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Tag: Cultural diversity

Dana: Forbidden questions

Posted on August 16, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

Questions need answers, silence is not an answer, silence has no wave, without a wave you can’t move, without a wave u cant build, without a wave you go and give up, without a wave u can’t wake up.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

1. Is Sauli Niinisto your favor president? Why, if yes? Why not? Can you answer this question or are you afraid of something or someone? Why? Whom?

Why can’t you answer?

What’s so positive about his character? What’s so negative about it?
What would you ask him if you could hit him with a question?

I would ask him what he thinks about my rights and who takes responsibility for all the crimes against me and my life in this country.

2.Do you think there is freedom in Finland? What does freedom mean to you?

3.Have you ever been harassed or attacked in a racist manner? Physically? Mentally? How? Was it with words?  Who attacked you? Could you share this with us?

4.Do you know who your ministers are? What are they really doing in parliament? Do you trust them or care at all about them? Why?
Aren’t the ministers those who influence your daily life and destiny? U should know what they’re talking about and what important things they do… but what are they? Do you know how much their salary is?

5. What are the major problems you have in this country?

6. What kinds of humans do you think and are your friends? Why?

Do you see yourself as a racist? Have you ever been a racist? Can you admit it? Not to me but yourself? Are you honest enough with yourself?

Victimizing and labeling immigrants for political profit

Posted on August 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

UK’s David Cameron is one European PM who is using immigration to bolster his Conservative Party’s poll ratings. It’s a recurring and worrisome political story across Europe: let’s get tough on immigration so we can gain a few percentage points in the polls. This type of campaigning is not only cowardly, but racist and disgraceful.

 

Näyttökuva 2014-11-15 kello 10.26.26
Source BBC.

 

In Finland, we do matters in the same way but the methods we use are different.

Finnish politicians have always been aware of the undercurrent of hostility and fear of foreigners. For decades they have been careful not to upset voters by speaking up for immigrants and cultural diversity.

Something happened in the April 2011 election, when the Perussuomalaiset (PS) attained their historic victory. It was the first time that a party during modern Finnish times openly used anti-immigration rhetoric to lure voters.

This is understandable taking into account that Finland was effectively a closed country to immigrants and foreign investment up to 1995, when it became an EU member and matters started to change.

I asked a Social Democratic Party MP in the mid-1980s why doesn’t she doesn’t stand up for immigrants. She told me that it wasn’t a smart idea because you could anger voters. Anti-foreign sentiment was deeply rooted in Finland.

When I approached around 1984 National Police Commissioner Olli Urponen in parliament and asked him why Finland made life so hard for immigrants, his answer was straightforward: “We want to keep the criminals out of Finland.”

When I asked Urponen that question, 0.3% of Finland’s total population was foreign in 1983-86. according to the Population Register Center. Many of these so-called foreigners, who totaled in 1984 15,702 people, were Finnish expats.

Finland’s immigrant population totals today 195,511, accounting for 3.6% of the population.

While there are many Finns who believe in cultural diversity, there are still many who oppose it tooth and nail. A good example of Finland’s anti-immigration undercurrent was the April 2011 election, which gave the anti-EU, anti-immigration and anti-Islam Perussuomalaiset (PS) their historic election victory.

Coming to terms with our ever-growing cultural diversity isn’t easy. Unfortunately,  Finns have been taught in the past at school and at home that this country is white and that foreigners should be perceived as a threat.

This perception of diversity is odd considering that over 1.2 million Finns emigrated between 1860 and 1999. If all of them would have stayed in Finland, our population today would be about 7 million.

We have a lot of work to unlearn what we have learned about ourselves and others.

The sooner we begin in earnest this task, the better for Finland.

 

 

Confessions of a recovering racist

Posted on July 20, 2013 by Mark

Society has achieved at least one significant victory in the fight against racism – it has succeeded in making open racism a dirty concept. The power of stigma that worked so effectively to reinforce racism has been harnessed to turn the tide against open discrimination – at least in polite society. Today, in most public discourse, it is social suicide to admit to any kind of open racism. This stigmatisation of racism is only one victory however in the long fight to rid society of its most pernicious form of exploitation.

