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Language is not always your passport to inclusion and acceptance

Posted on May 15, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Some politicians and social workers in this country believe that integration is only possible after an immigrant learns  the Finnish or Swedish language. This may be true but there are other factors that  play equally important roles in the integration process of an immigrant.  

An immigrant will have to pass many checkpoints before he is accepted as a member of Finnish society. How many and what those checkpoints are is open to debate.

Promising an immigrant that he’ll be integrated as soon as he learns the language is a bit like telling a child: “When you grow up you’ll have a wife, children and be successful.”

If language were a panacea to an immigrant’s integration problems, why is social exclusion still a problem among the Romany minority, which have lived in this country for centuries?

Another interesting group we could cite are the Latin Americans of Spain. The majority of them speak Spanish as their mother tongue, they are familiar with Spanish culture, and are even Catholics. Despite their command of the most widely spoken language of Spain and knowledge of the local culture, why do some groups like the Bolivians, Ecuadorians and blacks suffer from high unemployment and social exclusion?

What would you say if a person has lived most of his life in Finland, speaks Finnish as a native but admits: “The worst thing in Finland is that if you have a different religion, culture and language, you are left on the fringes of society. No matter how much you try to integrate you are always left outside.”

Would enrolling in a Finnish-language course be the solution?

Probably not.

The three examples above suggest that integration is a more complex matter than just learning a new language. Attitudes and acceptance by the host society may play equally important roles in the integration process of an immigrant.

One of the reasons why too many politicians and social workers like to speak of integration in simple learn-language terms may be because they are unaware of a wider problem.

As long as we don’t address that side of the integration problem, which is acceptance by the host society, we will never challenge the wider problem of integration effectively.

Lieksa, Finland, continues to be a thorn in Pohjois-Karjala’s side

Posted on May 14, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Lieksa is a troubled city in the eastern Finnish region of Pohjois-Karjala.  We have read too many stories on Migrant Tales and in the Finnish media about the racism that has struck the city after some 250 immigrants mostly from Somalia moved there. The Joensuu-based  Karjalainen reported Monday that an immigrant’s car had been vandalized on Sunday.  

The car, which had its rear and side windows smashed, had the following text written in lipstick: “I hate niggers.”

The police are investigating the matter.

Karjalainen reported that the owner of the car is concerned about his safety in the city of 12,800 inhabitants. “If they can do something like this to my car they could come to my home [as well],” he said.

While the situation in Lieksa is problematic to say the least, the consensus is that matters are improving, according to Alain Minguet, chairman of Joensuun seudun monikulttuurisuusyhdistys (Jomoni).

Migrant Rights’ Network: Voters’ verdict: Immigration not as important as the economy, Europe, or taxes

Posted on May 14, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Awale Olad

Election junkies in the UK and Europe have had a satisfying fix over the last couple of weeks. From the historical win of Francois Hollande in France to the local election gains in the UK mid-term elections for the Labour Party and Greece’s new political turmoil and looming elections – a further stage has been set for Barack Obama and Mitt Romney for a showdown on the debate over global economics and in particular, the direction of the USA.

France

Let’s begin in France where the electorate for the second time in France’s history elected a Socialist president, Francois Hollande, by ousting Nicolas Sarkozy after only one term in office. Hollande’s key policies were huge tax-rises on the rich and wealthy (75 percent marginal rate on those earning €1,000,000), housing, and reduction in corporation tax to boost business output and tackle unemployment.

His central policies were aimed at confronting the economic woes of the country and implementing a socialist vinculum to the public with a pinch of EU bashing. Most media commentators disagreed with his tax pledges but the electorate swung in his favour in both rounds of the elections.

On immigration, Hollande’s easiest decision was to back a UK-style immigration cap, which airlifted him out of a possible tense battle with National Front reprobate, Marine Le Pen, who Nicolas Sarkozy sought to align himself with in an attempt to win some of the 18 percent she polled in the first round. This didn’t work for Sarkozy and neither did his 5 years as president pummelling multiculturalism and lurching to the right on immigration (read here).

