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Tag: Sweden

YLE: Ruotsalaisen maahanmuuttajalähiön pahiskoulusta tuli palkittu eliittikoulu

Posted on October 10, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment:  Here is a good example of how a culturally diverse school in the the Stockholm neighborhood of Rinkeby has succeeded in becoming a model for the rest of the country. The principal, Börje Ehrstrand, who emigrated to Sweden in the 1980s from Finland, said that in a square meter of Rinkeby there live immigrants from a hundred countries. All the cultures of the world, ethnic groups and religions are represented at the school, according to him. 

The principal said that the challenges that the school faced before were resolved with the school staff. “We tried to figure out how the children could become winners in the labor market and we concluded that one succeeds if their interaction skills are good.”

A student must learn how to express his opinions, hopes and thoughts as well as work out an overall strategy, according to Ehrstrand.

“In the future labor markets are not Finnish or Swedish but international,” he said. “One has to have a global ability to work with all types of people (from different cultures).”

Ehrstrand places a lot of effort on the welfare of the pupils. Students shouldn’t feel that they are being discriminated and have to obey rules that they do not want to follow.

He said that taking into account the opinion of the students and parents is vital. 

____________

Ruotsin monikulttuurisimman lähiön koulua johtava Börje Ehrstrand kertoo Aamu-tv:n haastattelussa, kuinka ongelmakoulusta tuli palkittu opinahjo. Rehtorin mukaan menestyksen salaisuus on sama kuin ongelmakin oli: monikultturisuus.

Read whole story.

Ilta-Sanomat: Fazerin karkeista nousi rasismikohu Ruotsissa

Posted on September 20, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment:  When I saw this story on Ilta-Sanomat about a racist drawing of a Chinese on one of its chocolate-covered wheat puffs brand, I wondered if Fazer had learned anything after it was forced to remove a Golliwog from its famous licorice brand in 2007.

The latest uproar came in Sweden after Patrik Lundgerg criticized in his column the drawing of a stereotypical Chinese man on the bag of  Fazer Kina candies. 

Fazer has taken the criticism seriously and said that it would change the package.

You would think that a large company like Fazer would have enough sensitivity never mind brains to make such a mistake as depicting a foreign group in a stereotypic fashion. 
___________

Fazer vaihtaa karkkipaperikääreet rasismisyytösten takia. Fazerin “Kinapuffar” -karkkien pussinkylkeen piirretty kiinalaismies on herättänyt rasismikohun Ruotsissa.

Read whole story.

Der Spiegel International: Right-Wing Populists Face Test in Denmark

Posted on September 14, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: The right-wing populist Danish People’s Party will face an important election test on Thursday two months after right-wing fanatic Anders Breivik killed 77 people in Norway. The first test for anti-immigration populist parties came this month in the Norwegian municipal elections, were the Progress Party saw its support plummet by 6.1 percentage points to 11.5%.

Migrant Tales predicted shortly after Breivik’s mass killings in Norway that an important watershed was crossed and that support, at least momentarily, would wane for anti-immigration parties in the Nordic Region.

A Megafon poll for Politiken and TV2News published on September 12 showed that the opposition alliance will win 92 seats compared with the government’s 83 seats in the 179-seat parliament.

Ten years of sustaining a minority government in Denmark has permitted the Danish People’s Party to turn the country’s immigration legislation into Europe’s strictest. Here is a story on The Local of Sweden that highlights the problems that some multicultural couples face due in Denmark.

Karsten Dybvad, the CEO of the Danish Confederation of Industries, suggested on Politiken that Denmark’s strong anti-immigration and especially anti-Muslim stance have hurt the country’s image abroad.  “We have surveys showing that businesses feel we have problems with our cultural openness and image abroad. That is of course something we would like to help improve,” Dybvad says.

Contrary to Norway, Denmark and Sweden, where the Sweden Democrats have lost support in a recent poll, the right-wing populist Perussuomalaiset (PS) party continues to receive strong support in Finland. This maybe partly explained by the fact that the PS is now emphasizing more of its anti-EU side rather than its opposition to immigration.

_________

Just two months after the politically inspired massacre in Norway, a right-wing populist party, one of Europe’s most influential, will face a test of voter sentiment at the ballot box. The Danish People’s Party has been instrumental in tightening at least 20 laws pertaining to immigration and migration.

