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Tag: Finland

Say no to stereotypes because they are the fuel that myths and prejudice feed on

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

“Stereotypes have some truth to them” has some truth to it but not in the way people think. That truth is not about the stereotyped but the stereotyper.

Julian Abagond

The quote by Abagond not only exposes the stereotyper for what he or she is, but how racist myths and  views of other groups are maintained. In a country like Finland, which has had few immigrants in the past, it’s easy to understand why  stereotypes have flourished: nobody challenges them never mind the victim. 

STEREOTYPE3

In Finland I could say: “I’m Finnish, I don’t like sauna, I’m against going to the countryside and I hate stereotypes. Source: http://iesutebo2ing.blogspot.fi/2012/10/stereotypes.html

It’s a bit like if all of your workmates were men and your view of women was sexist, or based on stereotypes. Making jokes about women to reinforce your and the group’s chauvinism is possible as long as there aren’t any women sitting at the same table.

The same goes for gays who haven’t come out of the closet yet. People may make a homophobic comment or joke as long as the coast is clear.

The same applies to immigrants and other minorities. As long as there aren’t any of these people around, it may encourage some to make a racist joke or reinforce one’s myths with the help of  a stereotype.

I’ve been in too many situations where racist and homophobic jokes have been made. At first I didn’t laugh but now I speak out against them. I  say politely that such a comment is inappropriate or that you cannot generalize about people in such a way.

Whenever we generalize about a group with the help of stereotypes, we spoon-feed and help racism grow. Those who generalize, and thereby reveal their prejudice, may feel emboldened to do so because there aren’t any immigrants or minorities nearby.

Put one immigrant into the mix and the situation changes.

Thus the best way to rob racism of its precious air comprised of stereotypes and generalizations, is to deny its residence where you are.

I’ve been at meetings where people have generalized about other ethnic groups in a rude and denigrating fashion.

What to do?

Say politely but firmly: “You cannot generalize that way. People in the nineteenth century spoke that way about other groups.”

Result: You have denied a stereotype its space and its ability to survive another day.

Holocaust toll was much higher than believed – what will the deniers and Counterjihadists now say?

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Don’t look for intolerance in complex and distant places because it sits and hides right under our noses.

A story on the Huffington Post, reveals that researchers from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum found over 40,000 Nazi death camps and ghettos that existed during Adolf Hitler’s reign of terror between 1933 and 1945. The total is much higher than previously believed, reports The New York Times.

Even if Counterjihadists claim to be pro-Israel, that is only lip service to hide their intolerance for diversity. If they ever got rid of the Muslims from Europe like their modern “final solution,” their next target would most likely be the Jews.

While the terror that the Nazi regime sowed is clear to most sensible people and the proof is out there in ever-greater quantities, there are some who are still in denial about the horrors of fascism and the Holocaust. Those who play down such atrocities committed against the Jews, Roma and other minorities in World War 2, can be found in parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) of Finland.

One of the matters that has always struck me about Counterjihadists, Holocaust deniers, populist right-wing radicals and anti-immigration politicians, is how they believe that history can be rewritten and forgotten to suit their opinionated ignorance and hatred.

Their denials are the brush that’s supposed to whitewash the truth.

Let’s look at a few of the many PS politicians what they think about fascism and the Holocaust so we don’t forget who they are.

A politician who made his questionable political career on spreading racism and hatred is PS MP Jussi Halla-aho.

What did he say?

  • “It’s quite justifiable to claim that the Nuremberg trials are a farce. Their guilt was decided beforehand and the convictions were carried out for absurd reasons.”
  • “Retroactively opposing the Holocaust is nicer and easier than getting involved in solving present-day problems. It is nice to accuse the Germans because it’s what everyone does. Armenians are irrelevant because Armenians don’t own Hollywood and the American media.”*

Halla-aho was convicted in June 2012 by the Supreme Court for ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion.

PS Kotka councilman Freddy Van Wonterghem, who claimed in May 2011 on Iltalehti that even though excesses happened during World War II, the Holocaust was an “exaggerated” fabrication by the former Soviet Union.

An appeals court upheld in February Van Wonterghem’s ethnic agitation conviction.

What did Van Wonterghem write? He said it was ok if Saudis kill a Muslim woman because that person would not give birth to anymore Muslims.

On a Migrant Tales blog entry on Uusi Suomi, Van Wonterghem had no regrets about what he wrote.

And then there’s a long list of others who are dazzled by far right ideology and who don’t hide their admiration for fascism.

