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La Prórroga: 500 euros para desmontar mitos racistas

Posted on March 5, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Spain offers us in Finland a good case in point to study how the role of learning a new language has its limitations in the adaption process of immigrants. Spain has millions of Latin Americans who not only speak Spanish as their mother tongue, but belong to the same religion as well. 

The lesson we can learn from Spain is that racism and discrimination do not magically vanish after you become fluent in a language. There are many other factors at play like acceptance. . 

Are some Finnish policy-makers, politicians and even language teachers making optimistic promises? Are they giving a too rosy picture of our society by stating, “learn the language and everything will be fine?”

The beautifully written blog entry below by Zulma Sierra tells about an urban tale we commonly here in Finland as well from the anti-immigration crowd: Immigrants get better benefits and treatment than the locals. 

A man placed an ad in a Catalan daily, La Garrotxa, and offered to pay 500 euros to anyone who could inconclusively show that immigrants get preferential treatment by the authorities in the region of Catalonia. 

Nobody responded. 

This would be a great idea in Finland. What about if we placed an ad in Helsigin Sanomat and asked the same question? How many would respond? 

__________________

Zulma Sierra

Gracias a la Xarxa Barcelona Antirumors, llegó a mi pantalla esta historia fascinante: un hombre ofreció 500 euros a quien aportara pruebas de que los inmigrantes reciben tratos de favor por parte de la Administración Pública.

El anuncio salió en el diario local La Garrotxa y contaba con el respaldo del abogado Joan Capdevila. Es decir, quien quisiera comprobar que el anuncio iba en serio podía llamar a este despacho en Olot, y si las pruebas aprobadas eran irrefutables, el abogado se encargaría de pagarle su premio. El diario La Garrotxa, a su vez, se comprometía a publicar la historia -con las pruebas conseguidas por el ganador- siempre respetando el anonimato del participante.

Y aquí entramos en un terreno interesante: el anónimo. Porque el promotor directo de la iniciativa sigue siendo un misterio. Sólo Joan Capdevila lo conoce y, según un artículo suyo, aparecido en la Revista de Girona, el hombre estaba cansado de oír que a las madres extranjeras les regalaban pañales para sus recién nacidos, que los inmigrantes recibían un tiquet de asistencia o que los escolares -hijos de extranjeros- tenían comedor y transporte gratis.

El hombre estaba dispuesto a poner de su bolsillo para desmontar mitos, o para ratificarlos (en caso de que resultasen ciertos), pero no le interesaba ni dar la cara ni unirse a ninguna cruzada antiracismo.

¿Anuncio trampa? se preguntaban algunos políticos y comentaristas en los medios de comunicación locales. ¿Cómo es posible que una sola persona pretenda acabar con los estereotipos? El racismo y la discriminación, insistían en sus análisis, es cosa de las Administraciones Públicas y los profesionales.

Sí y no, digo yo. ¿Acaso la participación individual en la vida pública sólo puede concretarse a través del voto en unas elecciones? Para Capdevila resulta sorprendente que los medios de comunicación fueran perdiendo interés en la historia a medida que pasaba el tiempo porque no estaba respaldada por un colectivo o por una entidad. No se tomaron el trabajo de investigar por su cuenta el origen y la veracidad de las supuestas ayudas extraordinarias que reciben los inmigrantes de Girona, porque la “denuncia” que planteaba este ciudadano era bastante inusual.

Y se queja así don Joan Capdevila en su texto:

Els ciutadans normals i corrents, individualment, s’han d’abstenir, han de ser només espectadors de la realitat i no intervenir-hi, d’altra manera són excèntrics ridículs.

“Los ciudadanos normales y corrientes, individualmente, deben abstenerse, deben ser sólo espectadores de la realidad y no intervenir, de otra manera son excéntricos ridículos”.