Hollande quietly offered votes to foreign residents who sought democratic engagement in local elections as a second tier policy but came under fire for his soft touch on immigration. This was potentially a lethal manoeuvre by the right and had to be addressed with a response that meant he had to commit to a cap on immigration. Nevertheless, his narrow election win indicates that while migration was a hot potato it wasn’t a toxic enough issue for him to lose.

UK

The local election results were interpreted by most as an indictment of the Coalition’s recent budget proposals and tax cuts for high earners. Former Conservative Party Chairman, Lord Ashcroft, writes:

With turnout at a dismal 32%, no party has fired the imagination in these elections. But what is clear is that we are not managing to keep on board many of those who voted Conservative two years ago, let alone enlist further support.

The United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) has seen an increase in its support from Conservative supporters switching allegiances. It was reported that at least 13 percent of the electorate voted for the anti-EU party. Some argue that this is the result of the ongoing turmoil in the EU. Others comment that Tory radicalism has been lost in the centre ground and a lurch to the right is needed.

However, while most attacks centre on the core anatomy of the Coalition’s programme of policies, namely Lords Reform and Gay Marriage, it could be argued that the questions over the UK’s future membership of the EU and a stronger emphasis on tackling immigration (both policies a strong platform for UKIP) is what enticed disaffected Tory supporters to switch allegiances. Sniffing out the possibility of massive chunks of Tory support being hijacked by UKIP, potentially denying the Conservative Party a majority in 2015, Ashcroft insists that:

The real lesson is that the government should focus on the things that matter. Of course, if we could all agree on what they were, politics would be very much more straightforward. Some, in a manner which is now not so much predictable as Pavlovian, say the answer is to promise a referendum on Europe. But these people would probably give the same answer if you asked them how to stop a soufflé from sinking. I think Britain’s relationship with the EU was unlikely to have been on most voters’ minds as they elected their new councillors.

This is at odds with articles in Conservativehome, the Tory website that in recent months has grown increasingly hostile to David Cameron’s leadership, pushing for a referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU to neutralise UKIP’s appeal. The Tories, however, did manage to avoid a casualty in the shape of Boris Johnson, who secured another term as the Mayor of London, as did the 8 Conservative London Assembly Members.

There is advancement in Europe and a gradual increase in electorates moving towards the centre-Left as austerity measures and increasing unemployment begin to frustrate stagnating economies with centre-Right parties at the helm. Immigration has not yet taken centre stage in the UK but France’s recent wave of support for Marine Le Pen could fuel anti-immigration groups and hostile news outlets to pressure the government into setting a light under the issue. A lesson from France for all the mainstream parties is that immigrant bashing only gets you so far but not over the finishing line.

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Ilta-Sanomat billboard (lööppi) from February 5, 1997

Posted on May 14, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales publishes on and off Finnish tabloid ads* (lööppi in Finnish) from the 1990s. Taking into account that Finland’s immigrant population started to grow during that decade, it is easy at least through some of the main stories of tabloids like Ilta-Sanomat and Iltalehti to see how some of them reflected our xenophobic, prejudiced, racist or anti-Russian views.

This particular tabloid ad reads in bold letters: A Finnish man’s leg broken by Russians at a brothel in Kotka.

Anti-Russian views were common expressed on tabloid billboards. If it wasn’t the Russian mafia that kidnapped you or robbed you in Russia, Finnish men were in danger of getting their legs broken at houses of ill repute operated by Russians in their country.

*Migration Institute archive.

Ryhmä X ja natsismin samankaltaisuus

Posted on May 13, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Enrique Tessieri

Sari Karlström kirjoitus (poistettu) on hyvä esimerkki siitä kuinka helposti voidaan leimata kokonaisia ryhmiä. Karlströmin tapa on yhtä tyhjänpäistä ja loukkaava jos minä vaihtaisin kuvat ja kysyisin:

Onko tämä pelkkää propagandaa vai todellista uhkaa?