PS MP Juho Eerola’s far-right and anti-immigration views are well-known. He once wrote in a blog entry that he liked Italian fascist Benito Mussolini’s economic system because there was full employment.

His aide, Ulla Pyysalo, applied for membership in the neo-Nazi Kansalinen Vastarinta.

Eerola didn’t want Pyysalo to resign. He said he’d be more worried if she’d apply for membership in a far-left group.

PS MP Jussi Niinstö, who chairs the defense committee, showed his political colors in the fall of 2011  when he quoted in parliament Nazi playwright Hans Johst’s Schlageter, “Wenn ich Kultur höre … entsichere ich meinen Browning” (“Whenever I hear of culture… I release the safety-catch of my Browning”).

Niinstö substituted the word “culture” in Johst’s play for parliamentarism.

Heidi Kuittinen is a PS politician from Kirkkonummi, located near Helsinki. She is another Holocaust denier: “Hitler’s mother’s father was apparently related to the Rothschilds. The six million dead have been proven to be a hoax anyway. The amount of Jews in Europe before and after the war just doesn’t match with the numbers of the supposed holocaust.”’*

Occasionally the PS shows its romanticism of Nazism as a group. The PS of the western Finnish city of Pori launched their municipal election campaign with a former Nazi catch phrase: “One city – one leader.”

The Nazi motto was: Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer (One People, One Nation, One Leader).

Here’s what a former PS member, Atte Pulli, was quoted as saying recently: “SIEG HAIL! …Oops, I slipped. I’m drunk.”*

And another one by Amon Rautiainen, a Kotka city councilman: “People are too uptight with Nazism, if someone has a Totenkopf on a shirt or somebody questions the amount of people killed at concentration camps, you’re immediately branded with Hitler.”*

Rautiainen is being investigated  by the police for suggesting that Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen and Economy Minister Jutta Urpilainen should be killed and Muslims boiled alive, according to YLE in English.

In the face of playing down Nazism, fascism, the Holocaust and, of course, racism, it’s important that we the voters do not forget who these PS politicians are and what they really stand for behind their populist sound bites.

* Original source: truefinns.tumblr.com

Finnish police find list of hundreds of “enemies” at neo-Nazi’s home

Posted on March 4, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The Finnish police, who are investigating neo-Nazi Kansalinen Vastarinta (KV) activists for storming a book event on the far right in Jyväskylä in late-January, have found over 300 photos and personal information of “enemies” on one of the suspect’s memory stick, according to the police. 

Writes YLE in English: “The [memory] stick contained details about the religious and political convictions of people he regarded as political enemies. The information was kept under different categories, including ‘right-wing’, ‘left-wing’, ‘Jews’, ‘race traitors’ and ‘elite clubs.’”

The illegal list of people , which included Jews, was reported in the Israeli media, according to JTA.

The KV openly spreads anti-Semitism by glorifying National Socialism, the political ideology of Adolf Hitler’s Germany that reigned terror between 1933 and 1945.

JTA reports that Finnish Jews, which number about 2,000, have been told to exercise caution in disclosing  information about the events on Facebook and other social media sites.

Three men with bottles and knives barged in on January 30 a book presentation in the central Finnish city of Jyväskylä on far-right extremism. One of the three men who stormed the event is still at large, according to the police.

Meanwhile, a decision by the Etelä-Karjala police to cancel a similar book event in the southern city of Kotka has raised questions about freedom of speech and the right to assembly in Finland, reports Helsingin Sanomat. According to the organizers, the fire department wouldn’t give the green light to the event because the fire-rescue plan wasn’t turned in before the two-week deadline.

The organizers said that a fire-rescue plan was not necessary since it is only needed if  an event has more than 200 spectators.

 

Swedish People’s Party chairman challenges (without luck) PS head Soini on racism

Posted on March 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales raises its hat to Swedish People’s Party chairman, Carl Haglund, for challenging Perussuomalaiset (PS) Timo Soini on Helsingin Sanomat to an open debate about racism. Apart from immigrants and visible minorities, Finland’s Swedish-speaking population, which number about 291,000, has been under near-constant attack by the PS. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-3 kello 22.33.09

It is unfortunate but understandable in today’s Finland that only a small party like Haglund’s is the only one openly challenging Soini on a crucial issue like racism. If the PS ever won an election that would make Soini the country’s next prime minister, the country’s Swedish-speaking population would, like immigrants and other minorities, have the most to lose.

