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Tag: Racism

The story behind “Finland is a racist country” is in the comments

Posted on December 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

There were quite strong reactions among some Finns and immigrants to Maryan Abdulkarim’s interview on Helsingin Sanomat. Those who strongly objected to the article, appear to want to deny Abdulkarim’s right to express herself on a touchy subject like racism. 

It’s ironic, but those who want to deny Abdulkarim her right to speak out are the very people who spread hate speech and claim there’s mass censorship in this country.

You can read Abdulkarim’s full interview in English here.

White Finns, which include some white immigrants as well, control and jealously guard the high ground over the debate in the media whether there is racism in Finland or not. Some cry murder when a black woman, who is a Finn born in Somalia and is a Muslim on top of it, speaks out against racism.

One of these is from the anti-immigration camp, Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen, who is president of the ultra-nationalist and and anti-immigration  Suomen Sisu association. He wrote on his Facebook wall that as “a native-born Finnish citizen,” he is ashamed that the country’s largest daily published the story on Abdulkarim a day before independence day celebrations.

Note how he stresses “native-born Finnish citizen.” With such a lowly punch, Immonen tries to undermine Abdulkarim’s right to voice her narrative by trying to show that she’s not a so-called “real” Finn like him. Since she’s not a real Finn, her arguments aren’t as valid as his.

Immonen takes another punch at Abdulkarim on his Facebook wall: “The article forgets to mention the view that while over 50% of Somalis [in Finland] are unemployed and are overrepresented in crime statistics of a certain sort, they are still treated in our country in a very friendly manner and offered generous social assistance, municipal housing as well as a host of other benefits from taxpayers’ pockets.”

I get it. Abdulkarim’s arguments aren’t supposed to amount to much because she’s not a real Finn and because she belongs to a group where there is a high crime and unemployment rate, according to Immonen.

The PS MP recently blamed immigrants for Finland’s poor Pisa result.

Immonen claimed on Facebook: ”The long-term work of immigration and multicultural fanatics to make Finland more ‘diverse’ has bore fruit. Immigrants played a signifiant role in [the worse] Pisa results even if consensus politicians and officials claim the contrary. The differences in reading, science and math between immigrants and Finns in the Pisa test are mind-boggling.”

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-8 kello 10.19.36

Anti-immigration politicians like Immonen, who enjoy bashing immigrants who can’t defend themselves because they aren’t white and don’t have the same political and ethnic clout as him, must be stunned and devastated by Abdulkarim.

Weren’t all those Somali women supposed to be exploited and docile servants of men?

Who should we be ashamed of? Immonen, who makes up Islamophobic tales and spreads them, which in turn fuel prejudice and social exclusion, or Abdulkarim who has the courage to speak out?

Immonen and the Finns he represents aren’t the only problem. There are white immigrants, and those who think they are white, in this country who feel the same way  about blacks, Muslims and other visible minorities.

Just because they are immigrants doesn’t mean they automatically have empathy for those who are victims of racism and discrimination. Just like Immonen capitalizes on the anti-Islam message, some immigrants seek to climb the social ladder by bashing other immigrants.

Shameful but true.

Abdulkarim’s interview on Helsingin Sanomat is one matter but the most revealing aspect of her story are the reactions to it on social media.

They confirm without a doubt that what she says is true.

 

 

 

 

Isolationism, petty provincialism and nationalism: social ills with far-reaching consequences

Posted on December 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

In the backdrop of Finland’s independence day celebrations Friday and as the world mourns Nelson Mandela’s death yesterday, our country is at a major crossroads contesting whether it wants to be a closed or open society. The historic victory of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party in 2011 is one example how this country has taken a perilous path that brought so much disaster and suffering to this country in the last century. 

For the price of cheap sound bites drenched in nationalism and intolerance of every imaginable kind, some Finns are willing to forfeit everything we gained and worked so hard for in the last century.