Onko huoleni ja pelkoni aiheeton?

Pyydän lukijalta anteeksi jos kuvat loukkaavat. Tarkoitukseni on näyttää kuinka helppoa on kiihottaa ihmisiä pelolla ja yksipuolisella argumentilla. Edustavatko alla mainitut kuvat meidän arvoja? Tuskin.

Kaikki sodat ovat alkaneet yksipuolisesta vihasta. Meillä Euroopassa kuoli noin 60 miljoonaa ihmisiä toisessa maailmansodassa. Vihansanoista toteutuu teot.

 

Undermining the anti-immigration ideology of populist parties in the Nordic region

Posted on May 12, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

It is a tragedy that 77 people had to die at the hands of Anders Breivik on July 22. Ironically the mass killer did more than anyone to undermine the ideology of anti-immigration populist parties and hate groups in the Nordic region and Europe. 

The political fallout of Breivik’s deeds was clear: The first blow came to the Progress Party (FrP) of Norway, which saw its support plummet in the municipal election by 6.1 percentage points to 11.5%. That was followed by election setbacks in Denmark and Finland.

Not even the far-right Sverigedemocraterna of Sweden has been spared.

Norway’s Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg became an exemplary leader after the mass killings of Norway. His reaction was totally the opposite from what we saw in the United States after the September 11 attacks. Contrary to President George W. Bush, the Norwegian prime minister said that his country’s reponse to the mass killings will be more openness and more democracy.

The question that hounds us, however, is if Breivik were a Muslim instead of a white Norwegian, what kind of an anti-immigration backlash would we have seen in the Nordic region and Europe?

On a BBC documentary, Stoltenberg said that Norway had become after July 22 “more tolerant,[and] more careful not to judge people” by ethnic origin.

Wise words by a wise leader of a country that suffered one of its worst tragedies in recent history.

Pointing the finger at racism! But then what?

Posted on May 11, 2012 by Mark

A commentator recently asked us here at MT whether pointing the finger at racism will ever make it disappear. It’s a fair question and deserves a good answer.

Other ideas that came up in the same comment thread discussed people’s reasons or justifications for not liking immigrants. The suggestion was that the reason for racism is basically grievance, that [some] native Finns see [some] immigrants getting special treatment or simply ‘leeching off welfare’ and that this creates bad feeling which in turn means people are negative towards immigrants and then indulge in what comes across as ‘racism’ by way of expressing that grievance.

It is all too easy to confuse justifications (grievances) as the cause of racism. And by buying into the justification all too easily, people fail to consider the very real possibility that there may be other ‘reasons’ for this grievance towards immigrants. In other words, people justify ‘racism’ by saying that immigrants behave badly.

Let me give more detail. The most obvious fact when it comes to immigrants and their entitlements is that they are set out by the laws and rules of the public administration in Finland, decided not on the basis of comfort, but against very strict criteria designed to facilitate reasonably normal living and integration. Extremely poor immigrants do not have good prospects of integration, after all. This work to tailor the system effectively is done by Finns, with long experience of a Welfare State behind them. Immigrants are treated like any of the millions of persons in Finland that receive public support at different times in their life, on the basis of need.

Everyone, if you can forgive the generalisation, wants more than they need. Whether they try to get more and whether they get more is down to those same rules, which seek to give EQUALLY to all based on their specific needs. I.e. the principle of equity. Thus, comparing immigrants, whose needs have been clearly decided to be different, with other people requiring support is pointless. You might as well compare someone with a cold to someone with heart disease and then complain that the person with heart disease is gettting more in the way of treatment and services.

Second, if for some reason, immigrants get more than they would normally be entitled to because they are immigrants and because of the fears or opinions of the individuals working in the public administration (Finns I assume), then again this is not a matter for immigrants, but a reflection of the unprofessionalism of those individuals, a matter that should warrant investigation if it were to come to light.