Imagen tomada de Taringa.net

Imagen tomada de Taringa.net

Pues qué lamentable que así sea. Qué aburrido es vivir en la resignación, viendo pasar aquello que no te gusta, sin pronunciar ninguna palabra en contra. Qué penoso, además, que quienes deciden en las esferas de poder sólo toquen a mi puerta en época de elecciones porque saben que el resto del tiempo permaneceré inmóvil.

Y no quiero con esto desacreditar a los movimientos ciudadanos valientes y masivos como el 15-M que van dejando huellas importantes cada vez que pisan la calle. Por el contrario, pienso que una manifestación colectiva tiene que ir respaldada por acciones individuales y que, aunque una golondrina no haga verano, vale la pena hacerse sentir, decir lo que se piensa, luchar por lo que se cree.

Desde aquí, gracias a Capdevila y a su cliente por ir en contra del conformismo.

Por cierto… ¿Quieren sabe cómo acabó la historia? Nunca se presentó ningún candidato al premio durante los dos meses de la convocatoria.

How would you react to a racist, sexist or homophobic joke?

Posted on March 4, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

How would you react if somebody at work during a coffee break would crack a racist, sexist of homophobic joke? We’ve all been in such uncomfortable situations many times in our lives. Sometimes our silence glares back at us, other times we do react. 

A study in the United States by Janet Swim and Laurie Hyers asked the following question to women who’d hear a sexist joke or comment: Would you put them in their place, or would you be too nice to confront?

When the study was actually carried out, 50% of the women participants ignored the sexist comment, while 16% commented on its inappropriateness. Two percent grumbled but did nothing.

According to Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton of the University of California at Berkeley, when faced with sexism or prejudice our reaction will be very different from what we think we will do.

He continues: “Why? People underestimate the power of social norms (specifically, the norm of being polite, even against social transgressors). In addition, in such situations, people anticipate feeling angry, but in actuality they feel anxious…In other words, we ancticipate that we will stand up against prejudice, when in reality we end up being, well, too nice and polite to further disrupt the social order.”

Probably Mendoza-Denton’s conclusions are correct but in a wider context, if we saw how the media and other politicians reacted to the anti-immigration and even racist platforms of some of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) and other party candidates before the April election, was their reaction like the 50% in the Swim and Hyers study? Did they choose to remain quiet because they didn’t want to disrupt the social or political order of things?

If, on the other hand, we totally agree with Mendoza-Denton, does it imply that prejudice is so ingrained in our society that most of us are afraid to challenge it because that would be questioning our social order and the very essence of how we see ourselves and who can belong to our ethnic club?

Milloin minusta tulee suomalainen?

Posted on March 4, 2012 by Sasu

Sasu Xinhang Öländer

”Olenko suomalainen?” on niitä kysymyksiä, jotka yhdistävät kaikkia toisen polven maahanmuuttajia. Mutta kaikista kipeimmin se koskettaa värillisiä. Kantasuomalaisten keskuudessa kuuluu välillä lausahdus maassa maan tavalla mutta mitä tämä sanonta oikeasti tarkoittaa.

Abdirahim Husu Hussein sanoi kerran maahanmuuttajien poliittisessa paneelista, että on täysin kyllästynyt tähän sanontaan. Hän asettui sanomaan, että eikö somalit jo eläneet maassa maan tavalla. Tietyssä mielessä Abdirahim asetti kysymyksen. Mikä oikeasti riittää?

Tätä me emme usein kysy. Mutta meidän on silti aloitettava siitä. Jos haluat elää suomessa on sinun sopeuduttava ympäristöön. Kovin pala onkin kielen oppiminen. Suomen kieli on yksi vaikeimmista kielistä. Samalla suomen kielen opetus kouluissa on pirstaleista ja usein ala-arvoista. Vanhemmille maahanmuuttajille kielen oppiminen käyttökelpoiselle tasolle on useimmiten lähes mahdotonta. Lasten kohdalla oppimisen mahdollisuudet ovat useimmiten erittäin hyvä. Tämä johtuu siitä että lapset omaksuvat uusia asioita helpommin ja he useimmiten kasvavat pitkälti kantasuomalaisten keskuudessa. Nyrkki sääntö on, että ensimmäinen sukupolvi harvemmin oppii uuden asuin maan tavoille, mutta toinen polvi oppii.

