"Ungrateful
refugees served wholesome Finnish food protest about it" was the theme in recent
headlines in the Finnish media.
A
few days later the newspapers offered more in depth analysis; explaining the
disappointment of at least some refugees who may have been mislead by their
smugglers.
They
expected paradise but got a pot of barley porridge to eat.
We
expected them to be thankful and were baffled and offended by the protest. In Finland, we are proud of feeding our children with barley porridge. It is health food.
Reality
hit everybody in the face.
Some
refugees said they would food strike. That is a creative solution. Hunger is a
potent spice.
Traditional
Finnish food is simple, spiced with salt and pepper. Adding some bay leaves is
close to adventurous.
I am a great example myself of this food-gap: I
call my food blog posts #creativecolourfulcooking. What a joke for many people
in the world…
“Look: I used a red tomato!”
“I served yellow soup with dark green
parsley! “
But when I was little, oranges had just arrived in
the shops.
Spaghetti and pizza was a very rare treat.
We had boiled potatoes every day.
Breakfast was barley porridge.
Breakfast was barley porridge.
My favourite food was makaroonilaatikko (macaroni
and minced meat cooked in egg-milk).
My country was in uproar when former Italian
prime-minister Silvio Berlusconi insulted Finnish food and said “they don’t
even know what prosciutto is”. This was back in 2001 but it still hurts.
Finnish people have a proud core with a humble
layer on the outside and we expect others to behave in a humble manner, too.
Throwing a food protest on us is not a good idea.
But it will not make us racists and it will not
stop us from helping those in need.
It may provoke us to serve mämmi, though.
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