Read whole story.

Helsingin Yliopisto: Populismin juuret ovat kaukana historiassa

Posted on June 9, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Inari Sakki of the University of Helsinki, who was one of 16 new  academy research fellows on the Research Council for Culture and Society, has focused her research on current support of the far right in Europe and Finland. 

Sakki states that it is important to study those factors give far-right parties their support. While the Sweden Democrats reject Islam and multiculturalism and want to return to a Sweden of the 1950s when there were few if any immigrants, the rhetoric of the Perussuomalaiset is based on values like nationalism.

The PS  have not only shown to be unfit to govern, but are keeping the whole country and the political establishment hostage of their anti-EU stance.  Is their anything “patriotic” about this stance or is it just another opportunistic ploy to score political brownie points with other euroskeptic parties in Europe?

The reluctance to take part in government is also an indication that the PS doesn’t have the experience to sit on government. It could reveal the PS is a lot of talk and little action.  

Do you agree?

______________

“On selvää, että äärioikeiston kannatuksen kasvu on yleiseurooppalainen ilmiö”, sanoo Suomen Akatemian tuore tutkijatohtori Inari Sakki. Monien muiden Euroopan maiden tavoin populistipuolueet ovat moninkertaistaneet kannatuksensa viime vuoden aikana myös Suomessa ja Ruotsissa. Vaikka ilmiö on näkyvä, Inari Sakin mielestä uutta tietoa aiheeseen tuo sosiaalipsykologinen näkökulma.

Read whole story.

El País: El ocaso de la tolerancia nórdica

Posted on May 1, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Here is story published Sunday by El País of Madrid on how the Nordic countries of Denmark, Sweden and Finland have given ground to “far-right and populist” parties. The article, authored by Ana Carbajosa and Adrián Soto, who has lived in Finland for over thirty-five years, shows special concern over the last election in Finland.

Writes El País: “The last big (election) victory and which was probably more surprising was that of the Perussuomalaiset (the article translates the Finnish name of the party to Auténticos Finlandeses, or authentic Finns) who got two weeks ago 19% of the votes, or seven times more than in the last election (of 2007). Some analysts attribute the victory to the charismatic leader of the party, EuroMP Timo Soini.”

Could parties like the Perussuomalaiset, Danish People’s Party and Sweden Democrats mentioned in the El País story be knee-jerk reactions by some sectors of society to the rapid changes taking place in these countries due to globalization?

What is lamentable about these parties is that their responses are angry reactions with the usual round of anti-EU, anti-immigration and anti-Islam sentiment. Their hostility and nationalism only aggravates the problem.

Do you agree?

____________

Adrián Soto y Ana Carbajosa

La victoria electoral de los Auténticos Finlandeses ha supuesto una pequeña revolución en el país nórdico, pero sobre todo ha hecho saltar todas las alarmas en una región en la que hasta hace bien poco era casi impensable escuchar argumentos tan extremistas como los que ahora circulan por los Parlamentos nacionales de la zona. Los partidos de extrema derecha y populistas nórdicos ya no pueden ser ignorados porque les respalda una parte del electorado nada despreciable. En Finlandia y en Dinamarca han sido la tercera fuerza más votada. En Suecia han aflorado de la semioscuridad y han entrado en la cámara parlamentaria.

Pinche aquí para seguir leyendo.

True Finns’ Soini lashes out at the foreign media

Posted on April 20, 2011 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

While True Finns’ chairman Timo Soini tries to calm Finns and the outside world that “we’re not extremists, so you can sleep safely,” an eerie lull prevails over Finland as talks begin on forming a coalition government with Kokoomus, Social Democrats and the True Finns. Soini’s most recent outbreak was with the Swedish media, whom he branded on MTV3 as “unbelievable.”

One of the interesting debates going on between people in Finland is figuring out a suitable adjective to describe the True Finns.

Is it a racist party, xenophobic, protest, nationalistic, euroskeptic, ultra-conservative/conservative, populist, far-right or all or none of the above? Probably the answer to that question lies in the following query: What do the True Finns support, according to their election manifesto and blog writings of some of their newly elected MPs?

