Inside Finland’s Classes Teaching Moslems Not to Rape

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 23, 2016

First rule of ficki ficki is that you do not talk about ficki ficki.
First rule of ficki ficki is that you do not talk about ficki ficki.

Yes, dear readers. Satire is dead.

Finland has classes teaching Moslems not to rape women.

BBC:

Migrants arriving in Finland are being offered classes on Finnish values and how to behave towards women. Concerned about a rise in the number of sexual assaults in the country, the government wants to make sure that people from very conservative cultures know what to expect in their new home.

Johanna is one of those energetic, animated teachers whose cheerful energy lures even the most reluctant pupil into engaging with the lesson. She uses both her hands to stress her meaning and she always softens any difficult points with a smile.

“So in Finland,” she says softly, “you can’t buy a wife. A woman will only be your wife if she wants to be – because here women are men’s equals.”

Her pupils, all recently arrived asylum seekers at this reception centre hidden away in the snowy depths of the Finnish forest, watch her carefully – and I watch them. Some of the young Iraqi men, who already speak good English and passable Finnish, nod sagely. Others, particularly the older men, stare at one another with raised eyebrows as Johanna’s words are translated into Arabic for them. One man, hunkered down inside his black ski jacket seems to be taking notes while there’s a faint smile on the lips of the only headscarfed young woman in the room.

“But you can go out to the disco with a woman here,” adds Johanna brightly. “Although remember, even if she dances with you very closely and is wearing a short skirt, that doesn’t mean she wants to have sex with you.”

To be fair to the hajis, I do see how that part right there can be a bit confusing.

A Somali teenager pulls his woolly hat over his ears and cradles his head in his hands as if his brain can’t cope with all this new information.

“This is a very liberal country,” he says incredulously. “We have a lot to learn. In my country if you make sexy with a woman you are killed!” He turns to his neighbour, a Malian man of a similar age to gauge his reaction.

“It’s quite amazing,” the Malian nods. “In my country a woman should not go out without her husband or brother.”

Last autumn three asylum seekers were convicted of rape in Finland, and at the new year there were a series of sexual assaults and harassments similar to those in Cologne and Stockholm. Victims reported that the perpetrators were of Middle Eastern appearance – something Helsinki’s deputy chief of police, Ilkka Koskimaki decided to go public with.

“It’s difficult to talk about,” he admits as we drive in a patrol car through the icy streets of the city. “But we have to tell the truth. Usually we would not reveal the ethnic background of a suspect, but these incidents, where groups of young foreign men,” as he puts it, “surround a girl in a public place and harass her have become a phenomenon.”

The police van pulls up at a downtown reception centre where Koskimaki’s preventive policing team give similar classes to Johanna’s. A jumble of migrant men smoking on the snowy steps in flip-flops, hastily scarper indoors, clearly alarmed by the police presence. A muscly Iraqi man in gym kit approaches me cautiously and asks me in a whisper why I feel the need to visit the centre with three police bodyguards. Please, he pleads, please don’t think all asylum seekers are dangerous because of a few criminals.

Yes, female BBC reporter Emma Jane Kirby: why do you feel the need to go to the asylum center with armed male bodyguards?

It’s almost like you believe these men are dangerous.

But I’m sure you don’t think that, and work for the BBC, which is constantly shilling for immigrants. That would be extremely dishonest.

They look safe to me!
They look safe to me!