Rasism Hela mi…

Rasism Hela mitt liv har jag trevat efter allas accepterande. Jag har ursäktat mig själv med orden ”Jag är nog helt finlandsvensk” och ”Jag är nog född i Finland”. Jag har velat att alla skall se på mitt etniska ursprung så som jag ser det. Det är så klart omöjligt, ens första intryck tar alltid vägen genom pupillen.
Varför är jag så rädd för vad andra tycker? När jag började trean flyttade vi och jag ville inte byta skola, så jag tog metron från Nordsjö till Hertonäs varje dag. Det var då de rasistiska kommentarerna och påhoppen började. Jag kunde sitta helt stilla i metron då någon sa åt mig att jag skulle åka hem därifrån jag kom. Efter det har jag blivit kallad för många saker, bland annat mutanaama (leransikte), neger, apa. Och det hemskaste har alltid varit att bli verbalt anfallen medan en hel metrovagn full av vuxna sitter där och tittar på utan att göra någonting.
En gång jagade en nykter man en somalisk pojke av och an i metron och skrek saker som ”Jag skall döda dig, din negerjävel!”. Det enda pojken hade gjort var skämtat ljudligt med sina vänner.
Jag satt och grät högt i metrovagnen för att det hela var så orättvist. Jag bölade tills jag kom hem och kände mig barnslig och dum för att jag inte kunde sluta fråga en och samma fråga: Varför skall det vara så? Det är en logisk fråga när man tänker på det. Men det finns inget logiskt svar.
Några få gånger har det hänt att någon har sagt något åt rasisten. Det är den mest fantastiska känslan i världen när någon som man inte känner ställer upp för en. Och den värsta känslan är då ingen säger något och alla sitter där som vaxdockor utan känslor.
Jag har flera vänner med etniskt utseende och när vi talar om rasism skrattar vi åt händelserna. Fast innerst inne vet vi att det inte är något man skrattar åt. Det sårar och tar ont. Min mamma har en somalisk väninna. Jag slår vad om att hon också har fått höra skällsord och hemska saker. Men vad ingen vet är att hon förlorade fyra barn och sin make i kriget.
En kvinna vi känner som kommer från Elfenbenskusten hade suttit i bussen då en man spottat henne i ansiktet. Så skall ingen människa bli behandlad. Det är inte rätt!
Varför tar man inte upp olika kulturer, världsfrågor och invandring i skolan så att den nya generationen kan bli en bättre och öppnare version av den gamla? Varför försöker man kväva rasismen i Finland? Hur mycket man än gömmer något kommer det inte att försvinna. Låt nu människorna veta att det inte är okej att säga neger, fast man inte menar det ont.
Om Finland nu är ett så tryggt och stabilt land, varför får människor av etniskt ursprung uppleva påhopp dagligen? Och säg inte att det inte är ert problem om andra har det dåligt. Då är ni bara fega.
 

Rebecka Holm,
14 år
Helsingfors

 


 
 
 

Martin Luther K…

Martin Luther King Jr.: 8 Peaceful protests that bolstered civil rights

From 1955 until his death in 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was the dominant leader of the US civil rights movement. Following the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi, the Rev. Dr. King believed that nonviolent protest is the most effective weapon against a racist and unjust society. But it required rallying people to his cause. Here are some of the most revolutionary peaceful protests King led.

1. Montgomery bus boycott, 1955-56

Lasting just over a year, the Montgomery bus boycott was a protest campaign against racial segregation on the public transit system in Montgomery, Ala. The protest began, on Dec. 1, 1955, after African-American Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a bus to a white person. The next day, Dr. King proposed a citywide boycott of public transportation at a church meeting.

The boycott proved to be effective, causing the transit system to run a huge deficit. After all, Montgomery’s black residents not only were the principal boycotters, but also the bulk of the transit system’s paying customers. The situation became so tense that members of the White Citizens’ Council, a group that opposed racial integration, firebombed King’s house. 

In June 1956, a federal court found that the laws in Alabama and Montgomery requiring segregated buses were unconstitutional. However, an appeal kept segregation intact until Dec. 20, 1956, when the US Supreme Court upheld the district court’s ruling. The boycott’s official end signaled one of the civil rights movement’s first victories and made King one of its central figures.

2. The Albany movement, 1961

The Albany movement was a coalition formed in November 1961 in Albany, Ga., to protest city segregation policies. Dr. King joined in December, planning only to counsel the protesters for one day. Instead, he was jailed during a mass arrest of peaceful demonstrators, and he declined bail until the city changed its segregation policies.