So that is the system – designed by Finns and largely administered by Finns.

Next, the need for services is by no means unique to immigrants. Every man, woman and child in Finland receives State services at some point in their lives. Some receive considerably more than others. Many receive more services because of their own poor decision-making, e.g. obese people/smokers/alcoholics/addicts require more health or welfare services as a result of poor lifestyle choices. Young Finns are supported from the womb to the day of graduation and even beyond in their long journey to becoming productive citizens themselves, by their parents and to a large extent by the State. Many people fall ill or fall on hard times and the State is once again there to support them.

So if it was merely a matter of immigrants being in need of support that is the ’cause’ of grievance, i.e. the reason for the grievance, then those unhappy complainers would easily find a lot more to complain about in Finnish society. So why do the immigrants come in for so much special attention?

Further, the grievance centres on the feeling that there are ‘problems’ in immigration, and that if people are not allowed to express that sense of grievance, whether it is overt racism or mere skepticism, then the problems of immigration have been ‘shoved under the rug’, as they would say. But notice how the ‘problems’ are presented as a given. They are not a given, and we are right to question whether the problems are legitimate in scale and kind to warrant such a strong sense of grievance.

Something in this defence of grievance doesn’t add up:

1) The reasons for grievance are not unique to immigrants, so why focus on immigrants?
2) Grievance assumes something is unfair, and yet the system has been designed by Finns and almost certainly designed to be fair.
3) Grievance assumes that immigrants have done something wrong merely on the basis of needing State services, while such criticism is totally indefensible in a so-called ‘Welfare State’.
4) The grievance is based largely on myth and gossip and is not supported by State-gathered data.

So if the grievance is not justified, then why do people have such strong grievances towards immigrants? “I’m unhappy because they are getting more than me! How come I’m not worth as much? That feels like a kick in the teeth! What’s wrong with me? Am I not good enough? Of course, I deserve more than them – I’m actually better than they are. I was born here, my family built this place etc.!” Notice how superiority creeps in as a function of ‘compensation’ for insecurity.

It is no accident that those that complain about the welfare needs of immigrants also complain about the threat to Finnish cultural identity, even though Finland has much more existing cultural diversity than the additional diversity brought by immigrants. E.g. The cultural diversity between religious and non-religious Finns is far greater than the diversity between Christian and Muslim Finns. But the cultural self-defence that we see points to what seems to me a much more plausible reason for these ‘grievances’, that is, psychological insecurity. There is something about this need to bash immigrants that suggests it is almost a rite of passage for some, but passage into what? And why all the anxiety?

It has been said of male gender that you are not born a man, but that you have to prove you are a man somewhere in your teen years. Manhood is a prize, not a birthright, in the world of gendered society. Odd, really, because biologically speaking, ignoring complications, if you have a penis and testicles, then you are a man. But socially, it’s not so straightforward, and especially if you are not straight!

The same applies (by no accident) to the notion of national identity. Some Finns are not happy to accept themselves as Finns simply because ‘they were born and bred in Finland’, but rather have to ‘prove’ their Finnishness by claiming and holding to an identity, and a contested identity at that. In other words, if you say you hate hockey, sauna, makkara, beer, war, forests, lakes and snow, then chances are other Finns would not think you were very Finnish! Of course, that’s rubbish to demand such prerequisites to being Finnish, but that doesn’t stop it being in some way true of people’s attitudes.

Finns argue amongst themselves (like all peoples) about what is best for Finland, and what best represents Finnishness. National identity is something of a project, after all.

And it’s because of this, and the insecurity perhaps of not belonging to the world’s most obvious power hiararchies, that many people become a bit insecure about their Finnish national identity. It is no accident that those that complain loudest are also those that are otherwise the most powerless and in need of proving themselves – i.e. often young, unemployed, single men. And one thing that proves you as a Finn more easily than anything else is to point at a foreigner and say ‘hey, we are better than them, we are FINNS! Long live Finland!’. There you go, signed up member of Finnish society, give the guy (and it usually is a guy) a medal and tell him he’s served his country well (and who cares if he doesn’t have a job!).