Sitten tulee kulttuuri kohta. Tässäkin kohdassa ensimmäisellä sukupolvella useimmiten on hankaluuksia myötäillä ympäröivää kulttuuria. Heidän lasten kohdalla tilanne on monimutkaisempi. He oppivat koulun kautta erittäin hyvin mitä on olla Suomalainen ja Eurooppalainen. Ongelmaksi tulee silti, että opetus ei ole monikulttuurista. Suomen koulut valitettavasti ovat pahasti etnosentrisiä. Opetus antaa värillisille lapsille ulkoisuuden tunteen. He eivät kykene löytämään itseänsä koulusta samalla tavalla, kuin valkoiset oppilaat. Tämä voi johtaa kahteen mahdolliseen tilanteeseen.

Ensimmäinen on koulutuksen täydellinen hylkääminen koska kouluilla ei ole mitään tarjottavaa värilliselle lapselle. Tavallaan parempi vaihtoehto on koulutuksen vastaan ottaminen. Tässä vaihtoehdossa on enemmän hyötyä, mutta pahoja sivuoireita. Tärkein oire on omiensa mahdollinen hylkääminen. Tämä johtuu siitä että sinä et enään usko, että veljesi ja siskosi eivät ole enään samalla viivalla. Sinä olet nyt käynyt koulun ja oppinut miten olla suomalainen/Eurooppalainen ja näin ollen olet asteen ylempi. Tämä nähtiin siinä miten Afrikkalaiset ja Aasialaiset jotka ovat käyneet Eurooppalaisen koulutuksen olivat irtaantuneet omien maanmiesten todellisuudesta. Pahin on mahdollisen itseinhon synty. Et usko olevasi yhtä hyvä jollet osoita käytökselläsi, että Eurooppalaisuus ja valkeus on hyvä. On mainittava, että median antamat viestit hyvästä/pahasta ja kauniista/rumasta vahvistaa tätä ajattelu mallia.

Toisaalta Suomalaissuusta opitaan myös ympäristöstä. Ympäristö maahanmuuttajilla on pahasti vaihtelevaa. Osa maahanmuuttajista elävät monikulttuurisesta ympäristössä jossa asuu myös kantasuomalaisia. Ja toisaalta osa elää ympäristössä joka on monikulttuurinen mutta kantasuomalaisia ei näy hirveästi. Sellaisessa ympäristössä on huomattavasti hankalampaa suomalaistua. Voisin sanoa sen olevan lähes mahdotonta. Tässä näkyykin selvästi kantasuomalaisten tekopyhyys. He haluavat maahanmuuttajien suomalaistumista, mutta eivät ole valmiita asumaan heidän kanssa.

Sosiologi Sam Richards totesi, että sehän on ihan hullua olettaa maahanmuuttajien sulautuvan ympäröivään yhteiskuntaan, jos hallitseva ryhmä ei ole valmis asumaan heidän kanssa. Miten sinä voit oppia olemaan suomalainen, jos ympärilläsi on vain ainoastaan maahanmuuttajia. Tämä on maahanmuuttokriitikoiden pahin karikko. Jos Jussi Halla-Aho ei ole valmis asumaan Somalien kanssa, ei hänellä ole mitään moraalista oikeutta sanoa, että heidän pitäisi suomalaistua.

Ne jotka uskovat ”maassa maan tavalla” slouganiin näkevät, että mitään muutosta ei ole tapahtunut. He näkevät kulttuurit staattisina elementteinä, jotka eivät ikinä muutu. On suuri virhe uskoa että kulttuuri olisi staattinen. Kulttuuri on alituisessa muutos tilassa. Sekoittuminen on alituinen ilmiö, jota tapahtuu aina monikulttuurisissa yhteisöissä.