Racism is the invention of social categories based on arbitrary physical and cultural characteristics so that a dominant ethnicity can justify and exercise dominance over other ethnicities. Cutting through the social science verbiage, it is when the ‘big noses’ suddenly announce that only people with big noses are smart enough and advanced enough to rule the roost. I’m sure you get the idea.

Even though society has succeeded in making open racism a social anathema, racism hasn’t disappeared. Likewise, there has always been disguised racism – the kinds of discrimination that are hard to identify, very hard to prove outwardly and sometimes also very hard to admit. Following the successes of civil rights movements, covert racism has become the default position for a significant portion of whites. The same is certainly true of Finland also.

For example, ideas of racial superiority have given way to ideas of cultural superiority. Industrial and economic advantage are taken as signs not of exploitation or historical expedience, but of superiority in cultural evolution, something to be celebrated, defended and held as a matter of national pride. Indeed, such a position of superiority is taken as a perfectly natural justification for advancing second-class or stigmatised citizenship for all manner of peoples from other places, particularly those from the developing world.

The notion of the ‘developing world’ is problematic for this reason. It has built into it a value system that naturally places societies – and by implication their citizens – into a scale, a  hierarchy in social development and evolution, with Western societies standing aloft of the developing world. This hierarchy in turn serves as implicit evidence of the cultural superiority of the white races over other ethnicities. Even if it is nowadays recognised as an accident of history, it is still defended to the hilt as a justification for a wall of separation, to keep out the economic migrants from the South, Asia and the Middle East.

But it’s not merely an economic argument. In the populist/fascist discourses, disadvantaged migrants always morph naturally into the barbarians. Cultural superiority over the barbarians is assumed in all areas of society, politics, science, morality, technology, education, lifestyle, freedoms etc. Moreover, we are told we must protect our hard-won resources and superiority from the threat of the uncivilized barbarians.

This is so taken for granted that it seems impossible to argue anything other than the total superiority of the West. This is the pernicious nature of racism and its implicit notions of superiority – where social values are attached not to human beings, as emotional and intellectual beings of ‘equal standing’, but rather as units of an economic powerhouse whose economic advantage and cultural development is assumed to provide moral authority in all matters cultural and political. So that when people of other ethnicities attempt to articulate the nature of discrimination, the default position is that there must be some intellectual or cultural deficiency behind it.

There is a tremendous irony here. People of colour fought tooth and nail (as did many whites) for civil rights to be enshrined within the core of Western democracies. Not merely enshrined, but enacted, defended and supported by legislation and institutions to defend those rights. And now, this very advancement in civil and human rights is offered as part of the key evidence that maintains a sense of social superiority over the developing world. Time and again you hear today attacks on Muslim or African immigrants on the basis of human rights or civil organisation, with little or no thought to how those rights were actually won and by whom.

Today, the naturalistic (genetic) parts of racist dogmas have to a large extent been abandoned, but the ‘order’ and cultural hierarchies remain, and the ‘order’ is almost exactly as it was before, except that in addition to Jews, Gypsies, Africans and Indigenous peoples, you now have Muslims added to that list of untouchables. And for many of those opposed to Muslims, a very cynical strategy of the enemy of my enemy is my friend is adopted, much to the disbelief and disgust of the vast majority of Jews.

The ideology of the big noses today tells us that the West has fought hard to win its dominant position in the world and must therefore defend itself against the barbarian horde waiting at the gates  (infamously dubbed the ‘Gates of Vienna’ by the fascists). In the cold light of day you could see this as a justifiable form of self-preservation, were it not for the fact that it’s totally unnecessary. It’s quite feasible to accept that economically, the West must preserve a border and control levels of immigration. It’s merely a practical necessity related to the difficulties of any migrating population. Even if the most educated of Americans were to head en masse for Europe, the difficulties of catering for increased housing, increased jobs in the economy, language training, cultural adaptation and integration would require time and resources to manage effectively.

So when it comes to controlling immigration, the notion of having to defend cultural superiority is a red herring. Deprivation is not the sole preserve of cultural Others – all parts of Europe have experienced varying degrees of social deprivation over the centuries, brought about not by any innate cultural inferiority, but by exploitation, poverty and an enforced class system.