Now this free and easy access into Finnish national identity is none other than using racism (or overt cultural superiority) to gain membership of an exclusive and insecure club! However, doing this openly smells too much like sabre-rattling machismo, so it obviously has to be dressed up as something else. Hence the long hunt and search (typical masculine pursuits) for negative info (meal prize?) about the foreigner to ‘prove’ Finland’s superiority by way of facts, though the conclusion was, of course, always a foregone conclusion.

Funny how you never really hear Finns saying that other people’s cultures are superior! That’s a bit surprising given the great number of other cultures in the world, don’t you think? Well, that would be an obvious no-no and would lead to automatic excommunication from the Finn club!

Now back to our commentator’s most important point, which is, what to do about it, apart from wave the finger and accuse the numpties of racism? Indeed, we cannot merely point the finger at racism, and hope it goes away. We have to give people a genuine reason to not want to be racist in any way. We have to show clearly how it reflects on something rather pointless and futile, and how there are much better alternatives out there. There are alternative ways of creating national identities, without getting caught up in pointless comparisons and proving who is superior.

The problem with nationalism is that it can create as many problems as it solves. We do need some national cohesion and, in that, states and nations function very well as ways of ordering the complexity of human society. However, when the sabre-rattling, initiation rites and national celebrations that come with that nationhood start to overdo the ‘we are superior’, all sorts of potential conflicts begin to arise. The problem is then one of any masculinity/hegemony allowed to run riot – destruction. Destruction of trust, of understanding, of knowledge (real knowledge), of security, of freedom, of tolerance, of diversity (natural), of hope.

In condemning the cultural inferiority of outsiders, we systematically work to undermine any semblence of our own state of cultural advancement. It is no accident that the more the Far Right have gained in political power historically, the more society as we know it has changed for the worse. For all the happy justifications and talk of the glorious ‘community’, the reality is something else, as it would be when it’s driven by insecurity, manufactured hatred (gentle or otherwise), fear of not belonging, fear of change, or fear of being ‘too different’.

To sum it up – we become a neurotic and paranoid entity. Do we just wag the finger at this entity? No, we must call out this near-insane, childish, macho, power-mongering neuroticism for what it is. And hope that people stop for just a second to ask if it’s really all worth it, i.e. trying to belong by proving we are superior! There are other ways to create belonging, that are far less neurotic, after all. There are human values that absolutely transcend national identities, and which make life between people and nations more or less civilised.

What the original commentator, who I mentioned at the start, was saying or was saying other Finns were saying in as many words, is that:

Finland needs better immigrants to better fit into its better society

Now, let’s strip out the ‘superiority’ built into that for a second; let’s take out the ‘better this’ and ‘better that’ and see what we have left?

Finland needs immigrants to fit into society.

I have no problem with that. And that really is the difference between a racism-fuelled debate about immigration and a normal debate about immigration.

Just to reiterate an important point from the analysis, it is my belief that with racism, superiority gives rise to the need to find grievances as a form of justification. Anger against immigrants is largely manufactured, as a justification for the implied superiority of the host nation, and as a means of belonging and a short-cut to building a sense of nationhood. But it comes at a price.

So it’s not just about pointing out the racism – it’s about understanding it and not letting the fears that drive it become the norm in our society. Let’s not be paranoid. Let’s not seek to be superior when building our sense of nation and of self.

YLE’S Spotlight: Finland’s PS links to the Finnish Defense League

Posted on May 11, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

How are we supposed to react to the following news: A number of Perussuomalaiset (PS) party members have links to the far-right and anti-Islam Finnish Defense League (FDL)? The story, which was scooped by Yle’s Swedish-language program Spotlight,  claims that these PS members with ties to the FDL belong as well to the extremist Suomen Sisu association. 

