Finnish Argentine

Finnish Argentine is an Argentine person of full, partial or predominantly Finnish ancestry, or a Finnish-born person residing in Argentina.

Finnish Argentine
Finlandés-argentino, Argentiinansuomalaiset
Total population
Indefinite
Regions with significant populations
Misiones Province · Buenos Aires
Languages
Rioplatense Spanish · Finnish
Religion
Roman Catholicism · Lutheranism
Related ethnic groups
Finnish Brazilians · Estonian Argentines · other European Argentines

Finnish immigration in Argentina began in the early twentieth century and was not as massive as those of other European nationalities. Currently, most of the descendants of Finnish immigrants live in the city of Oberá, Misiones.[1]

The arrival

The first Finnish immigrants who arrived relatively organized to Argentina, arrived in the country in 1906 and founded the "Colonia Finlandesa" (Finnish Settlement)[2] near the city of Oberá. It was estimated that there were about 120 families. One of the pioneers of this wave was Arthur Thesleff. The reasons for the Finnish emigration seem to have been related to the repressive context that the country was in the early twentieth century because of the Russian occupation of the territory.[3]

Oberá

The Nordic House in Oberá, Misiones. Home to the Finnish · Swedish · Norwegian and Danish communities.

The Finns were one of the first foreign communities to settle in what is now the city of Oberá. At first, they called "Picada Finlandesa" to the three sections that were pooled city lots. This was because most of its inhabitants had come from Finland.[4]

Other areas where they settled

Besides Misiones, Finnish immigrant groups and their descendants settled in regions of the provinces of Corrientes, Córdoba and Buenos Aires.

Gastronomic traditions

In their adaptation and integration into Argentina, Finnish immigrants-like the Swedes and Norwegians, continued with some of its gastronomic traditions. The Finns who settled in Misiones, continued the habit of cooking fish (particularly surubí) and its tradition of homemade biscuits with spices like cinnamon and cloves.[5]

gollark: > also I'm pretty sure it's a case of in-group/out-group-ismWhat is? I mean, our CS class didn't, presumably, have someone going "hmm yes you are of incorrect gender/ethnicity, no computer science for you" - people just *didn't sign up*.
gollark: Yes, I ignored it because I patternmatched it to "identity-politics-y complaining again".
gollark: Fine. I'll manually embed it.> Not Everyone Must "Code" @ osmarks.tk> *Why I think that government programs telling everyone to "code" are pointless.*
gollark: WHY WON'T DISCORD AUTOMATICALLY EMBED THAT Æ
gollark: I mean, the "learn to code" things have been annoying and horocylindrical (https://osmarks.tk/nemc).

References

  1. "La colectividad finlandesa" Observatorio de Colectividades. Gobierno de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
  2. Colonia Finlandesa Finnish Wikipedia. (in Finnish)
  3. "El centenario de los finlandeses en Argentina" Archived 2012-02-23 at the Wayback Machine Embajada de Finlandia en Buenos Aires (in Spanish)
  4. "Historia de Oberá" Archived 2012-02-08 at the Wayback Machine Municipalidad de Oberá
  5. "Los inmigrantes en Misiones. Herencias gastronómicas" Archived 2012-10-18 at the Wayback Machine Sabor Misionero

See also

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