|
At the pinnacle of the Earth
are an indigenous people who have managed to survive the brutality
of the Vikings, colonization by the Swedes and today are still
fighting cultural genocide. This First Nation is called Sami and
inhabits Lapland, which consists of the northern parts of Norway,
Sweden, Finland and the Kola Peninsula of the extreme northwest
of Russia.
Within the arbitrary line known as the Arctic Circle, there are
approximately 85,000 Sami living in tribes that share a common
history, language, culture, livelihood, way of life and identity,
but are not one homogeneous group. These groups have their own
identities, promote various agendas and some have access to contemporary
media. However, many are victims of tyranny, receive no Human
Rights, fear for the safety of their community and struggle against
the onslaught of globalisation.
Determining whether somebody is eligible to be classed a Sami
one of the following criteria needs to be met. He/she considers
themselves a Sami; has Sami as his/her first language, or whose
father, mother or one of whose grandparents has Sami as their
first language (mother tongue); has a father or mother who satisfies
the above-mentioned conditions for being a Sami.
Each tribe has its own variety of traditional clothing and cultural
expressions, like singing and handicrafts, however the greatest
difference is the Sami dialect that becomes mutually incomprehensible
from one end of the Sami nation to the other. Language is an essential
part of the Sami identity and it has been under threat for many
centuries. In 1920's Sweden, a race-segregation policy was introduced
and the teaching of the Sami language was forbidden in schools.
In all the countries the Sami are spread across, they have full
citizenship, but they are not recognised as an indigenous group
by all governments who prefer to treat them as a minority, thereby
avoiding international legislation for indigenous people or agreements
such as the International Labour Organization declaration:
"To the indigenous peoples in independent countries, considered
indigenous because they descend from populations which inhabited
the country or a geographical region belonging to the country
during an era of conquest or colonization and the establishment
of the actual borders of the present states and which, no matter
their legal situation, still preserve all their appropriate social,
economic, cultural institutions or remnants of them."
Both the United Nations and European Union recognise the Sami
as an indigenous people and representatives from the Sami nation
are able to join UN global indigenous projects and people's conferences.
Both Finland and Sweden are also members of these same organizations
yet they refer to the Sami as a minority. On the surface this
may be a minor difference, but this has far-reaching consequences
regarding issues of land rights and the preservation of culture.
Currently the situation is far worse within Sweden as the government
continues to break the UN Declaration of Human Rights guaranteeing
freedom to both land and water. Across most of Scandinavia, the
Swedes have been the predominant antagonist throughout Sami history
with their early encouragement of colonialism, which strongly
mirrored the problems that faced the Native Americans and their
land.
In the mid-16th Century, the Swedish King Gustav Vasa declared
that "all unused lands belong to God, us and the Swedish
Crown", which initiated an emigration northward to Lapland.
As the frontiers of the country were pushed back and settlers
began to set up home on the 'free' land that appeared to have
no cost, no owner and was for the good of the Swedish Empire.
These settlers were unaware that the vacant land they were living
on was reindeer grazing land used by the nomadic Sami and stood
empty for periods of the year. When the herders returned to discover
an unwelcome visitor had set up residence, the civil unrest began.
Ensuring that the colonisation of Lapland continued the King encouraged
commercial companies to move their business to Lapland and use
the Sami as cheap labour.
One such company opened a mine and coerced the Sami to work both
in the mine and help with the transportation of ore; those who
refused to work received harsh penalties. This violent subjugation
resulted in huge numbers of Sami fleeing from the area, leaving
areas severely depopulated and the owners of the slave mine being
given armed troops, from the Swedish government, to prevent any
further depletion of the workforce.
Once colonization had gripped Sweden and settlers were being
encouraged to move to the northern regions with generous offers
of land, water rights and tax allowances, the effects upon the
Sami were devastating. Farming and cattle ranches became the key
source of income for the settlers and this conflicted strongly
with the traditional Sami lifestyle of hunting, fishing and farming
for the food to feed their family.
Intensive methods used by the settlers brought several species
to the brink of extinction thereby destroying the economic foundation
of the Sami hunting culture bringing widespread starvation to
many tribes. Across the Atlantic, the problems were echoed as
the Native Americans watched helplessly as their colonizers slaughtered
millions of buffalo depriving them of a major food source.
These atrocities continued for many centuries and even in Sweden
and Finland today the Sami are still fighting for their rights
to land and water. Methods for eviction may have changed from
brute force to court cases but the voice of the Sami nation is
getting louder due to the increase of media at their disposal
and the growing area it can reach. Mediums ranging from the Internet
to radio, newspapers to television are dedicated to highlighting
and fighting for the agendas of the Sami nation across all the
countries.
|