The new class system being put forward by Europe’s and Finland’s populists demands second-class citizenship for citizens whose origins are outside of Europe, or who are Roma, or who are Muslim, or who are homosexual. This class system says it’s okay to take immigrants from North Africa to clean and cook for Europe’s capitalists just as long as they go home again when the economy starts to tank due to the excesses of the banking elites. This class system says it’s okay to bleed the developing world of its very limited resources in health care personnel to cater for the ever growing numbers of older persons in Europe. This class system says that it’s okay to put financial and practical obstacles in front of immigrants that result in parents being kept apart from their children and husbands from their wives.

Indeed, a further irony is that today’s populism serves only to detract attention from the excesses of corporate elites by focusing on immigration as the pressing problems of the day. We are encouraged to turn a blind eye to the problems of growing inequalities within European societies. Better yet, for some, all inequalities can be reduced in their final analysis to those evil immigrants sucking out the slack from the welfare economy.

The whole notion of cultural superiority, while a useful distraction for those that cook the books in the guise of ‘investment practices’, is unnecessary to understanding or debating how to manage immigration effectively. It’s a practical issue after all. If you accept a new population to exploit and then fail to properly finance the transition process, then deprivation and all of its evils will emerge. If the global community fails to properly address economic development outside of the wealthy economies, then this will create migration pressures, the conditions for war and its subsequent population displacements, and provide further fuel for extremists within the developed and developing countries.

Today’s racists are somewhat immature. I’m being kind, of course. They see the barbarian hordes waiting at the gates. That’s the narrative and they push it at every single opportunity. They ignore social problems as facets of all societies. Crime becomes a problem especially of ethnic groups. Human rights violations become a problem especially of ethnic groups. Language problems become the problems especially of ethnic groups. Cultural tension and misunderstanding become the problems especially of ethnic groups. They ignore the fact that each of these issues applies to every population regardless of ethnicity. They ignore the significant problems of stigmatisation that result from their peddling of this narrative. They ignore the problems of heightened inter-ethnic tension and increased assaults against visible minorities. They see only the barbarians – like Trojan horses – attacking the fabric of their superiority from within and waiting at the walls to attack from without.

So, in defending the rights of Westerners they actually envisage ways in which the barbarians are to be denied the full rights of citizenship: the right to family, the right to equal status before the law, the right to political advocacy, the right to security, the right to dignity.

The racists of today run around in nappies. It’s a fantastical notion, I know, but quite telling. These nappy-clad racists wallow in their own ideological manure, completely oblivious to the crap that swims in their underwear and the stench of racism that fills the air wherever they go. They wave imaginary swords and play at heroes fighting the barbarians. They imagine themselves belonging to an order of knights sworn to protect the virtue of Western superiority.

In one sense, this has nothing to do with the grown-up world, but the victims of this would-be macho heroism are real nonetheless. The harms of racism, overt or covert, are very real. The potential for undermining the rights-based society they say they value is very real too, as populist groups make inroads into the political establishment across the EU by exploiting this narrative of the barbarian hordes and its implicit notions of cultural superiority.

Migrant Tales Literary: Mark or question mark

Posted on July 18, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

images

Source: www.aumethodists.org

White or yellow or one step until yellow …Finish the race???

The question mark means that it is a question for you, so this story wants your ideas; u can prove them, ur idea as u wish.

This is a colorful question so it isn’t an easy question to answer… but if I contrarily asked a colorless question every one would be answer it easily.

Actually i am trying to understand more about your race because i want to know where you came from, when, how and why did you come to Finland???

And there is nothing wrong to talk about race or ask this question… that’s my opinion.

Did you all came from the same place? Like the Ural Mountains… or from some different place?

Some Finns have tight eyes, flat noses and round faces; some of you aren’t white but yellow…again this is only my observation.

Well for sure you know who you are better than anyone else.

When you are a blond, there’s a faint, faint streak of yellow.

Yes your race… don’t be shocked because it was you who made me focus on race from the first day i set foot on Finland.

However i am proud of who i am… i love myself and my family and when i have a question i answer it easily… i am a Persian from Iran.

i always love everything  and everything that I have belongs to me.

Race is not important  for me but  morals are more important. Talking about race isn’t forbidden by me since i’d like to know more about who  you are.

