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Migrant Tales (July 21, 2012): Somali-Finn Abdulah -living in no-man’s land (Part 2)

Posted on December 17, 2013 by Migrant Tales

When Abdulah*, 30, talks to you about his twenty-two years in Finland, one of the first questions that arises is how has so much suffering escaped our attention. For Abdulah, acceptance isn’t only virtually impossible from white Finns, but can be  just as hard to get from the Somali community.

“I have decided to live outside this society,” he says. “I have learned that there is no place here. Even my people have turned their backs on me.”

Abdulah says that there are two matters you must never lose if you don’t want to be abandoned by the Somali community.

“Language and religion are crucial,” he explains. “I don’t speak Somali that well anymore since I grew up in this country. I  became an atheist two years ago and left the Muslim faith.”

How long will it take for minorities like the Somalis to be treated as equals in Finland?

Abdulah admits that he no longer believes in god.

“How can there be a god if people are constantly killing each other in Somalia?” he continues. “How can there be a god if there’s so much hatred and racism towards you in this country? How can god exist in such hells?”

There are many young men like Abdulah in Finland, who grew up the greater part of their lives in this country. He says that some have problems with the law.

“I don’t identify with such people anymore because I used to be one of them,” he says. “If you start drinking and taking drugs, your situation will only get worse. That’s the reason why I changed my life.”

Abdulah hasn’t forsaken hope despite the difficulties he’s faced. Two factors give him strength: his family and plans to be a gardener.

L_0995-Medium-223x300

Billboards like these in the early 1990s spread prejudice about Somalis in Finland. The tabloid ad claims that Somalis had made phone calls to the tune of hundreds of thousands of marks and supposedly passed the bill to the social authorities.

“But living in Finland still feels like being in a trap,” he adds. “I want to free myself but I don’t know how.”

Abdulah discovered Migrant Tales by chance when he was searching for an alternative forum that spoke up for immigrants and visible minorities like him.

“I used to visit Suomi24, Hommaforum and even took part in Iltalehtichat forums,” he says.  “They always said the same negative things about immigrants and Somalis. I felt relieved when I found Migrant Tales. It was like a light at the end of a dark tunnel that gave me hope.”

Abdulah is a very sensitive and respectful person. Despite the difficulties he’s encountered, he believes that one must be outspoken if he’s going to challenge a social ill like racism.

“We have to fight back,” he concludes. “Silence hasn’t changed my life for the better. That’s why I’m active in forums like Migrant Tales.”

*Abdulah’s name has been changed to protect his identity. 

Press Statement: Malicious prank against Migrant Tales

Posted on December 16, 2013 by Migrant Tales

MIGRANT TALES STATEMENT

December 16, 2013

The Migrant Tales blog was the victim of a malicious prank over the weekend by a group of users from Hommaforum, an anti-immigration forum notorious in Finland for its promotion of anti-immigration sentiment.

A story sent to us anonymously was in fact a bogus story intended to cast doubt over the integrity of Migrant Tales and the reality of racism in Finland. Such an exercise in deception will achieve neither aim.

However, it is NOT the intention of Migrant Tales to publish stories that are untrue, and it is very rare that we will publish a story that has not already had some verification via media sources, or for which we have direct contacts with the people involved or close to those involved. To an extent, as part of the new breed of citizen’s journalists commonly operating on the internet, we take stories on good faith. We are not the first to be deceived in this way and we will not be the last.

We will take care in the future to be mindful of the fact that some people are willing to go to extensive lengths to invent a story of racism simply to deceive the public in some way, but that perhaps unsurprisingly, those people were not actually immigrants in this case, but native Finns looking to use deception as a means to undermine the very real and serious understanding of racism in Finland.

There is nothing to be learned from such stunts except to say that we of course stand by the blog and we know and trust our own intentions to give a voice to REAL immigrants in Finland.

We will however be more careful with those very rare stories that come to us completely anonymously and with no other media verification. Rest assured, we do take the integrity of this site very seriously for the simple fact that those that suffer any kind of discrimination deserve to be protected from this kind of malicious manipulation of public media.

For further information contact:

[email protected]
www.facebook.com/likemigrant

Fadumo Dayib: Go suck on some oranges

Posted on December 16, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Fadumo Dayib

Never be bullied into silence. Never allow yourself to be made a victim. Accept no one’s definition of your life; define yourself. ? Harvey Fierstein

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-16 kello 17.10.05

Read full story here.