The reaction of some PS MPs reinforces the latter.

PS MP Reijo Tossavainen, who suggested in May 2011 with Teuvo Hakkarainen that Finland should close its borders to asylum seekers, slammed Haglund’s attack on Soini  as “childish.”

Haglund recently asked on Helsingin Sanomat a timely question: Why is he the only one challenging Soini on racism? Why are the other parties so silent?

The answer is pretty obvious. There are two answers to this question: the biggest parties are too afraid to do so and/or silently agree with many of the populist policies of the PS.

Even if the PS can be called Finland’s Immigrantionphobe Party in the same way as The Independent called the Ukip, Soini’s followers are  ostensibly anti-EU and want to relegate Finland’s second official language, Swedish, to the dustbin of history.

Haglund correctly pointed out last month when Soini appeared on BBC’s HARDTalk that the PS leader shamed Finland because he treated, as he usually does, racism with kid gloves.

Soini has refused to comment on what Haglund said and has made it clear that he doesn’t want to be seen with him in public.

Whatever Soini may want to say, he got caught off guard by BBC’s HARDtalk journalist Stephen Sackur.

One of the these situations was when Soini attempted to defend PS MP Hakkarainen and his use of the n-word in Finland which is “completely unacceptable and racist.”

Soini: “I said [to Hakkarainen] don’t use that kind of [racist] language.”

Sackur: “Why didn’t you fire him?”

Soini: “Why should I?”

Saucker: “Because if people use that sort of completely derogatory word towards people of a different race it suggests that they are racist.”

Soini: “Yes, but he hasn’t said he’s a racist and I don’t believe he is a racist.”

Steverp`s blog: Where I need to be (hopefully with some help from some Finns!)

Posted on March 1, 2013 by Migrant Tales
Comment: I got a tweet from our friend in England who has published before on Migrant Tales. “He writes: @MigrantTales Any chance you can share this link to my blog so I can try to be closer to my son in #Finland? Thanks!”
Certainly Stephen. It will be an honor. 
______________________________
By steverp

So this weekend I had my son over to visit from Finland (well, Friday to Tuesday, in fact).

I met him & my ex at Heathrow at lunchtime on Friday & straight away he recognised me. I saw the smile on his face & my heart melted straight away – as it always does when I see him. Whilst his mum went outside for a cigarette we had a little chat & caught up. I use the term ‘chat’ loosely as it consisted of me talking to him & him saying random real & made-up words back to me, including “Diddle” which is his word for Daddy. He also used the time to show me his nose-picking skills that his Grandpa has taught him for some reason. His mum is constantly at odds with him trying to get him to stop, as was I over the weekend, but he just finds it hilarious & thinks it’s a big game.

The coach trip back down south was made quite easy by the fact I’d bought my iPad & Beats headphones & loaded Cars on to it (his current obsession). He sat quietly with me for a while & then went & sat next to his mum to flit between the film & random levels of Angry Birds – or ‘ankka’ to him which is Finnish for ‘duck’ & what he calls every bird he sees & shouts repeatedly when he wants to play on the iPad.

img0443nq

Despite seeing him 2-3 time a week on Skype, I was still so surprised at how much he’d grown & how his personality was now really starting to shine.

During the visit we stayed at my mum’s & our days were spent visiting friends & family, as well as visits to Poole Park, Gus Gorilla’s, Bournemouth Oceanarium & the local swings on the Monday when the last few days had finally caught up with him & he was too shattered to really do anything (as was I).

Unlike other visits here or on my visits to Finland, the ex & I arranged to go out for some dinner one night. I’m not sure we’ve actually sat down together properly & shared a proper meal/drink/conversation in nearly 3 years. Since the end of last year we’ve been getting on a lot better – having the odd chat & sharing a few jokes, stories etc when we’re on Skype & via GMail. So going out for dinner seemed like a good idea – it gave me a few hours break & meant she didn’t have to spend the evening eating alone at the hotel or somewhere in town. All in all, it was a great night. It was like the old days in Australia (where we’d originally met & lived together). We cleared the air, had some interesting & funny conversations & shared plenty of jokes. This was the woman I’d fallen in love with on that warm night at Durty Nelly’s in Perth all those years ago. & despite our problems over the years, I knew this side of her was still in there somewhere. It was great to catch up properly over a couple of Guinness’ after dinner. It felt like catching up with an old friend. I sincerely hope we can keep things like this between us as it’s a great place for us both to be in, & the benefits for Pessi are surely immeasurable.