The city made several concessions, and King left jail and then Albany. But he returned the next year to find that little had actually changed. Upon his return, he was convicted of leading the prior year’s protest and sentenced to 45 days in jail or a $178 fine. He chose jail. Three days into King’s sentence, an Albany police chief arranged for his release. The movement eventually dissolved, with few substantial results after nearly a year of continued peaceful protests, but the campaign tested tactics that would shape future protests in the national civil rights movement. 

3. The Birmingham campaign, 1963

Lasting about two months in 1963, the Birmingham campaign was a strategic effort started by Dr. King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference to end discriminatory economic policies in theAlabama city. Some of the protests included boycotting certain businesses that hired only white people or that had segregated restrooms.

When businesses refused to change their policies, protesters held sit-ins and marches, with the aim of getting arrested. King encouraged these nonviolent tactics so that the city’s jails would overflow. Police used high-pressure water hoses and dogs to control protesters, some of whom were children. By the end of the campaign, many segregation signs at Birmingham businesses came down, and public places became more open to all races.

Of the tactic used in the Birmingham campaign, King said, “The purpose of … direct action is to create a situation so crisis-packed that it will inevitably open the door to negotiation.”

4. March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, 1963

Perhaps Dr. King’s most famous act as a civil rights leader came during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, on Aug. 28, 1963. The largest political rally ever seen in the US, it drew between 200,000 and 300,000 police and participants, to whom King delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

Among other things, the speech advocated racial harmony and economic rights for African-Americans. Observers estimated that nearly 80 percent of the marchers were black. 

5. Bloody Sunday, 1965

Dr. King and several other civil rights leaders organized three marches from Selma, Ala., to the state capital of Montgomery, in a bid for voting rights for all.

The first, on Sunday, March 7, 1965, involved nearly 600 protesters who marched east from Selma on US Highway 80, led by Jon Lewis of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Rev. Hosea Williams of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. King was not present because he had church duties. But days before, King had met with government officials to try to ensure the marchers would not be impeded. Even so, mob and police violence caused the march to be aborted on that “bloody Sunday.” When film footage of the police brutality was broadcast around the country, it sparked widespread public outrage and helped to boost support for the civil rights movement.

Of the event, King later wrote, “If I had any idea that the state troopers would use the kind of brutality they did, I would have felt compelled to give up my church duties altogether to lead the line.”

King tried to organize another march, but protesters did not succeed in getting to Montgomery until March 25. The speech he delivered that day, on the steps of the state capitol, has since become known as “How Long, Not Long.”

Bloody Sunday was a turning point for the civil rights movement, building public support and clearly demonstrating King’s strategy of nonviolence. 

6. Chicago, 1966

After successful demonstrations in the South, Dr. King and other civil rights leaders sought to spread the movement north. They chose Chicago as their next destination to take on black urban problems, especially segregation.

To show his commitment to the northern campaign, King rented an apartment in the slums of NorthLawndale on the city’s West Side. One Friday afternoon in August, King led about 700 people on a march in Marquette Park on Chicago’s Southwest Side, a white enclave, to protest housing segregation. Thousands of white people gathered, taunting King and the other protesters. At one point, a brick hit King in the head, but he continued the march as onlookers hurled rocks, bottles, and firecrackers at the marchers. Thirty people, including King, were injured.

Of the Chicago protest, King later said, “I have seen many demonstrations in the South, but I have never seen anything so hostile and hateful as I’ve seen here today.” He continued, “I have to do this – to expose myself – to bring this hate into the open.” 

7. Vietnam War opposition, 1967

Dr. King, an opponent of the Vietnam War, denounced America‘s involvement in a series of speeches at rallies and demonstrations. His first speech on the war itself, in 1967, was called “Beyond Vietnam” and was delivered exactly one year before his assassination. In it, he criticized the US government, insisting it was “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.” 

“A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in AsiaAfrica, and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of countries, and say, ‘This is not just.’ ”

Later that year, King commented on the “cruel irony” of black Americans dying for a country that treats them as second-class citizens.

“We were taking the young black men who had been crippled by our society and sending them 8,000 miles away to guarantee liberties, which they had not found in southwest Georgia and East Harlem,” he said. “We have been repeatedly faced with the cruel irony of watching Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seat them in the same schools.”

King’s opposition to the Vietnam War cost him many white allies, including President Lyndon Johnson and many members of the media. Criticizing one of his speeches, Life magazine called it “demagogic slander that sounded like a script for Radio Hanoi.” The Washington Post also said King had “diminished his usefulness to his cause, his country, and his people.”

In January 1968, the day after President Johnson’s State of the Union address, King called for a march on Washington to protest what he called “one of history’s most cruel and senseless wars.”

8. ‘Poor people’s campaign,’ 1968

Organized by Dr. King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1968, the so-called “poor people’s campaign” sought to address issues of economic justice and housing for the poor. King traveled the country to assemble a diverse group of protesters representing the poor who would march on Washington until Congress created a bill of rights for poor Americans.