Rant coming your way. Welcome deranged internet fascists. I’ve been expecting you and oh boy aren’t you so predictable. Come out from behind your computer. Yes, you. I know your mom is not at home, but did you just stumble on my blog? Do I interest you all of a sudden? I know am bootylicious, despite what you think, my mom told me so :) Did you just try to pigeon-hole me? Shouldn’t you be at work or at school? Ever considered doing something constructive and meaningful with your senseless life? Kamu, please. Nah, you will not spoil my free, hard-earned day from work with your nonsense. Did you just interrupt my head-banging to Avenged Sevenfold’s ‘Hail the King” track with your constipated rant?

Oh hell no, you didn’t! Hey, let me tell you one thing, you don’t get to define me. Never. No, you will not silence me. You will not intimidate me. And hell no, you will not muzzle me nor define me any longer. Your hate speech and emails will not dissuade me from the righteous path. Your comical antics, stone-age mentality and your attempted infantile cyber-warfare  tactics don’t work on this old-school nomad soul.

No, no more. So, take a chill-pill, get a life. Save your energy for another day. I am immune to your diarrhea. Paddle your hate elsewhere. One piece of advise though, come out from behind your computer. Sorry. I only know how to reason with a human being and not a faceless entity. You have my empathy: being a coward is not easy. As Shakespeare said, “a  coward dies a thousand times before his death”. Living with hate day in and day out must be really tough on you. Hey, your visit was useful, you provided free amusement and for that I give you thumps up. Good on you, there is something good in you too, after all. Ever considered going into comedy?

Anyway, I know the dark winter messes even with the toughest of us. Get some D-vitamin. Suck on some C-vitamin. Reflect on some Eva Paterson. I’ve got nothing but love for you and your sorry gang. Come back again, but not too soon though.

Race is the great taboo in our society. We are afraid to talk about it. White folks fear their unspoken views will be deemed racist. People of color are filled with sorrow and rage at unrighted wrongs. Drowning in silence, we are brothers and sisters drowning each other. Once we decide to transform ourselves from fearful caterpillars into courageous butterflies, we will be able to bridge the racial gulf and move forward together towards a bright and colorful future. ~ Eva Paterson

Read original column here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

When will we pass to anti-racism phase two in Finland?

Posted on December 16, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Some will agree that Finland is decades behind other countries when it comes to challenging racism. But there is good news: The rise of an anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam party in 2011, the Perussuomalaiset (PS), is a sign that we’re moving forward to phase two.

Phase one is when most of the efforts of a society go into denying or playing down the existence of racism. Phase two is when we begin to challenge in earnest intolerance through important changes in the law that would be seriously enforced and have a lasting effect on our attitudes.

Even if the PS do well in the upcoming elections in 2014 and 2015, there mandate if they ever make it to government will end in disaster. In a worst-case scenario, Finland will lose up to eight years of precious time flirting with an anti-EU, anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam party that will give them nothing but problems.

If we compared Finland with England,we’d be somewhere in the 1970s and 1980s now. Back then we saw the rise of the National Front in the United Kingdom and anti-immigration personalities like Enoch Powell.

Like in Finland before the 2011 elections, the media in England ate right out of the hands of people like John Kingsley Read, the founder of the xenophobic National Front, and gave Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech. wide coverage.

The hostility that we saw against immigrants thirty to forty years ago in the United Kingdom is clearly evident today in Finland. True, the media has woken up a little, but it still has a long way to go in reporting fairly about immigrants.

Xenophobes like Read and Powell of the United Kingdom have mutated into the PS and its populist-nationalistic anti-immigration rhetoric, which the media has given inflated respectability and importance.

In the United States it took hundreds of years to finally ignite the spark of the Civil Rights Movement on December 1, 1955, when a Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white passenger on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus. 

Those of us who aren’t white and are proud of our origins, are waiting as well for that Rosa Parks moment. That spark will come and when it does we’ll feel it’s presence.

How will we know?