Nationalism and intolerance never comes cheap. It caused Europe to go down a ruinous path that brought World War 2 to our homes and where an estimated 60 million people perished. The same arguments that led us to such ruin are being used today by short-sighted and opportunistic politicians: generalizing, over-simplifying and harshly victimizing other groups.

Compare anti-Semitism in the 1930s with Islamophobia and xenophobia in the 2010s.

While the time frame and historical context are different, the discourse is the same.

Since intolerance is nothing more than an exaggerated lie, parties like the PS of Finland are constantly required to make up new arguments to hid their prejudice, stereotypes and racism.

If you believe that the PS has toned down its xenophobia and loathing towards refugees, check out what they are doing in the municipality of Kouvola. According to the local daily, Kouvolan Sanomat, the PS wants the city council to stop receiving asylum seekers and quota refugees by 2016.

While the PS blame the economic situation and cost-cutting measures by the municipality for their stance, the truth is that this is a long-term plan by the anti-immigration party to stop Finnish municipalities from receiving quota refugees.

There are two types of municipalities in Finland today: open and closed. Those municipalities that opt for the closed model will struggle in the face of ever-growing poverty, while those that are open stand a better chance of making it.

One small indicator of our openness is our ability to accept refugees in our municipality. Accepting them is an important gesture and message to others because it shows that we are open to the suffering of others.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-11-28 kello 23.23.53

Finland’s map of shame. Only a handful of municipalities in Finland accept quota refugees last year.

Why would a company invest or a skilled immigrant move to a municipality that is hostile to other groups like refugees?

That is why those who claim to be patriotic while they spread hatred and racism are the real menace to our society. They are impoverishing our society economically, socially and robbing it off its greatest asset: the ability to help others in need.

Imagine that the third-largest political party in parliament in Finland is doing just that by inflating our nationalism to bash immigrants, the EU, and our ever-growing cultural diversity.

But the good news is that our ever-growing cultural diversity is here to stay no matter how much some try to exclude and make it invisible.

How does Nelson Mandela (1918-2013) empower us?

Posted on December 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The death of Nelson Mandela, who was branded a terrorist by countries like the U.S. and Great Britain, is a sad day full of mourning but full of hope as well. His struggle and triumph over apartheid, a toxic offshoot of white European colonialism, proves that no matter how oppressive a government is, change is possible.

You don’t need an army and the latest sophisticated weapons in your struggle. You can sit in jail for 25 years and eight months and be a force of change.

Never give up your dreams of a better world. US civil rights activist Jesse Jackson summed up Nelson Mandela’s life and example in the following words: “Suffering breeds character. Character breeds faith. In the end faith will not disappoint.”

If there is one person that emulates this quote like a bright shining light of hope, that person is Nelson Mandela.

Even if this great man has left us in body, his example and spirit live on as long as there are oppressed people demanding justice. And there are too many of them today. Their oppression is only possible thanks to our silence, cowardice and ambivalence.

nelson-mandela

Nelson Mandela was not only a transformative force in his country and globally, but believed in reconciliation. Reconciliation shouldn’t mean that we bow our heads and accept what happened, it means we take real concrete steps to challenge and do away with social ills like racism and injustice.

As we mourn Nelson Mandela’s death, the ugly face of racism is raising its head in the continent where colonialism took its treacherous  steps and enslaved millions and committed genocide.

In Finland as in Europe, no matter how much political power parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) amass, it can never succeed at making intolerance acceptable. The same goes for other likeminded parties in the Nordic region like the Danish People’s Party, Sweden Democrats and the Progress Party of Norway.

The stronger these parties become and the more power they amass and wield against minorities and our ever-growing cultural diversity, the more power is accumulating on our side.

If the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S. and the struggle to abolish apartheid in South Africa are clear examples that change is possible,  certainly change is possible in Finland and Europe as well.

Nelson Mandela would agree. He’d encourage us to continue our struggle, like today on the first day after passing on.