Would we call the True Finns a party that has spoken out against racism in Finland? Has it championed for women’s rights and gender equality? What about its views on pollution and its relationship with the outside world and Russia? Should Finland ditch the European Monetary Union and eventually the European Union? Do they approve and encourage cultural diversity? If so how is it realized? What about same-sex marriages? What do they think about Islam?

The BBC reports: “They (True Finns) believe that a low birth rate is not solved by immigration, as that results in problems and foreigners do not fit into Finnish culture. Instead, young women should study less and spend more time giving birth to pure Finnish children. That is like a faint echo of Nazi ideology.”

If Soini disagrees with these types of descriptions of his party, he should come out and condemn forcefully those in the True Finns who preach such things indirectly or directly.

If we look at Europe’s right-wing populist parties that have grown in recent years, their popularity is based on three contentions: hostility to Brussels, immigration and Islam. In many respects, the True Finns are no different in their “critical stance” of these three matters.

Some elected True Finns like Jussi Halla-aho, a member of the far-right Suomen Sisu association, said on election eve that the election victory was attributable to its anti-immigration and anti-EU stance.

In a cat-and-mouse game trying not to reveal the true face of the party, Soini has said that only 10% of the support that the True Finns got comes from anti-immigration. Whom do you believe?

I am certain that electing a party like the True Finns will not undermine xenophobia, racism and inequality in this country because the party indirectly gives its blessing to people who support these types of social illnesses.

Thanks to the independent media in Finland and abroad we can rest assured that politicians like Soini, True Finns and other parties won’t be able to mold their own comfortable image of themselves to the public.

There is a lot of concern in Finland as well as abroad about what the rise of a populist, anti-immigration and euroskeptic party implies for our country and Europe. That is why so much has been written about the True Finns as of late.

Finland election: Flirting with isolationism and xenophobia

Posted on April 16, 2011 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

In our neck of the woods in the Nordic region, ultra-nationalistic and xenophobic parties have made their mark in Norway, Denmark, Sweden and most likely now in Finland on Sunday when the True Finns are expected to score a historic victory. Will the election embolden other xenophobic parties in this region and Europe? Will it send shock ripples in the EU?

It’s pretty doubtful that parties like the True Finns have any answer to those questions because they base much of their rhetoric on populism and denial. Since Finns are the biggest per-capita coffee drinkers in the world, a good example of our populism would be adding salt to sour coffee in order to make it taste better.

Instead of solving our problems, a large group of voters have preferred to sprinkle the salt of isolationism and xenophobia on our reality.

Depending on the scale of the True Finns’ victory, the next thing we may see after Sunday’s election will be a stream of far-right party leaders flocking to Finland from the Danish People’s Party, Sweden Democrats, British National Party, Jobbik of Hungary and none other than Geert Wilders of the Isalmophobic Dutch People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy.

Are we afraid of these twenty-first century fanatics? Not at all because their example have shown us that xenophobia and racism have not been nipped in the bud in Europe.

Even though the True Finns may score a big victory on Sunday, they will not be a majority. That majority comprises of sensible Finns who are not lured by xenophobia, isolationism and corny political soundbites from True Finns’ chairman Timo Soini.

Xenophobia and ignorance are curable social diseases.

The original link was taken down.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOgc5WH0yW4]

However, here’s the latest one:

I apologize for the racist and provocative content of this campaign ad by Jussi Halla-aho and Teemu Lahtinen, both of which are running for the True Finns and are members of the far-right Suomen Sisu association. Apart from being xenophobic, the turban worn by the potato appears to be Indian. Is this against Indian IT-immigrants or some legal loophole? Both Halla-aho and Lahtinen reveal their shameful ignorance on a grand scale. Here is a video showing Lahtinen at a far-right march in France.

Ny Tid: Islamofobins idéhistoria

Posted on February 4, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Here a very long story about the origins of Islamophobia in Europe reported in Ny Tid.  The article states that throughout the centuries Europeans have looked for scapegoats to lash out against a common enemy. The Jews, Roma and Islam are recent tragic examples.

The Migrant Tales blog is a mirror of what some people think in Finland and Europe. Some prefer to stress over and over again how “incompatible” some groups are to our culture. That supposedly gives them an automatic carte blanche to hate others.  It is odd that none of these bloggers who have such strong opinions comment with their real names.