  • Support for the PS will shrink considerably
  • People are tied of listening to the PS’ whining and rhetoric
  • When we see xenophobic politicians as a minority and that they are only one or a small minority of votes in a 200-seat parliament (Abdirahman “Husu” Hussein)
  • The media will know what racism is and challenge it like any other social ills like gender inequality and homophobia
  • Politicians will promote and defend Finnish Nordic values to all of its inhabitants irrespective of their ethnic backgrounds
  • Our reaction to intolerance and racism will not be silence but be first and foremost a response
  • Finns will accept that there are “other” Finns that aren’t white. These people have the same rights and are treated equally by society
  • Cultural diversity is a good matter, it will be promoted because it makes sense and strengthens us as a society
  • Racists will be shamed and forced back to their closets.

In order to save our country from being devoured by the fires of hatred and intolerance, it’s important that we all take part in this struggle.

One way or another, we’ll get there.

 

Revista Fennia: ¿Queremos solamente “súperinmigrantes” en Finlandia?

Posted on December 15, 2013 by Migrant Tales

:: Enrique Tessieri ::

Al igual que la la Bella Durmiente que se durmió en la esperanza de despertarse con un beso del príncipe azul, los finlandeses  esperan recibir sólo inmigrantes de lujo, inmigrantes comunes no les interesan.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-15 kello 21.43.37

Pueden leer la nota en la Revista Fennia aquí.

Podría algún partido político o algún político prohibir la entrada al país de inmigrantes en un mundo globalizado, ya que todo el bienestar del país depende se sus vínculos con otros países?

Justamente aquellos políticos que se oponen con fuerza a aumentar los derechos de los inmigrantes y de otras minorías, hablan mucho de los inmigrantes de lujo.

¿Quiénes son entonces estos súperinmigrantes? La siguiente lista puede ayudarnos a entender:

 

    • Son inmigrantes de países nordeuropeos. Cristianos y heterosexuales y blancos.
    • Tienen buen nivel educacional, mucha experiencia laboral y buen comportamiento.
    • Siempre hacen su trabajo bien y nunca están sin trabajo. Se les paga un salario menor, pero lo mismo trabajan el doble, en comparación con los finlandeses.
    • Son solícitos con la policía, dispuestos a claudicar de su pasado, y no quedan rastros en ellos de la cultura de la cual vienen.
    • Sus hijos sólo hablan finés. Si hablan otro idioma, como por ejemplo el ruso, sólo lo hacen dentro de las cuatro paredes del hogar.
    • Los adultos aprenden el finés muy rápidamente, en menos de un año, ya que estos inmigrantes “súper” son muy inteligentes, pero no tanto como los finlandes.
    • Ellos hablan tan bien finés que sólo se nota un pequeño acento extranjero,  desde donde se filtra el olorcillo que diferencia a ellos de nosotros.
    • Sus hijos son bien recibidos en la comunidad, ya que son inmigrantes invisibles.

 

Hablando de inmigrantes se me viene a la mente el prócer argentino Juan Bautista Alberdi (1810-1884), llamado el padre de la inmigración, quien tuvo una amplia mirada sobre el desarrollo económico y social  que se produciría gracias a los extranjeros.

Aunque no hablaba de súperinmigrantes, tenía una visión muy romántica sobre el tipo de gente que vendría al país.Él escribió: “Deseamos mezclar la libertad inglesa, con la cultura francesa. Y la capacidad y moralidad laboral norteamericana con la europea.   Que nos las traigan vivas en las personas y que esas costumbres se asienten con ellas en nuestro país”.

No pensó en los habitantes nativos, ni en los negros ni en otras minorías.

A la Argentina llegaron entre los años 1881 y 1914, más de 4,2 millones de inmigrantes de Europa. En esos años la Argentina fue el segundo país elegido por los extranjeros después de Estados Unidos.  En el año 1914, el 49,4 % de los habitantes de Buenos Aires eran inmigrantes. Pero esta cifra es pequeña si la comparamos con Qatar, 86, 5 %; o con los Países Árabes, 70%; y Kuwait, 68,8%.

En Finlandia solamente hay el 3,6 %, o sea 195511 personas.

Si bien Alberdi quería una inmigración de lujo, “muestras vivientes de la civilización europea”, lo que vino fue otra cosa, anarquistas, gente pobre y sin educación, exiliados políticos y delincuentes.