 

 

Maryan Abdulkarim: “Finland is a very racist country”

Posted on December 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Is there racism in Finland? In order to find the answer to that question, we’d have to ask visible migrants and minorities.  Maryan Abdulkarim, 31, is a Finn who was born in Somalia, had the opportunity on Friday’s Helsingin Sanomat to answer that question. “Finland is a very racist country,” she said. “It always has been.”   

She says that white Finns don’t notice racism in our society because this social ill doesn’t affect them directly. She compares the situation to with those that can’t walk. “If you have two normal-functioning legs, it never crosses your mind what it’s like to move about in a wheelchair in Helsinki,” she said.

And adds: “You have to be in a state of awareness to notice what happens around you. Some react in such a way that they believe they are a bad person if they don’t notice racism [in society]. Others again deny racism and think that acknowledging it makes them racists because they are members of this society.”

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-5 kello 11.18.57

 

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Abdulkarim, who moved to Finland when she was seven, says that silence isn’t the answer when challenging a social ill like racism.

“We have a very vocal racist group [in Finland],” she said. “Their speech isn’t criticism but heresy, oppression and racism.”

Abdulkarim said that it’s not an isolated incident if a stranger shouts in public at a person by harassing him or her with the n-word. Behind such racism is a culture that makes it possible to use such labels because the perpetrator believes he or she is superior.

She herself has been harassed in this manner and once even spat at for speaking out against such abuse.

Migrant Tales agrees and believes that racism in Finland is a much bigger problem than some Finns, politicians and public officials want to admit.

Such a social ill will continue to find refuge and grow in our society as long as we continue to underestimate and deny its presence.

  •  The story publihed Thursday on Helsingin Sanomat about Maryan Abdulkarim was translated on Friday into English by Helsinki Times. Read full translation here.

 

PS MP blames immigrants for Finland’s disappointing Pisa result

Posted on December 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

This year’s Program for International Student Assessment (Pisa) results offered a rude disappointment for Finland, when it saw its global ranking slip sharply in reading, science and math, according to Yle in English.  Of all the OECD countries, Finland’s Pisa result saw the biggest drop from the previous year.

While part of Finland is still in mourning due to the result, it didn’t take long for Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen to directly pin the blame on immigrants for the poor Pisa result.

Immonen claims on his Facebook wall below: ”The long-term work of immigration and multicultural fanatics to make Finland more ‘diverse’ has bore fruit. Immigrants played a signifiant role in [the worse] Pisa results even if consensus politicians and officials claim the contrary. The differences in reading, science and math between immigrants and Finns in the Pisa test are mind-boggling.”

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-5 kello 0.43.41

Folks, here’s a member of Finland’s third-largest party in parliament scapegoating all immigrants for the disappointing Pisa result. Should we be surprised taking into account that Immonen is chairman of the far-right Suomen Sisu association and  predicts a war between Islam and white Christian Europe?

What Immonen’s comment shows repeatedly is not his hostility against immigrants in Finland but the ambivalent stance of the PS despite countless assurances by the party’s leader, Timo Soini, that racism isn’t an issue.

Taking into account that the Euro MP elections in May are crucial for the survival of the PS, it’s clear that MP’s like Immonen will continue to turn on the anti-immigration heat while Soini turns a blind eye.

Minister of Education Krista Kiuru was quoted as saying that we shouldn’t try to find explanations for the worse Pisa result by comparing the results of those so-called students with immigrant backgrounds and native Finns.

All in all, 15% of the students that took the test weren’t native white Finns.

If immigrant students lag behind their Finnish classmates, certainly the first important job of a world-class educational system like Finland’s should be to find the causes.

How well, for example, does Finland’s school system educate children with immigrant backgrounds?

