Iceland review - 2014, Side 26

Iceland review - 2014, Side 26
24 ICELAND REVIEW on immigrant issues.” Paul became the first foreigner to take a seat in iceland’s parliament when he stepped in as an alternate MP for the left-Greens in 2007. “it was kind of a novelty for peo- ple. What i did notice, though, is that when the discussion involved foreign- ers in some way that people were on edge just because there was a foreigner in the room ... We really need more foreigners getting involved in politics.” cHAnGinG AttituDEs While there is more information and support for immigrants in iceland than when Barbara first moved to the country in 1991, attitudes, she says, haven’t necessarily changed for the better. “When i arrived, immigration was so new that there weren’t really any negative feelings about it. People just thought ‘how weird, why would she want to live here?’ but i never really felt like ‘there are too many immigrants here, we need to close the borders now’ which i sometimes feel is the case now.” anti-immigrant sentiments rose to the surface ahead of the municipal elections in late May when a candidate for the Prime Minister’s Progressive Party in reykjavík, Sveinbjörg Birna Sveinbjörnsdóttir, reignited the debate on the building of iceland’s first mosque, stating that the allocation of the plot of land should be canceled. Support for the party soared resulting in it securing two of the 15 seats on the reykjavík City Council—instead of the zero predicted by polls prior to the statement. Juan shares Barbara’s concerns. “People are still afraid of changing too fast and i understand this fear of losing roots or traditions. i also notice that there is a lack of knowledge on multicultural issues and understanding ‘the other.’ This was visible, for example, in the mosque issue. i see this as a huge challenge because when you combine lack of knowledge and fear of change you get hatred and prejudice,” he says. There is little tolerance for genuine racists, though, Paul argues. “icelanders don’t like being told what to say, they don’t like being told what to do or what types of humor are acceptable or offensive … on the other hand, icelanders have a big allergy to open racists. icelanders reject extremism,” he says. Paul points out that the root of the icelandic word for stupid, heimskur, implies that an individual rarely leaves home and sees no further than their front yard. “i think ther’s is a lot of truth in that,” he says. Whether or not reykjavík is a multicultural city depends on your definition. edda maintains that it is. “reykjavík is a multicultural city for sure—there’s no question about it. around 10 percent of the city’s popula- tion is now born abroad.” Paul is more hesitant in his response. “it’s becoming more multicultural in the sense that you see more types of people on the street … but i think we have a long way to go before we have genuine multiculturalism here. But i think that is in part an organic process that comes from sheer numbers. i jokingly refer to the end of austurstræti as the arab quarter because there is ali Baba, Kebabhúsið and around the corner there is Habibi. But we have no Chinatown, no little italy, no little Saigon, no little Warsaw or little Bangkok.” * “People are still afraid of changing too fast and I understand this fear of losing roots or traditions.” mULtiCULtUrALiSm - Juan Camilo Román Estrada.
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