Vaikka suomalaiset eivät siitä ehkä pitäisi niin suomalaisuuteen on liittynyt aina vain uusia elementtejä. 1940-50-luvun sukupolvet eivät nuoruudessa kykenisi ajattelemaan, että he saattaisivat hakea Thaihierontaa, akupunktiota, syödä kebab aterioita, nauttia intialaista tai nepalilaista ruokaa ja tuskinpa he voisivat ajattelevan, että miten monen kirjava Kampin ja Asematunnelin edusta voisi olla. He tutkin kykenisivät uskomaan, että he voisivat aivan itse tehdä kiinalaista ruokaa eksoottisilla aineksilla, jotka sinä voit ostaa Hämeentieltä. Jos haluat nähdä maahanmuuton niin tee panorama asematunnelin historiasta.

Nämä analyyttiset todisteet annettuna on meidän palattava alun kysymykseen, mikä tekee sinusta suomalaisen. Jos suomalaisuus on pelkkää tietoisuutta Suomen historiasta ja kulttuurista niin silloin Abdirahim kommentti on oikeutettu. Maahanmuuttokriitikoiden tarvitsee kävellä vain Suomen kouluihin nähdäkseen sen sukupolven. Sukupolven maahanmuuttajia, jotka ovat omaksuneet Suomen heidän toiseksi identiteetiksi. Mutta he löytävät myös kadotetun sukupolven. He ovat värilliset. Värilliset jotka ovat tehneet kaikkensa, mutta se ei riitä vieläkään. Heille kysymys ”milloin olen suomalainen” vaanii olan takana aina, kun ventovieras kysyy mistä tulet. Aina kun he kohtaavat syrjintää, he muistavat, että vaikka he itse mielessään olisivat suomalaisia niin suurimmalle osalle suomalaisia he ovat yhä maahanmuuttajia ja kuokka vieraita. Heille suomalaisuus muuttuu helposti taakaksi. He joutuvat pohtimaan aina mitä he sanovat, kun kysymys tulee. Mitä kantasuomalaiset haluavat kuulla heiltä ja mitä he uskovat. Samalla he kamppailevat median ja yhteiskunnan heijastamia stereotyyppejä vastaan. Stereotyyppejä jotka ovat negatiivisia ja pahin kaikesta on, että värilliset alkavat uskoa siihen.

Stereotyypit ja Internoidut rasistiset uskomukset tekevät suomalaisuus identiteetistä ongelman. Ensiksi olet epävarma kuka sinä olet ja toiseksi et tiedä mitä uskoa itsestä. Oman arvon tunnistaminen on on ongelmista vaikein. Mistä tiedät kuinka kykenevä olet kun yhteiskunta heijastaa hirveän negatiivisen kuvan sinunlaisista. Yrität olla suomalainen, mutta mikään ei tunnu ikinä riittävän. Kun kuulet Maassa Maan Tavalla on sinun kysyttävä etkö sinä jo elä niin.

Martin Luther King sanoi Where Do We Go From Here Chaos or Community kirjassa, että pahin asia jonka ihminen voi menettää on tietämys omasta arvosta ja omasta kulttuurista. Ei ole olemassa pahinta haavaa kuin sielun haava. Vahvin vastalääke tähän on ylpeys. Ylpeys omaan rotuun, etnisyyteen/kulttuuriin ja uskontoon. Kun sinä olet tietoinen omista juurista ja ylpeä niistä, silloin rasismi ei voi tuhota sinua sisältä päin. Malcolm X, Steven Biko ja Martin Luther King toimikoon profeetoina tällä tiellä.

