I watched last night an excellent Norwegian film What People Will Say (this title summarizes pretty well the story, while the Spanish choice, "El Viaje de Nisha", is quite more abstract). I think this is my second Norwegian film, the first one had been Thelma, also an excellent one.
What People Wil Say tells the story of a Norwegian teenage girl born in a Muslim family of Pakistani immigrants. She's a happy Western teenager, that has fun with her other Norwegian friends that follow different scales of melanin (from a pale, red haired "Viking" to one girl of african descent). Then, a conflict with her conservative family breaks out and they end up sending her to Pakistan to live with some relatives so that she can be educated in "good, proper values", and not in the "absurd" moral of the Westerns (as her parents say). The story goes on, but it's up to you to fully discover and enjoy it.
There's beauty in the beginning of this film, a beauty that still seems familiar to me, but that having lived in France in recent times (and following day by day the involution of French-Belgian-German... societies) also seems so far away. The beauty of seeing how the second generation of immigrants, those born in our soil and granted with all the rights that this involves, try to live a normal life, try to be one more of us, try to enjoy the freedoms and opportunities that European civilization gives us. I guess a story like this is possible in Norway (or for example in Spain) because there immigration of distant cultures is relatively recent, and they are now in the second generation. Unfortunately a story like this is no longer possible in countries that are SUFFERING now the third of fourth generation of Muslim immigrants. That generation that no longer wants to be one of us, that no longer want to enjoy our freedoms, but on the contrary want to cut back others freedoms imposing on the rest of the population their medieval codes and morals.
I know that there is no soft solution for France, Belgium... Demography plays against freedom... For the moment we'll continue to see the "Libanization" of our countries, and then it will end up either in a civilizational war between Normal Europeans, Asians, South Americans and a few very moderate Muslims on one side, and Muslims and Far Left degenerates on the other side... or in the total submission and conversion of Non Muslims to Islam.
I hope in Norway it can be different. If they learn from the errors of other European countries and they silence (destroy) the Far Left and expel all Muslims not adhering to a very moderate interpretation of their religion (or any other group that permanently complains about the "evil" Europeans) then they can have a beautiful society. A mixed society where your skin-eyes-hair color, the straighten of your hair, or the birthplace of your parents represents nothing... That's a beautiness that countries like France enjoyed for a few decades, before the religious, decolonial, indigenist... madness ruined it all...
"Cerise sur le gâteau" (icing on the cake), the director, Iram Haq is a Norwegian of Pakistani descent, and this film is inspired by her own life experience. One can say for sure that she's "une chance pour l'Europe", someone that has given to our society as much or more than our society has given to her... quite different from Daniele Obono, Rhokia Dhialo, Camelia Jordana, the Traoré family-gang... and so many imported scumbags that rot our existence...
There's an important passage in the story that I should mention. While in Pakistan, she and his boyfriend are caught kissing each other by 3 corrupt policemen that beats them and force her to take off her clothes while filming her. Then they blackmail the family or otherwise they'll publish the video on the internet. It's amazing, a country ruled by medieval moral rules that leverages modernity to make things even worse... well, nothing new, Pakistan is a Nuclear Power...
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