“When we see others as the enemy, we risk becoming what we hate.”
Desmond Tutu
Desmond Tutu, the anti-apartheid activist who won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize, warns that we risk becoming what we hate if we allow our hatred to get the best of us. If there is one party in Finland whose hatred has converted it to something toxic and pathological, that party is none other than the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*.
The PS and its politicians, like Riikka Purra, act like Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. On the one hand, they may make reasonable statements and then go off the wall with their usual xenophobia.
At a recent party convention in Helsinki, Purra said: “I don’t want left-wing and Center Party-led ‘red-brown’ governments at the helm of our country; I don’t want massive tax hikes; and I don’t want the government’s top priority to be recognizing Palestine—as Vice Chair (Nasima) Razmyar just outlined.”
Apart from threatening to take away social welfare for people who have lived here for less than ten years, she made it a point with Interior Minister Mari Rantanen that white Finns will not have to change anything when more foreigners move to the country.
Blow is an example of the PS’ Mr Hyde mask.


Interior Minister Mari Rantanen (left) and Finance Minister Rikka Purra stated that Muslims should be kicked out of Finland. “Finland and Finnishness are based on Christian values,” said Rantanen. Purra considered Islam an “aggressive” culture that is preying on Finns’ tolerance, friendliness, and kindness. “But Finns must not give up their language, culture, values, nothing to such groups.” Facebook
One of the best monitors of Islamophobia in Finland and Europe is the European Islamophobia Report.
Finland’s central figures in the Islamophobia network:
“PS continues to be one of the most important platforms of Finland’s Islamophobic
network. All of the elected 46 MPs (out of a total of 216) of the Finns Party based
their campaign on anti-Muslim and xenophobic themes. PS ministers like Riikka
Purra (Finance), Mari Rantanen (Interior), Wille Rydman (former Economic Affairs),
Leena Meri (Justice), Ville Tavio (Foreign Trade), and Jussi Halla-aho (Speaker of Parliament) have all spread the Great Replacement theory with little to no consequences.
Tavio and the government have gone as far as to link development aid to accepting
deportees. MEP Sebastian Tynkkynen, who has three ethnic agitation convictions,
and MP Kaisa Garedew both want Islam to be banned in Finland. Halla-aho, who
was convicted in 2012 of ethnic agitation and of breaching the sanctity of religion,
pressed charges against a comedian and deputy Helsinki councilor for calling him “a
fascist.”