I am myself a brunette and Persian, but in Iran we have white, blond, dark and darker… different kinds of people live in my country.

My grandfather was a white man with green eyes (they called him blond, but he was not like your blond). My grandmother was like me.

I’d like to test my DNA… it would be exciting for me to know even if I couldn’t change the result. I am who I am.

Finally we are  both guests in this land, aren’t we not?? The Sami were here before you moved here, and when i came here you were both here.

You came earlier and i came later… you came with your family and and i came alone and it was not my will… it was the UN’s  will.

Then why isn’t this land called Samiland instead of Finland???

Really?

I have never seen a Sami person in Finland and i would like to meet them…it is one of my wishes; i’d like see them face to face and close up. i’d like to know about their culture. Well i was living only in Vaasa and then in Helsinki, i know they live in such places but I never met one of them.

NOW

So how do you feel about my question?

Do you like it if a stranger asked you such a question?

Or do you think that it your the only one who has the right to ask such a question?

Does race play a big role in your life? Well this is a big question for your politicians and government… i don’t know if they’d  even let you ask such a question.

This question  gives the Finnish government such an allergic reaction that its body temperature can rise to 45C°.

My chin is up.

Finland never was, is, and will be only “white”

Posted on July 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Whenever a far right politician like Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen, Jussi Halla-aho or James Hirvisaari comment on what is or who has the right to be Finnish, they always get it wrong. Their views, that Finland is only white, is not only wrong but a hostile act towards the tens of thousands of Finns who have foreign parent(s). 

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Finns with multiethnic backgrounds are more than some would want to admit. Why are politicians, especially from the PS, denying these people the right to be accepted and treated as equals in this society? Why doesn’t anyone, like Migrant Tales, speak up courageously for them?

The extreme nationalistic view of these PS politicians is not only harmful to Finland but to the people they label and exclude as equal members of this society. Why? Because they aren’t white.

Politicians, the media and the general public should send a clear message to those who label others in such a pernicious way. This is important because the aim of these anti-immigration politicians is to divide Finland along ethnic lines. Not only do they aim to make life as hard as possible, but destroy their self-esteem as Finns.

Immonen, who is chairman of the extremist Suomen Sisu association that aims to keep Finland white, writes on an Uusi Suomi blog entry: “This national cohesion [of white Finland] shouldn’t be upset by a no boundary utopian ideological world that is based on mass immigration and a multicultural social policy.”

Has anyone ever told Immonen and his pundits that Finland never was, is or will a so-called monocultural country? No country can ever be monocultural. It is a ludicrous claim like stating that all members of Group X are criminals or that Group Y are lazy.

That social construct, which Immonen refers to, was built during the last century thanks to myths born from Finland’s extreme isolation and fear of the outside world.  

Instead of trying to breathe life into an ethnic Frankenstein that never existed, Immonen and his cronies should look at ways to encourage social and national cohesion through a policy of inclusion, acceptance and respect for cultural diversity.

Finland is a rapidly becoming a culturally diverse society and we must learn to live with this fact. Hiding our diversity or brushing it under the rug,  like Immonen aims to do, is harmful to Finland.

No matter how much anti-immigration politicians and political parties may want to opportunistically kick and bitch about the fact that cultural diversity is here to stay, there’s nothing they can do about it.

It’s time to get real and embrace diversity for the sake of Finland’s present and future social cohesion.

Sikh busman confident that employer will lift turban ban

Posted on June 29, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Busman Gill Sukhdarshan Singh is confident that his employer, Veolia Transport of Vantaa, will honor a Southern Finland Regional State Administrative Agency ruling that imposing a turban ban by the employer was discriminatory.

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Source: Gill Sukhdarshan Singh.

”I have no doubt that that in two months, when I will get written permission from the employer, I will start wearing a turban at work,” Sukhdarshan Singh told Migrant Tales.

The Southern Finland Regional State Administrative Agency gave the Veolia Transport of Vantaa until the end of Septempter how the company plans to redress the problem.

Sukhdarshan Singh said that what he did was for all Sikhs living in Finland and “to further multiculturalism.”

”Multiculturalism means that my children can appreciate both cultures,” he said.

Two of his children study at university and one at high school.