Finland’s PS executive board sacks one member from the party

Posted on March 4, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

After the decision by the Perussuomalaiset (PS) executive board on Saturday to sacrifice Tommi Rautio, it is pretty clear that Timo Soini’s party has lowered the bar even lower. It is perfectly fine today to be a PS member as long as you don’t condone violence publicly.

You can, however, be a PS member and belong to a neo-Nazi association and even be fined for hate speech and defaming a religion never mind making the usual populist statements. You can be openly homophobic and spread urban tales about the Romany minority on Facebook and still be a PS member.

The violence and hostility that we commonly see coming from the PS is as sinister as the far-right thread on Facebook that condoned a cold-blooded killing. It is upholding a culture of hatred, mistrust and constant war against immigrants, Finns with international backgrounds, minorities, even women.

Let’s admit it, if Soini and the PS national board think that only one person should be sacked from the party after offering us scandal after scandal splashed on Finnish tabloids every month, it proves what we have been saying on Migrant Tales all along: Cut off racism and far-right nationalism from the PS and the party will deflate into insignificance.

In Magrant Tales’ opinion, Soini is no different from the party’s far-right wing led by PS MP Jussi Halla-aho.

The PS leader knows how to sugar-coat  the same anti-immigrant and anti-immigration message.

There is a very good analysis on Savon Sanomat today (in Finnish) that explains why the PS’ popularity has suffered a significant fall in the polls.

Finland's PS executive board sacks one member from the party

Posted on March 4, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

After the decision by the Perussuomalaiset (PS) executive board on Saturday to sacrifice Tommi Rautio, it is pretty clear that Timo Soini’s party has lowered the bar even lower. It is perfectly fine today to be a PS member as long as you don’t condone violence publicly.

You can, however, be a PS member and belong to a neo-Nazi association and even be fined for hate speech and defaming a religion never mind making the usual populist statements. You can be openly homophobic and spread urban tales about the Romany minority on Facebook and still be a PS member.

The violence and hostility that we commonly see coming from the PS is as sinister as the far-right thread on Facebook that condoned a cold-blooded killing. It is upholding a culture of hatred, mistrust and constant war against immigrants, Finns with international backgrounds, minorities, even women.

Let’s admit it, if Soini and the PS national board think that only one person should be sacked from the party after offering us scandal after scandal splashed on Finnish tabloids every month, it proves what we have been saying on Migrant Tales all along: Cut off racism and far-right nationalism from the PS and the party will deflate into insignificance.

In Magrant Tales’ opinion, Soini is no different from the party’s far-right wing led by PS MP Jussi Halla-aho.

The PS leader knows how to sugar-coat  the same anti-immigrant and anti-immigration message.

There is a very good analysis on Savon Sanomat today (in Finnish) that explains why the PS’ popularity has suffered a significant fall in the polls.

I

Soini: PS to sack two members today

Posted on March 3, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman Timo Soini was quoted as saying today on Nelonen television that “at least two” members will get sacked today at the party’s national executive board meeting. One of these is PS councilman Tommi Rautio, who suggested giving a medal to the Finn that killed in cold blood a Moroccan pizzeria employee.

The other person expected to get the boot is Jani Viinikainen, a member of the PS’  Pirkanmaa region board. Viinikainen founded last year an anti-gay Facebook page and another one recently against the Roma.

Viinikainen was quoted as saying on Facebook that he expected to get sacked by the party. PS MP James Hirvisaari, who was fined for hate speech in December by a Kouvola court, told Viinikianen that he was concerned about free speech in Finland, according to the PS board member.

Two sackings in a party that has offered the tabloids a scandal each month seems insignificant.

The interesting question to ask is if these sackings will change the party. Some are rightfully skeptical.

The big picture of Finnish society in the twenty-first century

Posted on March 3, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

One of the biggest unanswered questions when debating our ever-culturally diverse society in Finland during this century is trying to make out what the big picture is. Do we have to search faraway to forge that big picture or are the answers right under our noses?  

