Hopeful, but Worried for the Future: An Analysis of the Lived Consequences of Colonisation as Narrated by Older South Sámi in Norway
Abstract
:1. Prologue
2. Introduction
2.1. Background
2.2. Theoretical Perspectives on Colonisation
3. Methods
3.1. Design and Choice of Methods
3.2. Participants
3.3. Recruitment and Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
3.5. Ethical Reflections
3.6. Ethical Considerations and Roles on the Research Team
4. Results
4.1. Hopes and Worries Related to Racism
“So, I thought… Like I was almost an adult before I discovered that it’s not common to be called all sorts of things. That not all people are sworn at, that this kind of thing is not normal in everybody’s lives. So… It worries me. I’m not talking about myself, but for my… I really think that in general, there are dark clouds hanging over the Sámi people.”
“Of course, I hope that everything will go well with them [children and grandchildren] And that they will be accepted for being Sámi. That they are allowed to be Sámi, and that they don’t have to hide, as our generation and those before us had to do. But we see how some of them [the younger ones] must struggle even today, and that’s awful to watch. Yes, it is.”
“You should have been dead too, so we could have got rid of some more ‘finns’” [local derogatory slang for Sámi].
Participant: “I was so surprised. But I asked them: Who says that? Well, they said, it’s mum and dad! I still regret… I didn’t manage to think… I should have asked them their names, but I didn’t. So you know it’s hard sometimes. (…) I don’t think it was the children [who came up with this xenophobic idea]. I think they’d heard this at home. I think it’s the parents that talk this way. It frightens me.”
I: “Yes, that must have been unexpected.”
P: “Yes, it was. So I think... You must be strong in your mind to manage to survive in the society we live in.”
“They talk so much about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and what was done to the Sámi people before. But it is more or less the same way today, really.”
“It seems like the younger generation has woken up. They don’t tolerate that they [majority Norwegians] say or write this and that. The younger generations, they stand up and speak up! That is what we have waited too long to do.”
4.2. Hopes and Worries about the South Sámi Language
“Several are very active in using the South Sámi language nowadays, and some of them take courses to learn to speak the language.”
“Yes, I am a little afraid of going back to my first language, but my son is learning South Sámi now. That makes me feel safer.”
“Perhaps they will not even understand that I am speaking South Sámi, and I find that a bit worrying. Maybe they’ll think I’m just ‘babbling’, not realising that it is a language?”
4.3. Hopes and Worries for the Future of Reindeer Husbandry
“It is of course possible to reduce the herd or to substitute the traditionally used winter grazing areas by feeding them [by giving supplementary feeding], but personally I think that’s completely wrong.”
“You know, our lands are being expropriated. That is very negative for us [the reindeer herders].”
“It started with the alteration of the big lakes. That led to a loss of big grazing areas and heathlands due to reduced areas, but also the consequences of the alteration [the reindeer shun previous grazing areas, e.g., because of the sound from the windmills]. And now we have the big propellers [windmills] all over the place.”
“I’m not concerned yet, because we tend to find solutions, and we have always adapted to changes. But finding enough food [in the mountains] will be difficult if the winters continue to be like this one.”
“I am very interested in the future for reindeer husbandry because I have children and grandchildren in reindeer husbandry (…), so I really hope there is a future for them there. And personally, I think there is a future for them in reindeer husbandry, I do.”
“So much has gone against reindeer husbandry. But reindeer husbandry is strong.”
“Society needs to accept that the reindeer need the grazing areas in order to survive. Then, and only then, can reindeer herding survive in the future, if not it will simply not survive.”
5. Discussion
6. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Mentsen Ness, T.; Munkejord, M.C. Hopeful, but Worried for the Future: An Analysis of the Lived Consequences of Colonisation as Narrated by Older South Sámi in Norway. Societies 2024, 14, 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14050071
Mentsen Ness T, Munkejord MC. Hopeful, but Worried for the Future: An Analysis of the Lived Consequences of Colonisation as Narrated by Older South Sámi in Norway. Societies. 2024; 14(5):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14050071
Chicago/Turabian StyleMentsen Ness, Tove, and Mai Camilla Munkejord. 2024. "Hopeful, but Worried for the Future: An Analysis of the Lived Consequences of Colonisation as Narrated by Older South Sámi in Norway" Societies 14, no. 5: 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14050071
APA StyleMentsen Ness, T., & Munkejord, M. C. (2024). Hopeful, but Worried for the Future: An Analysis of the Lived Consequences of Colonisation as Narrated by Older South Sámi in Norway. Societies, 14(5), 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14050071