Sweden is right, Finland wrong in its strategy against anti-immigration parties

Posted on December 4, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt reiterated to Helsingin Sanomat the government’s plans to isolate Sweden Democrats despite the latest polls in Sweden, which show the anti-EU and anti-immigration party making gains. Even if the Sweden Democrats have tried break free from their neo-Nazi and racist image, the party led by Jimmie Åkesson has suffered a number of scandals. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-4 kello 7.43.07

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

We know from a fact that flirting with the far right, right-wing populism, isolationism and adopting a tougher anti-immigration stance can backfire badly as happened in Finland in April 2011, when the Perussuomalaiset (PS) became the country’s third-largest party in parliament.

After over two and a half years of PS opposition politics, which has been strongly characterized by racism, nationalism and neo-liberal economic ideology, what should mainstream parties have learned?

The answer to that question can be found in neighboring Sweden where mainstream parties there have isolated politically the Sweden Democrats.

Is this an effective strategy?

Yes, despite gains by the Sweden Democrats in the polls.

Time will prove Sweden did the right thing while Finland failed in the task in challenging intolerance.

If the government of Prime Minister Jyrki Kaatainen has taken an ambivalent stance on intolerance, why would PS head Timo Soini want to renounce racism in his party if it attracts votes?

It’s like asking a junkie to give up drugs.

Immigrants and their associations should speak out more against exploitation

Posted on December 3, 2013 by Migrant Tales

In the struggle that immigrants and members of the visible minority community in Finland, it’s important that we have a voice and speak out against exploitation and attitudes that promote intolerance. 

Kuvankaappaus 2013-12-3 kello 8.43.13

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Migrant Tales wrote recently about Abdi Osman, a naturalized Finn who came to this country fifteen years ago with 50 dollars in his pocket via Moscow from Somalia. According to Osman, social welfare should be scrapped and Finnish-language courses aren’t important.

His advice for success? Work, work and work.

While his recipe for success is no different from the simplistic extremist views of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) or Youth League of the National Coalition Party, it proves that immigrants can be just as tough against their own kind as the worst native.

In a rebuttal to Osman’s views published on Jyväskylä-based daily Keskisuomalainen, the chairman of Somaliland nuoret, Warda Ahmed, asked whether asylum seekers that the businessman helped to employ could be victims of exploitation.

“Asylum seekers can get permission to work from the Finnish Immigration Service (FIS) as they wait for years for their residence permit…They don’t get social security, language skills or understanding of [their] employee rights. Salaries are paid cash in hand, there are no retirement benefits paid and working conditions aren’t overseen by a union…” writes Somaliland nuoret association.

While it’s a welcome  news that immigrant associations in this country raise their voices against injustices, it’s hoped that more would follow Somaliland nuoret’s example. Immigrants and especially the associations that represent them should speak out more against exploitation.

If the exploitation is committed by an individual company or a fast-food chain is one matter, another serious issue is turning a blind eye to the problem since they “are immigrants” that should be thankful for getting a job that we’d never take in a million years. The difficulties in getting a work permit never mind a job in Finland for some opens the doors to exploitation, especially if the victim has poor language skills and little education.

But who is to blame? The employer, FIS or the victim?

In the 1980s, when the then Aliens’ Office was a state within a state run by Eilä Kännö, Pakistani citizens were required to get pre-approval from the Finnish honorary consul of Pakistan, Aarne Roiha.

These Pakistanis were given  residence and work permits from the Aliens Office if they got approval or worked at one of Roiha’s three restaurants in Helsinki (Klippan, Ässäpata, Kaisaniemen ravintola).

A foreigner, who spoke on condition of anonymity and knew Roiha, told Migrant Tales that those Pakistanis that worked for the former honorary consul were underpaid, slept at the restaurants where they worked. “They were forced to come to work when they were sick and even beaten at work like being slapped in the face,” the person said.

There are unconfirmed reports that Roiha, who was forced to leave the country to Florida because of tax issues, used to entertain Kännö at his restaurants in Helsinki.