If you ask anti-immigration groups what that big picture is they will quickly cite one-way integration, or assimilation (check the Perussuomalaiset party’s Nuiva Manifesto). On the opposite side of the debate you will hear a completely different answer promoting “tolerance,” or suvaitsevaisuus.

One of the pitfalls of both positions is that they lack a comprehensive view of the big picture. Even if anti-immigration groups are fighting tooth and nail to keep Finnish society “white,” they don’t offer any solutions on how to include those that are visible immigrants and minorities. Tolerance is a very general term and could not stand alone as an effective integration model.

Another key stumbling block in the search for a model is that we haven’t asked the opinion of immigrants and Finns with international backgrounds how they envision our society in this century.

When looking at different integration models we should find one that works best for us.

It is a good matter that Finland looks at Canada as one successful integration model for immigrants. It should be noted, however, that the Canadian model of multiculturalism is totally different from what some anti-immigration groups define it to be.

In Canada it is a model that promotes inclusion of immigrants whereas for anti-immigration groups in Europe it is an immigration policy that permits Muslims and Africans from moving to the region.

If you ever get into a debate with a member of the PS who belongs to the Suomen Sisu association, you should ask that person to define multiculturalism. Is he or she talking about the Canadian social policy that came about in the 1970s or is it an immigration policy that allows Muslims and non-EU nationals from moving to our country?

The first big mistake that anti-immigration groups in Finland and elsewhere make is claiming that we are a multicultural nation. Nowhere in our most important laws like the Constitution is that adjective “multicultural” mentioned. It does not even appear in the Non-Discrimination Act (Yhteenvertaisuuslaki).

What kind of a society are we then? We use a lot the term “multiculturalism” but what does it actually mean? Does it mean cultural diverse society?

If a term like multiculturalism can mean so many things to different groups, this explains in part why we are still in the dark about that big picture of what kind of society we want to build in this century.

The formula and building tools for our society are not in Canada per se but right under our noses. We could have never built such a well-functioning society that is at peace with itself after a very rocky first quarter of a century of our independence without key values such as social equality, or tasa-arvo.

To that key value, we should add other ones like mutual acceptance, respect and equal opportunities.

If we keep to these values, or those that we use to include all members of our society and apply it to others as well, we will be on the right path.

Thus the big picture of our society in this century should be inclusion through mutual acceptance and respect.

Speigel Online International: Study (on Muslims in Germany) Hints that Mutual Suspicion Is Slowing Integration

Posted on March 2, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Here is an interesting story on Speigel Online International that highlights the problem between white Germans and Muslims and one that we should try to avoid in Finland. When looking at immigrants in Germany, we should point out that that country never had the intention of keeping the millions of Turkish workers that migrated there in greater numbers from the 1960s. The expectation was that they’d work for a few years and return back with their children to their home country.

It is pretty clear that with such a widespread attitude very little can happen on the integration front. Chancellor Angela Merkel highlighted the problem by placing the blame squarely on immigrants by stating that Germany’s multicultural society has “utterly failed.” 

A new study by the interior ministry appears to reinforce what Merkel said in October. One of the result of the survey shows that 20% of Muslims in the country are skeptical when it comes to integration.

Fine. But the question should be what has Germany done to make Muslims feel a part of German society. Even the interior ministry survey is one-sided and places blame on Muslims for not wanting to integrate, it fails to look at the host society. 

While Hans-Peter Uhl, the parliamentary spokesman on domestic policy for Mekel’s conservatives, called the study “horrifying,” others take a different view. “I find it surprising that the interior ministry has once again used taxpayer money to finance a study that creates headlines but no insights,” said Serkan Tören, an integration expert for the business-friendly Free Democrats, Merkel’s junior coalition partner.

Volker Beck of the Green Party went further. She said that those that see Muslims solely as a threat should stop telling them that they aren’t a part of our society. “They shouldn’t be surprised when that leads to defensiveness,” she said. 