After King’s assassination in April 1968, SCLC members continued the campaign, organizing protests in Washington, D.C. Joined by D.C.’s poor and homeless, the protesters effectively shut down the city that summer. The bill of rights they envisioned never became law. 

2011 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 1,700 times in 2011. If it were a cable car, it would take about 28 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.

Russian-Trained Doctors

Authorities to check credentials of all Russian-trained doctors

 
sign over entrance of Valvira's main office

 Image: Yle

The National Supervisory Authority for Welfare and Health (Valvira) says it is checking the suspicious credentials of another individual working as a physician in Finland — in addition to those of Esa Antero Laiho, who was detained on Wednesday.

Valvira says it received an anonymous tip that this second person’s diploma from a Russian medical school may also be bogus, as Laiho’s is believed to be.

Valvira had issued the individual with a six-month permit to work as a doctor in Finland.

The agency says it will check the diplomas of all Russian-trained doctors it has licensed to work in Finland over the past 20 years.

Valvira estimates that this will involve dozens of people, perhaps more than 100. Medical Counsellor Pirjo Pennanen of Valvira told YLE that a more precise figure will be available on Thursday.

She says that Valvira is focusing on Russian medical schools simply because the two suspected cases that have emerged now are related to Russia.

Pennanen adds that the Supervisory Authority is tracking where the second suspected pseudo-physician has worked. However she does not believe that this person has treated a large number of patients.

YLE

Refugees and Finland

Municipalities hesitate to accept quota refugees

 
Preparations for taking in quota refugees at Mäntyharju.

 Image yle

Finland is finding it difficult to take in all of its so-called quota refugees, as municipalities are reluctant to accept them. About 400 refugees are awaiting entry to Finland at refugee camps abroad.

Municipalities receive money from state coffers for several years to cover their costs after accepting quota refugees. Nonetheless, the majority of municipalities have not taken in any despite the Parliament-approved annual quota of 750, which has been in place since 2001.

Some of the 400 refugees awaiting entry have been in the limbo for four years.

“Finland committed to receiving [refugees] by the parliament’s decision, but unfortunately at the moment there is a bottleneck in the transfer to municipalities,” says Lisbeth Mattsson, Head of Immigration at the North Savo Centre for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment. “Indeed, it is more than anything a very difficult question in international terms.”

In other words, the predicament is beginning to reflect badly on Finland’s reputation.

A question of money?

The municipality of Mäntyharju in South Savo is gearing up for its first quota refugees, 25 Iraqis. Some Mäntyharju residents believe that, in persuading the local authorities to welcome refugees, the money played a greater role than humanitarian reasons.

“I don’t have any illusions about the municipal decision-makers’ sense of social justice,” says Timo Kuoksa from the local refugee support group.

Municipal authorities deny the claim. But refugee supervisor Eija Emerenini says that financial support from the state is important, as it makes it possible to accept refugees at all in the current economic situation.

“Certainly, state compensation did influence the decision in that it enabled the reception [of refugees],” she notes.

YLE

Finns Party assistant admits national-socialist link

A member of the Finns’ Party parliamentary staff admitted on Tuesday that she applied to join a neo-Nazi group two years ago. The information was leaked to the media a day earlier.

MP Juho Eerola’s assistant, Ulla Pyysalo, says she applied for membership in the Finnish Resistance Movement without being aware of all of its views. The group espouses a national socialist, anti-immigrant agenda.

The daily Helsingin Sanomat reports that the Finns Party board will discuss the revelation at a meeting on November 19. It quotes the chair of party’s parliamentary delegation, Pirkko Ruohonen-Lerner, as saying the issue is very serious and could lead to expulsion from the party.

In July, Pyysalo made headlines when she posted an offensive joke on her Facebook page about Greens MP Jani Toivola.

Eerola and Toivola are both first-term MPs, while Ruohonen-Lerner has been in Parliament since 2007.

City of Helsinki rented space to neo-Nazi group

YLE, Helsingin Sanomat, Iltalehti, Etelä-Saimaa

Neo- Nazi Group in Finland

City of Helsinki rented space to neo-Nazi group

Two weekends ago members of the Swedish Resistance Movement (SMR), a neo-Nazi organisation, gathered in a space rented from the city of Helsinki. It was the first official meeting of the group’s Finnish arm, according to the Free Movement Network.

The October 22 meeting held in the city’s Sähkötalo building in Kamppi drew around 30 people, according to Dan Koivulaakso, a spokesman for the Free Movement Network, a migrant rights group in Finland.

Koivulaakso told YLE News that his group learned about the seminar entitled “Fight Against” from the SMR website.