Strict laws, lack of regulation and greedy businessmen are a recipe for the exploitation of people who have no other choice but to be thankful for those that use them.

The reason why this happens in Finland and in so many countries is because it is highly profitable. Certainly the employee may have a different opinion about the whole matter.

The PS are now hoping that Kouvola stops receiving asylum seekers and quota refugees by 2016

Posted on November 28, 2013 by Migrant Tales

If you believe that the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party has toned down its xenophobia and loathing towards refugees, check out what they are doing in the municipality of Kouvola. According to the local daily, Kouvolan Sanomat, the PS wants the city council to stop receiving asylum seekers and quota refugees by 2016. 

While the PS blame the economic situation and cost-cutting measures by the municipality for their stance, the truth is that this is a long-term plan by the anti-immigration party to stop Finnish municipalities from receiving quota refugees.

It’s nothing new that the anti-immigration party uses refugees to drive home their xenophobia. In the PS’ municipal election program, it recommended that municipalities shouldn’t accept refugees because the best way to help these needy people would be in refugee camps next to their war-torn countries.

This type of hostile campaign against refugees appears to be paying off for the PS. Annually around one out of ten municipalities accepts quota refugees, according to MTV3, quoting the ministry of employment and the economy.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-11-28 kello 23.23.53

Finland’s map of shame. Only a handful of municipalities in Finland accept quota refugees these days.

Every year after 2003, Finland has missed its 750-quota refugee target: 734 in 2012; 626 in 2011; 634 in 2010; 727 in 2009; 737 in 2008; 727 in 2007; 676 in 2006; 690 in 2005; and 679 in 2004, according to Finnish Immigration Service (FIS).

 

 

Is your attitude towards racism determined by your upbringing and where you grew up?

Posted on November 23, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Some immigrants and visible minorities fight against intolerance their own way. Others, however, shy away from such a challenge by preferring to live in denial. Is the way you fight against intolerance dependent on what you learned at home and in your home country? 

If a white Russian learned to hate blacks and Muslims in his society, why would he start defending this group in Finland? What about those immigrants that come from countries where questioning authority is a no-no?

What about if you lived in a society where your ethnic group had privileged status but now you’ve lost that status? What about if you make a deal to accept that you’re a second-class citizen in your new home country as long as you are not relegated to third- or fourth-class status?

Just because a person is an immigrant doesn’t mean that he or she understands never mind is against racism. Those prejudices that you learned could be reinforced by the new home country.

While some white Finns try to justify their racism by claiming that some immigrants are racists, one can never compare the two.

Writes Migrant Tales in January:

“The fact that white Finns are the standard of everything in Finland is enough proof that they wield real power. White Finns don’t have to understand racism because they simply don’t have to. It’s not an issue because they are the standard of this society, the norm. Everyone else has a prefix attached to them like immigrant, immigrant descendant, black, Roma etc.”

IMG_0038

One of the great figures to emerge from the Civil Rights Movement was Martin Luther King Jr. He said: “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

The most important matter that the Civil Rights Movement taught me was that you can challenge a social ill like racism and beat it at its own game even if such a social ill believes that it is all-powerful and unbeatable.

If I use myself as an example, it’s clear that the African-American Civil Rights Movement in the United States  (1955-68) had a lasting impact on my life. It not only taught me how important it is to challenge a social ill like racism, but fight for change in a non-violent manner.

Images and my direct experience with that period lives on so strongly that I bring them up in talks in Finland.

Kuva 79

 Malcolm X is another exemplary fighter of the Civil Rights Movement. He said: “Racism is like a Cadillac, they bring out a new model every year.”

Racism leaves deep scars in some people. It has left such wounds in me.

One open scar was left by our elementary school’s first black pupil in the mid-1960s. He was bullied to such an extent by his classmates that the black child lasted about two weeks at our Hollywood, California, school.