____________

By Charles Hawley

A new integration study released on Thursday has triggered yet another debate about the role of Islam in Germany. The report found that a surprising number of non-German Muslims are skeptical about integrating into society. But the country’s own doubts about immigration may have muddied the data.

Read whole story.

Finland’s ever-growing cultural diversity is an opportunity to overcome past fears

Posted on March 2, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

One of the matters that Finnish academics, politicians, policy makers never mind the general public missed out completely about our ever-growing cultural diversity is that our history and myths are hindering us to see the big picture.  The official and unofficial response to our culturally diverse society appears to be a subtle “no.”

As there are Finns who don’t get it there are others who do. Those that do  build bridges and pathways to our society with mutual acceptance between ourselves and our newest members of our society.

The debate in Finland concerning the big picture about cultural diversity is muddled by our impaired view from inside those trenches that we have dug. Our violent history and the cold war, which kept us geopolitically near-isolated from the rest of the world during 1945-91, are some shovels we have used to dig ourselves in that hole.

We should make an effort to get out of there because the task will take generations.

Debate about our cultural diversity and that big picture of Finnish society in this century should begin first and foremost among ourselves. In that debate, we must make an effort to banish our historical grudges and, most importantly, our fears as a nation of Russia and the outside world.

Any integration program that does not tackle these issue is doomed to failure. Xenophobia and racism will be the most effective weapon of choice used by Finns to keep that “Other” world in its place.

This route is not only a reckless one but very expensive to tax payers. Politicians should be told that integration, inclusion and opportunities will save Finnish tax payers a lot of money as opposed to jumping on the anti-immigration bandwagon and spreading urban tales.

As long as some of us continue to live inside those deep trenches, our society will always be threatened by populists and the far right as we saw in the April election, which reinforced institutional and colorblind racism in Finland.

Matters are in a very critical state at present. So much so in fact, that some Finns don’t even believe that racism and populism aren’t a threat to our society.

Past wars have traumatized our country but isn’t time ripe to attempt to heal those wounds?

Like it or not, our ever-growing culturally diverse society is offering us that opportunity.

Finland's ever-growing cultural diversity is an opportunity to overcome past fears

Posted on March 2, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

One of the matters that Finnish academics, politicians, policy makers never mind the general public missed out completely about our ever-growing cultural diversity is that our history and myths are hindering us to see the big picture.  The official and unofficial response to our culturally diverse society appears to be a subtle “no.”

As there are Finns who don’t get it there are others who do. Those that do  build bridges and pathways to our society with mutual acceptance between ourselves and our newest members of our society.

The debate in Finland concerning the big picture about cultural diversity is muddled by our impaired view from inside those trenches that we have dug. Our violent history and the cold war, which kept us geopolitically near-isolated from the rest of the world during 1945-91, are some shovels we have used to dig ourselves in that hole.

We should make an effort to get out of there because the task will take generations.

Debate about our cultural diversity and that big picture of Finnish society in this century should begin first and foremost among ourselves. In that debate, we must make an effort to banish our historical grudges and, most importantly, our fears as a nation of Russia and the outside world.

Any integration program that does not tackle these issue is doomed to failure. Xenophobia and racism will be the most effective weapon of choice used by Finns to keep that “Other” world in its place.

This route is not only a reckless one but very expensive to tax payers. Politicians should be told that integration, inclusion and opportunities will save Finnish tax payers a lot of money as opposed to jumping on the anti-immigration bandwagon and spreading urban tales.

As long as some of us continue to live inside those deep trenches, our society will always be threatened by populists and the far right as we saw in the April election, which reinforced institutional and colorblind racism in Finland.

Matters are in a very critical state at present. So much so in fact, that some Finns don’t even believe that racism and populism aren’t a threat to our society.

Past wars have traumatized our country but isn’t time ripe to attempt to heal those wounds?

Like it or not, our ever-growing culturally diverse society is offering us that opportunity.

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