La mayoría de los que llegaban a esta tierra venían de Italia y España, y lo que buscaban era un mejor estandar de vida.  Los finlandeses fundaron en el año 1906 una colonia en la provincia de Misiones, llamada Colonia Finlandesa. En en los años 1930 los jóvenes comenzaron a buscar trabajo en las ciudades y la colectividad fue achicándose.

Temo que esos inmigrantes de lujo que algunos políticos esperan no lleguen nunca, al menos no en grandes cantidades, entonces ¿qué hacemos?

Pienso que ya es tiempo de dejar de discutir si la inmigración es algo bueno o malo, y conversar sobre lo que ya existe y cómo optimizarlo. De hecho tenemos una pequeña comunidad multicultural que crece, y habría que ver cómo transitar los caminos que van y vienen desde y hacia los diferentes grupos culturales.

Ya que nuestra sociedad tiene como fundamento la igualdad para todos, creo que para construir una Finlandia fuerte, debemos trabajar sobre la aceptación y respeto de las minorías, y crear las condiciones de posibilidad igualitaria para todos. Sería importante hablar de las soluciones y no sólo de los problemas.

Está claro, que estamos un tanto perdidos, y que nos falta la visión de un modelo a seguir sobre la multiculturalidad y los diferentes valores. Tenemos que dejar de misvalorar a los inmigrantes no dándoles todos los derechos y dejar de buscar culpables.

En este sentido hay muchas personas equivocadas en Finlandia. Y este no es el camino, al menos no el camino finlandés.

Enrique Tessieri es antropólogo y periodista. Vive en Finlandia actualmente.

 

A letter of thanks to Hommaforum and Hannu of Scripta

Posted on December 15, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Hommaforum, a Finnish hate forum where people reveal their xenophobia and racism anonymously, tried to pull a fast one on Migrant Tales by making up a story about an Ethiopian victim called Dawit. The aim of the email and the story that was published and taken down was supposedly to discredit and shame one of Finland’s most outspoken blogs against racism. 

Did they succeed? Not by a long shot. Migrant Tales has published some 1,800 postings. We have many faithful visitors. We have as well some who dislike us so much that they lose sleep over this blog.

Apart from analysis about cultural diversity in Finland, comments by associate editors like JusticeDemon and Mark add value to our forum. Migrant Tales wouldn’t be anything without them.

After reading over 30,000 comments on our blog, I have learned an important lesson: It’s an utter waste of time to debate with those who are challenged on the tolerance front. We seek proactive answers, while the latter seek to be indifferent.

Apparently, Hommaforum is riling mad about a posting by Fadumo Dayib, Run Nigger, Run, which was published this week. 

Why did this Dayib’s account anger them? Because a Somali, a woman, had the guts to tell her experiences about racism in Finland. This was too much for the people of Hommaforum to take. For some men, Finnish machismo is manifested through racism. That’s why they feel especially threatened when a woman from Somalia can outdebate them.

Another matter that the perpetrators wanted to unsuccessfully show, or claim, is that we don’t check the reliability of our stories. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Everything I write on this blog I take responsibility with my real name. Contrary to many, I am not anonymous and do so because I believe in what I do. I take responsibility for what I write.

The grand majority of our stories are based on reliable sources like newspapers, NGOs and others. We do some investigative reporting with good results and sometimes, hardly ever, we publish directly.

Another factor you have to understand is the motive. The site is Hommaforum, who apart from spreading racism in this country, one of its aims is to deny racism, even if it sounds surreal.

The action taken against our blog is similar to a bogus Finland Democrat Party story in November 2012 published by Turun Sanomat in which former PS MP, James Hirvisaari, was supposed to be a founding member.

Turun Sanomat was chosen as a target because it help spread Helena Eronen’s racist blog entry about sleeve badges last year for different ethnic groups.

Dayib’s opinion piece that was published on Migrant Tales is the reason for Hommaforum’s actions.

In the face of the latest prank, I would like to personally thank them for showing how threatened they feel by our cyber presence.

Migrant Tales is no Turun Sanomat and neither do we have the backing of Finland’s third-largest party in parliament, the Perussuomalaiset (PS), never mind the symbol of ethnic intolerance in this country, Jussi Halla-aho, who was sentenced for ethnic agitation. We’re a small and humble forum that has grown out of nowhere thanks to our arguments and the support of our readers.

The question that interests Hommaforum is if we we’ll stop speaking out against racism in Finland. The answer is a flat no.