I don’t remember his first name, but his last name was Brown. How can I remember such a fact about a classmate I knew briefly such a long time ago? One of the jokes that was made by one student went as follows: “What’s the color of shit? Brown!”

Imagine the power or racism to destroy another person’s self-esteem. My classmates were all children who came from so-called middle-class homes. Together they acted like a school of ferocious pirhanas attacking their prey.

Even if the principle of the school spoke to all of us about how we should treat the new black student with respect, he never spoke to us about our behavior.

How is racism perpetuated and reinforced in Finland? By denial and in so-called normal Finnish homes.

The Perussuomalaiset (PS) and its leader, Timo Soini, are good examples of the bullying and victimizing of immigrants and visible minorities in this country. As everyone knows, Soini is the so-called good cop of the anti-immigration party.

One of the PS’ biggest loose canons and racists, MP James Hirvisaari, was expelled from the party after he invited a friend to parliament, whom he took a picture of making a Nazi salute.

If it weren’t for the PS, and specifically because of Soini, it is doubtful that Hirvisaari would have ever been elected. As a member of the far-right Muutos 2011 party today, nobody is any longer interested what Hirvisaari thinks.

So yes, Soini and the PS are responsible for making racism and intolerance more acceptable in Finland. Letting him off the hook is a mistake. He is the wolf in sheep’s clothing.

We must remember, however, that it’s not only the PS that has issues with racism but every party in this country. The PS would have never obtained so much power without the complacency and cowardice of other mainstream parties.

Finland’s Interior Minister Päivi Räsänen’s blog entry on the Roma reveals why Europe has done so little to help this minority

Posted on November 22, 2013 by Migrant Tales

I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read Christian Democrat Interior Minister Päivi Räsänen’s opinion piece on Uusi Suomi about the hardships that the Romany minority face in Europe today. As she expressed concern about their plight, I could not forget her intolerant views of gays, non-Christian refugees and her silence in the face of strict family reunification laws in this country.

Räsänen hasn’t been a too friendly voice for Romanian and Bulgarian Roma who have come to Finland to beg.

Eric Erfors’ column on tabloid Expressen of Sweden didn’t give Räsänen high marks either for her views of gays, the Roma and immigrants who aren’t Christians.

Zuzeeko, a Migrant Tales associate editor, wrote in spring about how little to nothing detaining children seeking asylum for long periods of time.

It shouldn’t surprise anyone why Räsänen’s approval rating among the populist anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS) is so high.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-11-22 kello 21.11.45

Read full story here.

Not only has Räsänen upheld stereotypes about the Roma with her views, she has publicly defended by playing down ethnic profiling by the police.

The interior minister claimed  in April last year that ethnic profiling didn’t occur in Finland because “the vast majority of foreigners look just like natives, so it’s [ethnic profiling] is not even a very sensible way to supervise aliens.”

At best Räsänen’s “concern” about the Roma reveals why so much has been said but so little done to help this minority.

As we listen to people like Räsänen speak about such shameful intolerance, it’s our own inaction and impotency speaking echoing to us.

Still can’t see the crocodile tears? Read on:

Disagree? Read on:

  • Interior Minister Räsänen disagrees with findings of police report on the Romany minority
  • Council of Europe concerned about ethnic profiling by police in Finland
  • Let’s challenge Finland’s disgraceful family reunification obstacles
  • Zuzeeko’s blog: Ask Finland’s Minister of Interior to stop detention of innocent children
  • Interior minister: Far right isn’t “a big threat” despite what happened in Jyväskylä
  • Feeding Somalis and poor immigrants to the loan sharks of Finland
  • Aamulehti rape story: Minister Räsänen speaks out in favor of tougher sentences
  • Finland’s interior minister wants to make begging illegal
  • Räsänen sees no wrongdoing, ethnic profiling by police with spot identity checks
  • YLE in English: Immigration rules to be tightened
  • HS: Kristillisten Päivi Räsänen ottaa vastuun maahanmuuttoasioista
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