Some PS members that Spotlight uncovered were: Klaus Elovaara, Jani Viinikainen, Ulla Pyysalo, Pasi Turunen, Jarmo Kyyrö, Heta Lähteenaro and Tommi Rautio, who suggested that a medal should be given to a white Finn after he killed in cold blood a Muslim pizzeria worker in Oulu.

Jussi Jalonen, a Tampere University war history researcher, was quoted as saying on Spotlight that “Islamophobia is rife among Finns Party [PS] members involved with the nationalistic Suomen Sisu association.”

PS MP Olli Immonen of Oulu did not see any problem with criticizing Islam since its spread is the biggest threat to Western culture.

Immonen, who had been silent about two deaths involving Muslims in Oulu at the end of January and February, believes that a war between white Christian Europe and Islam is inevitable.

Ilta-Sanomat billboard (lööppi) from August 7, 1996

Posted on May 10, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales publishes on and off Finnish tabloid ads* (lööppi in Finnish) from the 1990s. Taking into account that Finland’s immigrant population started to grow during that decade, it is easy at least through some of the main stories of tabloids like Ilta-Sanomat and Iltalehti to see how some of them reflected our xenophobic, prejudiced, racist or anti-Russian views.

The billboard below states in bold letters: Somalis to remain in Finland. What kind of welcoming statement is that? It shows how low tabloids will stoop to get their story and how ungrateful some politicians are. Both groups have profited immensely thanks to their near-constant bashing of different immigrant groups. The Perussuomalaiset party’s election victory last year is a case in point.

What is strange about the whole immigration and cultural diversity debate in this country is that even if politicians claim that certain immigrant groups are a burden on society, they have not helped but hindered their integration. These politicians will never tell you that if we contrarily promoted mutual acceptance and respect instead of suspicion and racism, we’d benefit socially and financially.

*Migration Institute archive.

Social inclusion is vital to a well-functioning society

Posted on May 9, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Why are we so passionate at Migrant Tales about immigrant and minority rights? Because such groups are effective yardsticks that reveal the state of civil rights and democracy. The more social inclusion we succeed in promoting, the healthier our society is. 

There are clear examples in some recent elections in Europe that blaming immigrants and minorities for a country’s problems has become the trend.

We have even seen the rise of political parties that are keen on promoting social exclusion. Naturally they will not tell you this outright but may resemble the neo-Nazi Golden Eagle of Greece, which won 7% of the vote on Sunday.

This video clip of the party’s leader, Nikolaos Michaloliakos, is a good example of what a financial meltdown can bring. And it’s not at all pretty.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4AXJx3IzdY

In a very common style, Michaloliakos pointed his guns at Greece’s undocmunented immigrants: “Out of my country, out of my home! How will we do it? Use your imagination.”

Do we have far-right groups in Finland? What does it say about the state of our society if a right-wing populist party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) sees its support rise fivefold in last year’s election?

One thing that is clear about the PS is that it is anti-EU, anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam.

The way of thinking in anti-immigration parties, “this is our country so leave if you don’t like it,” is one of the reasons why integration isn’t working as effectively as it should.

One of the worst lies told about immigrants is that they do not want to adapt.

A Somali I met on Monday while interviewing the father of Abdisalam Mohamed Abdulahi revealed what we know but don’t want to admit. He speaks Finnish like a native. He’s lived in this country two thirds of his life.

“The worst thing in Finland is that if you have a different religion, culture and language, you are left on the  fringes of society,” he said. “No matter how much you try to integrate you are always left outside.”

Spreading an urban myth like “immigrants don’t want to integrate” is a very effective way to exclude whole groups and build high walls around them.

Why do we do this?

To control resources like wealth and jobs by excluding other groups.

It is no myth that excluding others and promoting social inequality is the costliest approach in social and financial terms.

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