Back in 2008, I was about to throw in the Migrant Tales towel but one Scripta member thought he would strike us off the cyber map by calling a social-media lynching mob to our site. I was amazed and emboldened by the attack.

If that attack wouldn’t have happened, it’s doubtful that Migrant Tales would exist today. Thank you Hannu (Onkko for Hommaforumers  and Internetsi for others). If there is one person that boosted our blog from the beginning, that person has got to be Hannu.

The moral of this story? The more you hit us and the more you notice us, the stronger we grow and the weaker and more isolated you become.

I’m more than certain that in 20 years or sooner, Migrant Tales will be judged as a forum that had the courage to speak out against racism while your hate site, Hommaforum, will be studied as an example of how racism got a beachhead and spread in Finland.

In many respects reading what you write on your forum is like listening in 2013 to a white racist speaking in the 1950s in Alabama about blacks.

How come you don’t write your comments with real names? Why so much inflated bravado, anonymously? Are you afraid that your grandchildren and great-grandchildren will be shamed by what you write?

Yes, that must be the reason.

And hey, thank you Hommaforum and Hannu of Scripta for making us stronger today.

 

Migrant Tales 2008: Being an immigrant in Finland. A letter from Ida

Posted on December 15, 2013 by Migrant Tales

COMMENT: Migrant Tales has always been interested in publishing the experiences of Finns with multicultural backgrounds. The letter by “Ida” below is one of the first we ever published on this blog in September 2008.

There are others ones aboutSomali-Finn Abdulah, Living in no-man’s land, and Micah J. Christian, What being Finnish means to me.

While all of these people come from different backgrounds, their experiences in Finland are pretty much the same since all three of them have had to struggle with racism and rejection.

The question isn’t whether racism is alive and well in our society, but what must we do to challenge this social ill that threatens us.

__________

By “Ida”

I am an immigrant. Sometimes I feel so frustrated in Finland that I just wanted to ‘give it back to the society’. Hence the crime. People like me (hypothetically) acting out of frustration. If the mentality here is that no foreigners are good and only a tiny fraction of people like Juha, the social worker, understands and/or appreciates diversity it doesn’t help much because the general society isn’t open=minded. I would even call racist.

If a person like Juha comes to ask me how do I like it in Finland, I wouldn’t want to hurt his feelings. A guy who works so hard for us. What do you expect me to say? that I am so frustrated that I can leave this second to another place where I feel more comfortable?

I would reverse those numbers. 95% prejudiced and 4% nonchalant, 0.5% don’t care, 0.001% welcoming (and the rest 0.499% lost in statistics).

Good welfare system is like a double-edged sword for immigrants. We are taken care of but we are also blamed for using them. And so you have to be ever-thankful that you are here, Finland. Because you are given shelter and food, now you can take this mental abuse in the form of institutionalized racism.

Any CONSTRUCTIVE comments?

Timo Soini’s silence in the face of PS MP Olli Immonen’s proposal reveals that he has always been the wolf in sheep’s clothing

Posted on December 13, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Timo Soini, the chairman of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party, was quoted as saying on YLE in English that PS MP Olli Immonen’s written question to parliament, that Finland should start classifying people according to ethnic background, doesn’t concern him. 

What do you think such a statement by the head of an an anti-immigration party reveals? What does it say say about the present state of this country about promoting mutual acceptance?

It shows all along that Soini is not only an opportunist who would sell out Finland to amass more political clout and power, but the wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, Olli Immonen and others of the PS aren’t the so-called bad guys, Soini is by a mile.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-12 kello 23.53.00

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

While such an admission by Soini shouldn’t surprise us, it shows that Finland is still in deep denial and ignorance about racism. It shows that too many politicians in Finland would care less about immigrants and minorities.

Why are we still in the present stage where we deny racism as opposed to challenge it as we should? The answer is clear: We deny racism as a real problem in our society because intolerance gives some status and power over other groups.

We also deny it because the behavior of some shames us.

Immonen’s proposal is racist, but Soini’s silence  sends a dangerous message to the wrong people.

 

PS MP wants Finland to classify people according to ethnic background

Posted on December 12, 2013 by Migrant Tales

As the European Parliament elections near in May 2014, the attacks against immigrants and visible minorities in Finland by the Perussuomalaiset (PS) are getting stronger and more relentless. The latest one is by none other then PS MP Olli Immonen, who gave parliament Wednesday a written question that Finland should start registering people according to their ethnic background.

