Human rights well before Human rights…

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“The Cyrus Cylinder is one of the most famous objects to have survived from the ancient world. It was inscribed in Babylonian cuneiform on the orders of Persian King Cyrus the Great (559-530 BC) after he captured Babylon in 539 BC. The cylinder is often referred to as the first bill of human rights as it appears to encourage freedom of worship throughout the Persian Empire and to allow deported people to return to their homelands. It was found in Babylon in modern Iraq in 1879 during a British Museum excavation.”

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New book by Maarit Korhonen

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Received Maarit Korhonen’s new book today. It is entitled Wake Up School. Only available in Finnish (unfortunately)! In the book, as in her previous, Maarit is very critical of her work as a teacher in Finland. The usual suspects who advertise for the wonders of Finnish education will probably not mention it…

Maarit’s website is here

Finnish passports

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Alfred Jaar’s work of art entitled  One million Finnish passports (1995).

“The three Nordic countries, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, are the three most generous countries in helping the developing world. Every year they’re always the three top donors in terms of development and social programs in most developing counties. In the last ten years, they have welcomed one million refugees that have become citizens of those countries. But this project takes place in Helsinki, Finland, at the Museum of Contemporary Art. I was shocked to discover that Finland is completely different than the other Nordic countries. They have what they call a “zero immigration policy”. Ironically, the year I was having this show, Finland was applying to the European community, so I created this project called “On Million Finnish Passports”. As you see, the passports are behind high security glass because the authorities requested that people did not have access to them. This measures approximately ten meters by ten meters by eighty centimeters high.

And why one million? Because I calculated that in every European country approximately twenty percent of the population is foreign or of foreign descent. Finland has five million inhabitants, so twenty percent would be one million. As you may know, Finland is a very rich country with a very large territory. What I wanted to do with this piece was to ask the following questions: Who will be the next one million Finnish citizens, now that they are joining the European community? Do they want to remain insular and isolated, or do they want to welcome new faces, new ideas, new colors to their territory?

The lighting was such that you could see yourself reflected slightly on the glass, so you would see the passports through your own image. I like very much this image, it’s a kind of sea of identity waiting to be filled.

There was a lot of press and reactions to this piece. The most moving reaction was that a few people came back to the museum with their own passports, and threw them over the glass as a sign of solidarity.”

Tired of the sisu hoax

Will we soon put an end to this madness? I worry when ‘scholars’ create this sort of buzz. Sisu is probably going to be the next hoax we are going to sell to the world. Stop comparing cultures, stop imagining! Read this but don’t believe it ; )

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New article – Diversities in Textbooks

Fred Dervin, Kaisa Hahl, Anu Härkönen & Heidi Layne (forth.) “Do I contradict myself? Very well, I contradict myself (…)”:
Representing intercultural encounters in two Finnish history textbooks. In Hahl, K., Niemi, P.-M., Longfor, M. & F. Dervin (Eds.). Diversities in Textbooks: The Case of Finland. Newcastle: CSP. Draft available HERE

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Beautiful piece by Kureishi on the immigrant

The Guardian, May 2014

The immigrant has become a contemporary passion in Europe, the vacant point around which ideals clash. Easily available as a token, existing everywhere and nowhere, he is talked about constantly. But in the current public conversation, this figure has not only migrated from one country to another, he has migrated from reality to the collective imagination where he has been transformed into a terrible fiction.