About half of the PS MPs want to deny Finland’s cultural diversity

Posted on June 24, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Roughly half of the 39 Perussuomalaiset (PS) MPs have signed a draft law that would in effect deny Finland’s ever-growing cultural diversity in the youth law. If PS MP Olli Immonen had his way together with twenty other PS MPs, Finland would go into denial mode and conveniently brush its immigrants and visible minorities under the rug.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-6-24 kello 17.28.42

Social Democratic Party youth wing chairman, Joona Räsänen, criticized Immonen’s draft law. He said that the PS doesn’t want Finland’s youth to think that multiculturalism and diversity in our society are good matters.  Read full story (in Finnish) here.

It’s not first that Immonen, who is chairman of the far right Suomen Sisu association, has drafted anti-immigration laws.

PS MP Immonen claims on his Facebook wall that in the present youth law multiculturalism is considered a good matter. “In my opinion, it shouldn’t be the law that should determine whether multiculturalism is a good matter or not. Let everyone determine it for themselves.”

With MPs like these and many others, it’s not difficult to spot the red herrings in their arguments. In simple English, Immonen is saying that Finland should not become culturally diverse and that we should do everything possible to prevent people who are different from us from moving to this country.

How many more of these laws, which have no chance in passing in parliament, will have to be drafted before we understand that Finland’s third largest party in parliament is not only racist but would destroy this country?

Twenty-one PS MPs have signed the draft bill. Some of these are Jussi Halla-aho, Jussi Niinistö, Juho Eerola, James Hirvisaari, Vesa-Matti Saarakkala, Ritva Elomaa, Reijo Tossavainan, Teuvo Hakkarainen and others.

 

 

 

 

Racism Review: Interracial Cheerios – What We’re Still Ignoring

Posted on June 17, 2013 by Migrant Tales

MT Comment: What would happen if such a commercial were aired in Finland and in other parts of Europe? 

________________

A recap for those of you who haven’t been following the cereal saga. On May 28 General Mills aired a YouTube Cheerios ad featuring a Black father, White mother and their young biracial daughter.

The 30-second clip was immediately bombarded with racist remarks referencing Nazis, “troglodytes” and “racial genocide.” It got so many negative reactions the comment section was taken down a day later. It is now impossible to verify any of the racist vitriol that was submitted there. But that wasn’t the end of it anyway. Commenters on the cereal’s Facebook page said they found the commercial “disgusting” and it made them “want to vomit.” One viewer expressed shock that a Black father would stay with this family writing the mother was, “More like single parent in the making. Black dad will dip out soon.” Simultaneously a Reddit stream on the ad turned into a debate about the accuracy or likelihood of the mixed-race family comprising a Black man and White woman, rather than a Black woman and White man. The negative responses drew explosive and infuriated attention across the Internet and then media. The result was an overwhelming and massive outpouring of support. America rushed to defend the bi-racial family en masse. Now, if you Google “Cheerios ad,” there will be no end to the pages and pages of results you find. Indeed as I write, the commercial has received close to 3.5 million views. The comments section is still disabled.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYofm5d5Xdw

A couple weeks later, the saga seems to be coming to a close. Americans are still a little shaken but ultimately appeased by the final tally (i.e. the dramatic outnumbering of positive to negative responses). To date however the discussion never really included an examination of some critical points that could have propelled us forward. And so we may continue to tread water. First, we have been greatly influenced here by a history we like to forget and neglect. We have long feared interracial unions particularly between Black men and White women because they presumably pose the greatest “threat” to White male control. Remember, 18th and 19th century opposition to race mixing aimed to protect White male interests in an era of colonial expansion. While Black women’s lives were tragically treated as inconsequential, male freedom to choose a White partner made access to White women a barometer of power. For instance, when White men, who held the highest position of privilege, crossed the racial border in having consentual and nonconsentual relationships with Black women, they were seldom penalized. But Black men who crossed, or who were even suspected of crossing the racial divide by having relations with White women, were severely beaten or killed. These social politics rooted themselves in stereotypes that still profoundly affect us:

Black men are thought to lust after white women; white men are thought to be envious of black male sexuality; black women are supposed to be more sexually satisfying than white women; and white women are dehumanized as trophies in competition between men…The system of racial apartheid and oppression that defined the early years of this country’s racial history remains in force today. Racial and sexual stereotypes are still very powerful, and double standards still abound. White men were ever vigilant about black men’s sexual access to white women – and they still are.1

Second, I think it’s worth asking which character really had us up in arms. The mother, the father, or the CHILD?? I suggest it was the body/appearance/phenotype of a young multiracial child who centrally sparked this race controversy. Her character represented living proof of sex between a Black man and White woman, fanning an age-old fear of Black male virility and the dismantling of White supremacy. The Cheerios child also embodied a commitment to longevity on the part of her parents. This was not a tale of dangerous romance swept up on wild winds, but the story of a steadfast family living their every day life. The message being, we’re not going anywhere; a direct challenge and deconstruction of what has long been the dominant American family prototype (i.e. White heterosexual parents and their White children, a dog and house with white picket fence).

What’s perhaps even more important to note here however is the way a multiracial body again became a platform for race deconstruction while its voice and experience went largely unnoticed and unacknowledged. And how we continue to avoid having race conversations with mixed children and perhaps most children in general. Much of the Cheerios debate has been dichotomous and adultcentric, focusing on interracial partnership/marriage and the Black/White divide. But we need to ask ourselves, how does the divide translate for the mixed race child? Does she herself feel divided when she sees she is poised precariously on a tight rope in “the middle”? These are the children of the future and they are being asked to represent race redefinition without the privilege of weighing in. Case in point, when MSNBC interviewed the child actress, Grace Colbert, and her real-life parents, her Black father was asked most of the race questions. His daughter meanwhile bore silent witness while sitting attentively at his side. And when Grace’s White mother, sitting on her other side, was asked if the backlash had “pushed sensitive conversations at home” with the kids, mom answered, “Not really. Um our kids are very open. And you know they – I inquired about, to my daughter, about it and she actually just thought the attention was because she had a great smile. So. She really had no idea.” This answer was given within obvious close hearing range of Grace’s fully capable ears. Grace just wordlessly continued to flash her great smile. But we are left to wonder – what was she really thinking?…

~ Sharon Chang blogs at MultiAsianFamilies

Note 1. See Root, Maria P. P. Love’s Revolution: Interracial Marriage. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2001. Print.

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Ariela Patterson: The right to be me on my terms

Posted on June 17, 2013 by Migrant Tales

One of the biggest challenges facing Finland in the new century is to come to terms with its ever-growing cultural diversity. While some Finns have no problems with this, others oppose it. Finland’s cultural diversity is, however, something that nobody can stop. There are today tens of thousands of Finns with multicultural backgrounds.

Ariela Patterson, 23, is one of them. Her father is from the United States and her mother is Finnish. How does she see Finland’s new face and what challenges await it today and tomorrow?

Migrant Tales: How did you feel about your Finnish identity when you were growing up in Finland?

Ariela Patterson: Since I haven’t travelled abroad a lot I can’t really compare because I am Finnish. I know I have as much of a right to be here as any person.

MT: What was the most important decision you made to come to terms with your identity?

AP: The most important decision I made was to accept who I am. It happened through an internet forum that touched briefly on race/ethnicities. I can’t remember what the person wrote, but it shook me to my core. It was something like,”don’t let others define you as a person. We are all individuals, human beings. Someone will love you because of who you are, not because of your skin color or the ethnicity you represent.”

MT: How old were you then?

AP: I was eighteen. I had trouble with my identity before I made that discovery about myself that changed my life. I felt before that I didn’t belong to either my African-American or Caucasian side. I was raised by my Finnish mother in Finland so it was difficult to identify with my African American side, especially because of the way the media portrayed, and still does to some extent, African-Americans.

MT: Did you fit in easily before?

AP: I was always the ”American girl” in Finland. So when I went to visit my relatives in the US, I thought I’d feel right at home. I did until my cousin introduced me to her friends as her ”Finnish cousin.” I now found myself in the same situation as in Finland but reversed. The feeling of not belonging anywhere was slowly eating away at me from the inside and I felt like my mother didn’t understand either because she’d never been in my situation.

MT: What happened then?