Even though people have the right in Western society to make fun of any religious group, Denmark appears to have gone over the brink.  A Somali man was convicted of “terrorism” for breaking into the home of Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, who had made fun of the Prophet Muhammad. The man was sentenced to nine years in prison, according to AOLNews.

Probably this is the type of country that the True Finns want for Finland: tough laws founded on hatred of other cultures. In sum, living in denial to the world.

Do you agree?

___________

Om man alls vill begripa den hets mot muslimer som likt vinterns isvindar för närvarande sveper över Europa bör man läsa Mattias Gardells bok Islamofobi – det slår Lars Sund fast

To keep on reading click here.

UUSI SUOMI: Uusi imaami pelkää: ”Islamofobia voi kärjistyä”

Posted on December 12, 2010 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Anas Hajjar, who was appointed last month the new imam of the Islamic Society of Finland, condemned the bombings in Stockholm. He was quoted as saying in Uusi Suomi that the bombings in Sweden could fuel Islamophobia in Finland.

One of the most incredible claims by anti-Muslim groups in Europe is that Muslims are treated with kid gloves. Yes, true, they are getting preferential treatment: Devastated societies in Iraq, Afghanistan, ostracization and exclusion in Europe  and elsewhere to name a few. Some believe that the Muslims are suffering the same treatment that Communists endured in the United States and the racism that blacks suffered/continue to suffer in many parts of Europe.

What do you think?

________

Suomen islamilaisen yhdyskunnan imaami Anas Hajjar pelkää Tukholman terrori-iskun kasvattavan islamofobiaa Suomessa. Uuden Suomen haastattelussa hän penää malttia ja toivoo, etteivät ihmiset sotkisi enemmistön ajatuksia vähemmistön tekoihin.

– Tämä teko on lähtöisin ymmärtämättömyydestä. Me täällä yhdyskunnassa opetamme niin muslimeille kuin valtaväestöllekin sitä, mitä islam todella on, Hajjar sanoo Uudelle Suomelle.

Marraskuun alussa valittu imaami kertoo kuulleensa tapauksesta vasta tänään, mutta sanoo pommi-iskujen järkyttäneen häntä ja koko islamilaista yhdyskuntaa syvästi.

– Tämä on järkyttävää, koska hän [pommittaja] sanoo puolustaneensa islamia, mutta keitä vastaan, Hajjar kysyy hämmentyneenä.

– Teolla on aiheutettu viattomille ihmisille pelkoa, ahdistusta ja kauhua. Se on vastoin islamin oppeja. Tuomitsemme teon jyrkästi, Hajjar sanoo.

Ruotsin islamilaiseen yhdyskuntaan Hajjar ei toistaiseksi ole saanut yhteyttä, osaksi median haastattelupyyntöjen vuoksi. Hän kertoo, ettei suomalaisen yhdyskunnan korviin ole kantautunut mitään tietoja tai edes huhuja siitä, että Tukholman terrori-iskujen tekijällä tai tekijöillä olisi yhteyksiä Suomeen.

Hajjar ei usko, että Tukholman tapaus saisi aikaan samantapaisen terrori-iskun vaikkapa Helsingissä. Sen sijaan hän pelkää, että se kasvattaa islamofobiaa entisestään Suomessa.

– Islamofobia on lisääntynyt koko ajan, ja toivottavasti se ei nyt kärjisty. En lähde arvailemaan, mihin se voisi johtaa. Toivottavasti ihmiset ymmärät sen, että vähemmistön teko ei edusta enemmistön ajatuksia, eivätkä sotke näitä keskenään.

– Tämä on niin tuore juttu, että tätä pitää käsitellä nyt kaikessa rauhassa, Hajjar kehottaa.

RPT-Swedish govt still short of majority after recount

Posted on September 22, 2010 by Migrant Tales

This election is going to be a real nail-biter…

(Reuters) – Sweden’s centre-right government was still just short of a parliament majority after a preliminary recount of Sunday’s election, though it picked up one more seat.

The election commission said in a statement that the preliminary result of the recount, which included overseas and postal votes not counted on election night, gave Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt 173 seats in the 349-seat parliament rather than the 172 announced on election night.

A total 175 seats are needed for a majority.

The new centre-right seat was gained from the Social Democrat-led opposition bloc, which went down to 156 seats.

The anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats, shunned by both blocs, stayed at 20 seats and still held the balance of power, the count showed.

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