for the welfare of the population are just as likely to come from any newcomer who aims to fill whatever niche if offered up and to meet the demands for taxes that will inevitably come their way.

This week we will be launching the ‘Migrant Manifesto’ which we think is really needed if we are going to build the communities in the UK which can really meet all the challenges of living in our modern globalised world and at the same tackle all the growing problems that come from inequality and social exclusion.

This means going beyond the simple celebration of the fact that migrants contribute more in taxes than they take out in services. Our Manifesto will call for acknowledgment of the fact that the immigration policies of recent years have created a hugely uneven playing field for newcomers, with rights to secure residence status, to challenge the unfair decisions of the authorities, to sponsor the admission of family members, to access the public services which they pay for from their tax contributions, to escape from the dangers of exploitation in the workplace, and generally to live without the fear of the constant demand to produce papers that ‘prove’ identity and legal status, all being badly eroded.

Our view is that policies on the way migration is managed should be as much about basic human values and they are about extracting economic advantages over people deliberately made vulnerable because of their status as non-nationals. If we thing that it is permissible to squeeze more out of migrants than it is out of citizens then we will be held back from challenging inequality and the gross injustices that emerge from racism and xenophobia.

Our ‘Migrant Manifesto’ campaign will go live after its launch this coming Wednesday.

What it calls for has been outlined in a series of blogs on this website over the past six weeks. The full text will be public after the launch and we are offering it up as an opportunity for discussion and, hopefully, a spur to campaigning activity during the next six months.  A special website will be launched very soon to help sustain the momentum of this work.

To recap on what we are calling for, check these blogs from the last few weeks

  • End the ‘hostile environment’
  • Protect a right to family life
  • Give European migrants a fair deal
  • Improve the immigration system for all
  • End the exploitation of migrant workers
  • Protect the interests of international students 

We hope that these calls for action will resonate with groups working with migrant communities right the way across the country.  The Migrant Manifesto will make progress only if it is taken up and developed by people who can affirm its basic propositions, but also add and take them further forward.

We welcome your comments about this campaign and will look forward to hearing from you all.

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

* Don Flynn, the MRN director, leads the ogranization’s strategic development and coordinates MRN’s policy and project work. He is a regular and sought-after speaker at conferences, seminars and lectures on behalf of MRN.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

Response to Fazer’s gigolo says a lot about Finland today

Posted on November 10, 2014 by Migrant Tales

The decision by the Council of Ethics in Advertising of Finland that there was nothing wrong with Fazer’s gigolo television commercial says a lot about why there is so little respect towards minorities in this country. For those who lived in Finland in the 1970s, Fazer’s gigolo was the typical stereotype of the southern European man, who spoke broken Finnish, was useless but was a good lover. 

Irwin Goodman even wrote a racist song about the ‘gigolo’ called Marcello Magaoni, or Marcello Macaroni.  There a similar song in the 1970s by Esa Pakainen, who masqueraded in a 1960 Finnish movie as a blackface with his partner Pätkä.

In a similar story in Sweden in July, some members of the Finnish community in Sweden were outraged about a Heikki the drunk character in a book that they claimed reinforced stereotypes about Finns in Sweden.

Why does a large sweets company like Fazer of Finland think that it’s perfectly acceptable to reinforce stereotypes about minorities in order to boost sales? Are they saying that ‘humorous’ racist stereotypes hit the spot with Finnish consumers?

The response of the Council of Ethic in Advertising is one matter but the comments from readers on different newspapers are just as revealing.

The lion’s share of those responses about the Fazer gigolo didn’t see anything racist or wrong with the commercial and agreed with the Council of Ethics in Advertising that it was humorous.

Writes Pantterit on parhaita: ‘That was a really funny commercial.’

Funny? Certainly if you are white.

Read more comments (in Finnish) on Lappeenranta-based daily Etelä-Saimaa.Näyttökuva 2014-11-10 kello 12.38.31

Why does Fazer think that the way to Finnish consumers’ heart is with the help of ethnicity and race? In 2007, after mounting pressure from the EU, it stopped using its infamous golliwog on its licorice brand and in it stopped using a Chinese man or women in one of its products in 2011.

Migrant Tales filed a complaint to the Council of Ethic in Advertising because the commercial promoted stereotypes of southern European men. Stereotypes are the breeding ground from with the fruits of intolerance feed off.

The decision by the Council and the reaction of many readers clearly shows how little weight migrants and minorities continue to have in Finland.

I for one will be one person who will boycott Fazer products and I hope that many more will do the same.

 

 

The Council of Ethics in Advertising of Finland finds nothing wrong with Fazer’s ‘gigolo’

Posted on November 7, 2014 by Migrant Tales

The Council of Ethics in Advertising has found nothing wrong with a Fazer advertisement, which depicting a stereotypical Southern European gigolo in a salt licorice television commercial. The seven-member board of the council, which are all white Finns, considered the commercial to be done in good taste and with humor.

Migrant Tales filed a complaint to the Council of Ethics in Advertising citing that the Fazer television commercial reinforced racist stereotypes about men from Southern Europe. Aren’t stereotypes the breeding ground of racism and discrimination?

The council receives all of its financing from the private sector.

For those of us who have lived in Finland in the 1980s, the “mud-faced gigolo speaking broken Finnish” was a common racist stereotype of some foreign men that still exists.

An important question we should ask Fazer is why it persists in using such marketing strategies after racist mascots like its infamous Golliwog on its licorice brand, which was banned in 2007 thanks to EU pressure, and the racist image  of a Chinese man or woman in one of its products in 2011? Why does the company think that race and ethnicity are the way to the Finnish consumer’s heart?

Adding salt to injury, tabloid Ilta-Sanomat headlines that the commercial doesn’t insult migrants.

Right on, Ilta-Sanomat. Here’s a white tabloid giving its “expert view” on what is and isn’t offensive to migrants.

Tabloids like Ilta-Sanomat played an important role in reinforcing intolerance and hostility towards migrants from the 1990s.

Näyttökuva 2014-11-7 kello 10.28.54

 

Read full story here.

 

Even if The Council of Ethics in Advertising sees nothing wrong with the television commercial, many minorities in Finland consider it offensive.

 What is your opinion of this tv commercial?

See also:

  • Time warp Fazer of Finland: Stereotyping Mediterranean “gigolos” to sell salt licorice
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  • Vapaa Liikkuvuus
  • Venla-Sofia Saariaho
  • Vieraskynä
  • W. Che
  • W. Che an Enrique Tessieri
  • Wael Ch.
  • Wan Wei
  • Women for Refugee Women
  • Xaan Kaafi Maxamed Xalane
  • Xassan Kaafi Maxamed Xalane
  • Xassan-Kaafi Mohamed Halane & Enrique Tessieri
  • Yahya Rouissi
  • Yasmin Yusuf
  • Yassen Ghaleb
  • Yle Puhe
  • Yuliet Tresa
  • Yve Shepherd
  • Zahra Khavari
  • Zaker
  • Zalina Ametova
  • Zamzam Ahmed Ali
  • Zeinab Amini ja Soheila Khavari
  • Zimema Mahone and Enrique Tessieri
  • Zimema Mhone
  • Zoila Forss Crespo Moreyra
  • ZT
  • Zulma Sierra
  • Zuzeeko Tegha Abeng
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