The Free Movement Network has sent a letter to the Helsinki City Council regarding the space rental, asking officials to explain whether providing premises for neo-Nazis to congregate complies with the city’s policy to combat racism.

The city rents space through Palmia, an enterprise owned by the city. Leila Korhonen, head of catering services at Palmia, says the company would not knowingly have rented the room out to neo-Nazis.

“But as long as they’re not breaking any laws, people have a legal right to assemble,” she explains.

Those interested in renting space from the city need only to provide their name to Palmia. But Korhonen says the incident has raised much internal discussion.

“It would be very difficult to rate lessees on their ideological background. We check their credit rating and that’s it,” she told YLE News.

The Finnish branch of SMR was born in 2008. According to Koivulaakso, SMR’s Finnish meetings have previously been held in secrecy.

“The social climate in Finland has hardened in recent years, making groups like SMR feel they can stage their meetings in the open,” he explains. “Many of the movement’s Swedish members have been convicted of murder and violent crime.”

Finns Party assistant admits national-socialist link

YLE News

Presidential Powers

Parliament trims presidential powers

Parliament's vote on Oct. 21

MPs voted along party lines except one who cast a blank ballot and 40 were absent.

Image: YLE

MPs have approved a constitutional reform that further chips away at the powers of the presidency. The bill passed easily by a margin of 118-40.

According to the new wording, any disputes between the president and the government are to be resolved by Parliament. It also cuts back on the president’s rights to make political appointments and states that the prime minister alone represents the country at EU summits.

The revision mentions Finnish EU membership for the first time. The revision also aims to increase public opportunities to participate in the legislative process, allowing people to present bills in the form of citizens’ initiatives.

Voting against the changes were 38 of the 39 MPs from the Finns Party and the two members of the backbench Left Group.

The new constitution comes into force at the beginning of March 2012, when a successor to President Tarja Halonen is to be sworn in.

MPs poised to cut presidential powers

YLE

Vietnamese workers face deportation for being low-income

A Vietnamese family at their home in Ostrobothnia.

Image: YLE

Finland plans to deport Vietnamese workers living in Ostrobothnia. Rural communities attracted the Vietnamese to fill unwanted jobs, but immigration officials say they do not earn enough money to qualify for residency in Finland.

Income limit guidelines (annual)

2 adults 18,360 euros

2 adults + 1 child 23,760 euros

2 adults + 2 children 29,160 euros

Source: The Finnish Immigration Service

Companies in Finland often struggle to fill low-paying jobs, which is why they have turned to foreign labour to keep places such as greenhouses and wood workshops running.

Many of those working jobs turned down by Finns fall below the Finnish poverty line, technically qualifying them for welfare benefits. This makes immigrant families ineligible to stay in Finland, though Finns in similar jobs earn the same salary.

Officials say the fact that the Vietnamese themselves believe they are making ends meet has no bearing on the law.

“I would be really sad if I’m forced to return to Vietnam. I would like to stay here with my husband. We’ve made good Finnish friends,” says Thi Quynh, who faces deportation.

Some 3,000 foreigners move to Finland every year in search of jobs, but most leave within their first year in the country.

The Ministry of Social Affairs and Health draws a parallel in the deportation of the Vietnamese workers with the cases of the foreign grannies, which have raised much public debate. Deportation orders may follow the letter of the law, but they do not always seem fair, according to officials.

YLE

Emergency shelter in for europeans in Finland

Helsinki continues emergency shelter for East European Roma

Roma leaving a makeshift camp in Helsinki last week.

Roma leaving a makeshift camp in Helsinki last week.

Image: YLE

 The City of Helsinki will continue to grant emergency shelter to Roma from Eastern Europe for two nights if the need arises. Instructions given to city employees have been more precisely defined, following comments made by civil servants that accommodation was being denied.

According to the chair of the City’s Roma working group, Jarmo Räihä, guidelines issued last spring on the granting of emergency shelter remain in force.

“Separate emergency shelter for East European Roma will be not provided in the same manner as last year, but the City can provide emergency accommodation for two nights to all EU citizens at its Hietaniemenkatu hostel,” he said.

Employees at the shelter told YLE earlier that new guidelines had forbidden the provision of emergency accommodation to all Roma from Eastern Europe.

Räihä said staff will be advised again on the current guidelines. His view was reiterated by Marja-Liisa Tikka, Director of the Hietaniemenkatu Shelter. She confirmed emergency shelter would be granted to EU citizens for up to two nights including Roma from Eastern Europe. However, she admitted different opinions on the issue had arisen among staff.

Last week, police evacuated a makeshift camp set up by Roma from South-East Europe in eastern Helsinki.

YLE

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