AP: So one evening, when I was 18, I decided that I won’t live up to stereotypes imposed by others. All I wanted is to just be me. It hasn’t been easy for me after this revelation since I’m still in the process of fully accepting who I am. Even so, I can now look back and look at myself in the mirror with pride because I am “me.”

MT: Another important decision you made was to extend your hand to those who don’t accept you.

AP: The majority of people, or all I’d say, who don’t accept me have never taken the time to know me. They have their prejudices that fence them in even before I’ve managed to blink an eye in their direction. Maybe they’ve had bad experiences with others and that’s why they generalize and stereotype people. They may have other reasons as well. I bet if they’d sit down and got to know me they’d walk out with a totally different view.

MT: What kind of pressure do you feel for being different from the majority?

AP: I feel that I represent every person who looks ”foreign” in this country. If I act badly, I feel I help them to judge every foreign-looking person in the future in a negative manner. This is a very stressful situation to be in considering that I was born and lived here all my life.

MT: What is racism to you?

AP: Racism is to me a worldwide disease that spreads. It’s a mixture of prejudice, ignorance, envy, anger and fear. In my opinion, only a fool will willingly pass it along to their children. I don’t know if racism will ever fully disappear but I hope that we can live one day in a post racist world.

MT: What does Finnishness mean to you?

AP: Being tolerant, acceptant and respecting other people.

MT: Do you feel that Finnish society is more open of its cultural diversity?

AP: Some people are more acceptant than others. But I’ve noticed that the darker your skin tone is, the more skeptical people are towards you.

MT: Do you think Finland will become a more tolerant society in the future?

AP: I think it will change for the better. But I also think there will always be an opposing group that will pin the blame for their problems on others.

 

How serious is the Future of Migration 2020 Strategy?

Posted on June 15, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The more I think of the government’s published white paper on immigration policy made public on Thursday, the more I have reason to worry.  Apart from omitting altogether the term multiculturalism and cultural from diversity in the Future of Migration 2020 Strategy, your suspicions aren’t put to rest by the Confederation of Finnish Industries (EK), which was critical of the policy statement. 

Riitta Wärn, an EK labor market specialist, said that the government white paper missed the mark.

“As someone who has been monitoring immigration policy for a long time, I don’t consider this to be a major change,” she was quoted as saying on YLE in English. “There’s not really anything surprising or new laid out in this policy.”

A comment I read on Facebook linked to Qbee Integrator  highlights Wärn’s frustration: “This people are so funny, I just imagine which young skilled immigrants they are talking about while they cannot employ young foreigners who graduated from their own Finnish high priced education system. People finish professional degrees, masters and PHD and they are subjected to shop cleaners and dish washers. Every year the country produces 10s of new immigrant Finnish graduates in nursing, health care and social services, only one 1% is employed on short term basis, yet we hear everyday that there are shortages.”

While the government should be commended for speaking out against racism and the importance of challenging discrimination in our society, one of the matters that shines through in white paper is the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS) party.  Sadly it’s not its chairman, Timo Soini, that we see claiming there aren’t any racists in the party, but its far right anti-immigration pundits. 

Speaking out against racism is important but equally important is to remain focused and on our toes to distinguish between official lip service and actual deeds.

If omitting the term “cultural” from diversity raises some questions and makes it more acceptable to anti-immigration groups, another worrisome term used in the white paper is “controlled immigration.”

 “Uncontrolled immigration” is a byword used by far right and right-wing populist anti-immigration groups like the PS to keep the country white. In other words, we don’t want any Muslims, Africans and other visible immigrants to migrate and live with us. 

Another big question mark over this white paper is the credibility of Interior Minister Päivi Räsänen, whose conservative Christian and views on cultural diversity get in the way of good judgement.

How on Earth can a politician like Räsänen who considers homosexuality an illness, wants to make begging illegal,  sees nothing wrong with ethnic profiling by the police and wants to tighten family reunification laws and policy seriously wants to improve the situation of immigrants and visible minorities in Finland? 

Considering that Finland is a young republic which invested a great deal of energy in undermining immigration and foreign investment to Finland, turning it into a successful and dynamic “diverse” society will take more than just a white paper.

Read the white paper (in Finnish) here. An English-language version will be available after summer.

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