Rebecka Holm, who was 14 years old last January, rallied enough courage back then to write a letter to HBL* that changed her life. That letter to the editor spoke openly about her multicultural background and racist harassment. In March, she was given the Red Cross Award on the UN Day Against Racism for her courage and example.
Rebecka Holm
When you speak to Rebecka, two matters shine through: her courage and confidence. Like her mother, she was born and raised in Finland. Her father, who is from Somalia, lives in London. Her stepfather is from Gambia.
Rebecka agrees that racism is a “big issue” that people prefer not to talk about in this country.
“If somebody speaks bad about you and wants to make you feel inferior because of your background,” she said, “then we need to talk about this serious matter and not hide from it.”
According to Rebecka, one way of tackling a social ill like racism is to speak out against it whenever and wherever it may appear.
“If someone at work makes a racist joke, you should point out that it’s unacceptable to insult people in such a manner,” she said. “People should know better. Racism is shameful and nothing to be proud of.”
The young adolescent lives in the eastern Helsinki neighborhood of Vuosaari and travels by metro every day to middle school. It was what she saw on one of those trips that encouraged her to write to HBL.
A group of adolescent Somalis were talking on the metro apparently too loudly for some people’s taste. A white Finnish man started shouting at one of them and then ran after one of the adolescents yelling, “I will kill you, you bastard n-word.”
“I cried and felt really depressed by what I saw,” said Rebecka. “How is it possible that something like this can happen? Why don’t people react if someone is attacked in public?”
Rebecka said that she knew a black woman from the Ivory Coast who was sitting on the bus. Out of nowhere, a man came up to her and spat on her face.
While Rebecka used to feel uncertain about her Finnish identity, it’s a different story today.
“My Finnish identity means a lot to me because I love Finland,” she said. “Finland is my home and I was blessed to be born here. Even so, I’m a Finn with a multicultural background. That fact doesn’t make me less Finnish than anyone else.”
Rebecka said that accepting oneself is the first important step one must take to build a strong identity.
“It’s very difficult to live without a sense of who you are,” she concluded.
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