PS’ chairman Timo Soini was silent about Immonen’s plans when approached by the Finnish media.

Soini continues to deny that there are racists in the populist party even if some of its members like MP Jussi Halla-aho have been sentenced for ethnic agitation.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-12 kello 7.25.46

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Even if we speak in Finland of a society that prizes education and Nordic values, MP’s like Immonen show that the education they received at school and at home on racism was too little and deficient.

The term “race” is generally used in the US while “ethnic group” is used in Europe to mean the same thing. In the US, blacks consider themselves “a race” while some Hispanics refer to themselves as la raza, or “the race.”

According to Immonen, who is chairman of the ultra-nationalist anti-immigration Suomen Sisu association, ethnic classification of people in Finland is necessary due to its ever-growing cultural and ethnic diversity.

I personally believe it’s none of Immonen’s or the general public’s right to pry and classify me into a group they think I should belong to.

Immonen said that Finland could copy the same ethnic-classification system used in Britain. Some ethnic groups that people could be classified into are Finnish Finns, Finnish Swedes, Saame, Roma, other European, African, Asian, diverse ethnic background and other ethnic group, according to the PS MP.

Finland does classify people according to their nationality, mother tongue and place of birth.

Taking into account that race or ethnicity is a social construct to begin with, classifying people into groups is difficult especially in an age when we move and travel with greater ease from country to country and where we adopt complex multicultural identities.

To show how difficult it would be to classify people along ethnic lines, the system we use presently in Finland is fraught with problems. Nationality, mother or father tongue, place of birth don’t shed light on a person’s ethnic identity since that it a personal choice.

US American sociologist Yehudi Webster at the California State University, Los Angeles, believes that classifying people by race actually worsens racial strife.

“It is not ‘race’ but a practice of racial classification that bedevils the society,” he writes.

Writes the American Anthropological Society:

“In the United States both scholars and the general public have been conditioned to viewing human races as natural and separate divisions within the human species based on visible physical differences. With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century, however, it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous, clearly demarcated, biologically distinct groups.”

Countries like England and the United States, which classify people into ethnic groups, have a questionable history since both practiced slavery and had oversea colonies. Ethnic classification played a crucial role in enabling whites in these countries to exploit other groups by classifying members of their population  into superior (whites) and inferiors (other groups).  

 

 

Why do we still hesitate to challenge intolerance in Finland?

Posted on December 11, 2013 by Migrant Tales

I had an interesting chat yesterday with an old friend about racism in Finland. One of the matters we agreed was that Finland hasn’t reached that stage where we accept that racism exists and that concrete steps must be taken to challenge it. This fact leads us to a second important question: Why? 

The answer is obvious and could be answered with the statement below I got from Ruth Rubin’s Facebook wall.

1504001_10202654076895766_2042479362_n

They give as a present fear so they can sell us security.

Wars will never end not because it is in our blood, but because it is big business. Why would the army, navy or air force of a country admit that we live in a safer world? If they did, they’d see their budgets slashed.

Since racism is hostile and a violent act like war, it’s clear that it has a role as well. The above-mentioned statement if applied to racism would read something like the following: We deny racism in order to remain in our historic, political and economic comfort zone.

There’s a lot of money riding on ensuring that we have an effective system that discriminates against different groups like immigrants and visible minorities.

Why not ask the Perussuomalaiset (PS) if they agree?  What would happen if they admitted that racism is an issue in this country that should be tackled. Making such an admission would be synonymous to commiting political hara-kiri.

Like some political parties, some institutions like the police, educational sector, Finnish Immigration Service, even some so-called anti-racist associations, don’t want to take the debate to the second level and admit that racism is an issue in this society because it would diminish their power and status.

So to answer my friend’s comment, why Finland still resists to recognize that racism is an issue in this society, is clear: We deny racism as a problem because intolerance gives some status and power at the cost of other groups.

My friend and I have lived in this country for many decades. Contrary to him, I have Finnish ancestry. I believe that we know a little about racism in Finland.

Even so, few are willing to discuss in earnest our view on the matter. 

Why?

Because we are still in the phase of denying rather than challenging racism.

 

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