Over those 5 days my bond with Pessi, & the understanding between us, increased more than I could have ever hoped. He constantly asked after me when I wasn’t in the room “DIDDLE! DIDDLE!”, & seemed to take in what I was saying to him & would respond accordingly. Kisses went from being scarce, to being an almost hourly thing in the end – including numerous world record challenges where he would come in for a kiss & stay there until I nearly passed out, which would include his cheeky tactic of grabbing my cheeks or ears so I couldn’t get away!

As it’s apparent from my previous blog posts (if you’ve been good enough to read them), my heart is most certainly in Finland. I’ve spent the last +2 years travelling too & from, as well as applying for tens if not hundreds of jobs every single week. All to no avail so far. My dream of moving there has never wained, but this weekend has just gone on to reinforce it even further – to the point where I’ve been sat here contemplating how I could possibly move there without a job & get by (something I always previously said I wouldn’t do).

I’m now starting to believe that I could sit here for the next 5 years & apply for every job going in Finland & I wouldn’t be successful – all the while missing out on precious time with Pessi – seeing him grow, develop & learn new things on a daily basis. So now begins the serious deliberations & planning to see if I could possibly get over there in the coming months without a job & with little money (as all my spare money at the moment goes on flights, hotels, visits etc). So if there is any good person out there (obviously in Helsinki or Espoo) that has a spare room, sofa, bathtub, rug on the floor, going, please get in touch. I’m not going to be in the position to fork out a deposit for somewhere formally myself, so I think I’m going to have to try & crash somewhere until I can find a job & have an income etc.

If there’s any one out there that can help (even if it’s just some words of wisdom or a potential lead), please do feel free to get in touch. You’d make at least these two people very, very happy!

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Anti-gay vote in Finland was a vote for intolerance

Posted on February 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The vote to defeat the draft bill that would have legalized gay marriage by the legal committee of parliament sets not only a dangerous precedent but reveals Finland’s ever-hardened stance not only against gays, but against all minorities.

If there were a Hall of Shame for MPs, its members would consist of those who voted against the gay-marriage bill: Anne Holmlund, Markku Mäntymaa, Kari Tolvanen of the National Coalition Party; James Hirvisaari, Arja Juvonen, Kaj Turunen of the Perussuomalaiset party (PS); Arto Pirttilahti, Ari Torniainen of the Center Party; and Peter Östman of the Christian Democratic Party.

Other likely infamous “candidates” would be PS MP Jussi Halla-aho, Juho Eerola and a long list of others.

A vote in favor of gay rights would have been a vote for greater rights and acceptance of  all minorities in Finland.

Why is Finland still the only Nordic country that hasn’t legalized gay
marriage? Is it because the third-largest party of parliament is the 
anti-immigration PS?  

Or has the PS strengthened, reinforced and emboldened the intolerant stand of MPs from other parties?

Wednesday, February 27, was a shameful day in Finland revealing that we have a long way to go to make our country a more tolerant place for everyone.

 

Finnish parliamentary committee votes 9-8 against gay marriage

Posted on February 27, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A draft law to legalize gay marriage in Finland has been defeated by a vote of 9-8 by the legal committee of parliament, reports Uusi Suomi, citing Tweets by Green Party MP Jani Toivola and Aino-Kaisa Pekonen of the Left Alliance. 

Dibujo

Green MP Jani Toivola tweeted that he was “disappointed” by the gay marriage vote today.

The members of the legal committee who voted against the draft bill were: Anne Holmlund, Markku Mäntymaa and Kari Tolvanen of the National Coaltion Party; James Hirvisaari, Arja Juvonen and Kaj Turunen of the
Perussuomalaiset party; Arto Pirttilahti and Ari Torniainen of the
Center Party; and Peter Östman of the Christian Democrats. 

Those voted in favor of the bill were Suna Kylmäläinen, Antti Lindtman, Kristiina Jalonen-Salolainen, Johanna Ojala-Niemelä of the Social Democratic Party; Stefan Wallin of the Swedish People’s Party, Jaana Pelkonen of the National Coalition Party, Pekonen of the Left Alliance, and Toivola of the Greens.  

The vote should be seen as a hard blow for tolerance in Finland. It’s clear that this government has mixed opinions about minority rights, It’s wisful thinking to expext that the adverse climate against immigrants will improve anytime soon in Finland.

“We lost in the vote,” he said. “It’s sad, it makes me cry, the world isn’t ready yet.”

Wrote Migrant Tales on February 19: MP Anne Holmlund of the National Coalition Party and former interior minister appears to be against gay rights as well. She has reportedly sabotaged a petition as chairman of the legal committee to debate and legalize gay marriage.

Far right and anti-immigration quotes in English by the PS

Posted on February 25, 2013 by Migrant Tales

There’s a new site that publishes quotes by your favorite Perussuomalaiset (PS) politician in English. Those PS politicians are none other than Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari and Juho Eerola.

 

You can visit the site at truefinns.tumblr.com

The editors state the following: “Quotes by some leading politicians of the True Finns party. Note that we do no approve of the views they represent. Actually we just want to show what kind of crazies they are. Complaints about the opinions of the True Finns should be directed to the True Finns themselves.”

Here’s one quote by Hirvisaari: “A hate crime was committed in Helsinki some time ago. I believe it was a rare and unique event. It is not always racism if a skinhead beats up a black man, it can be just boys being boys. But if it was a typical case of molesting women, maybe it the black man deserved it.”

And another one by Juho Eerola: “I am attracted to fascism and especially (to) the economic policies.”

Let’s not forget Halla-aho: “What is relevant is that all terrorists are Muslim.”

Finland, the PS and far right: How long before the chickens come home to roost?

Posted on February 24, 2013 by Migrant Tales

I’ve lived and worked in countries like Colombia and Argentina during the dirty war (1976-83), where people were and still are killed for what they write. Never would I have imagined that I’d receive my first death threats twenty years ago in this country, Finland. The threats and harassment haven’t stopped.  

When I read about this serious problem affecting university researchers who study a social ill like racism and even journalists, I not only wonder how we have got here but how long it will take before something snaps.

Unions representing university researchers brought up the issue in mid-February, stating that threats to their members at the University of Eastern Finland  have been on the rise. A new story on MTV3 today reveals the same problem on a much wider scale.

Another sad example was Jyväskylä, were a group of neo-Nazi thugs disrupted a book event on the far right in Finland.

It’s clear that those who harass and threaten people for what they do or write, have little respect for our democratic institutions. They are like lawless vigilantes full of bravado but turn to cowards when their identity is  exposed.

Racism and hatred are sexy for some people. Some politicians fall in love with them because it brings them to the public light and feeds their low self-esteem, narcissism and bizarre ego trips. What they don’t know – or don’t want to know – is that racism and hatred know no master. It can bite back, and hard.

Anders Breivik is a good example. He’s the dog on the short leash that turned into a mass murderer. The smoking gun were the hate sites he visited and that fed his twisted world where, like in a fairy tale, you can rewrite history to suit your ignorance.

What is Perussuomalaiset (PS) leader Timo Soini going to do about the extremists in the PS like MP Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, Olli Immonen, Juho Eerola and others?

Nothing because he can’t and because he has already let the ogre out of the cage. Living on an overdose of wishful thinking, the PS leader believes he has control over the violence that his party has sown but well understands that he is now a hostage.

That monster that lurks in our society spreading hatred is the same one that is threatening university researchers, journalists and writers that challenge it.

Like a cancer, we must isolate and neutralize it.

Or maybe we should continue covering our eyes and leave everything to chance.

 

 

PS MP Hirvisaari now says he was “pressured” to resign from Suomen Sisu

Posted on February 24, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP James Hirvisaari, who was convicted for ethnic agitation in December, announced Saturday on Twitter that he was “pressured” to resign from the extremist Suomen Sisu association. He announced on Friday that he was resigning from Suomen Sisu because he was too old to belong to “a youth organization.”

Hirvisaari tweets, “The truth: I was pressured to resign from Suomen Sisu.”

In his usual far right tone, Hirvisaari wrote on his blog: ”[I didn’t resign] because there was something wrong with the association, but because it is a youth organization.”

And continues: “I thank Suomen Sisu’s smart young men and women for their inspiring, intelligent, peaceful and authentic love for the fatherland and for their company and great example.”

So what does this latest piece of news about Hirvisaari’s motive to resign from Suomen Sisu tell us? It reveals that there is a big struggle in the PS between the far right faction led by MP Jussi Halla-aho and the party’s chairman Timo Soini.

Hirvisaari now regrets resigning from Suomen Sisu.

Is this tweet by Hirvisaari an outright declaration of war against Soini?

Are Hirvisaari’s days counted in the PS?

Maybe.

Sources: Hannele Kosonen and Turun Sanomat

 

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