Alternatives to a widget economy and quality environment.    How can they
resist making widgets the meaning of their lives and the sum total of their
value system?     Perhaps they could get Milton Friedman to save their
souls.    What kind of world class economists are they following to have
such things happen.   No key to a prison, money for an orchestra from taxes
gee whiz what is the world coming to?    Next thing you'll tell me they
don't speak English.

REH



January 14, 2003
Finns Prove the Adage About What You Pay For
By ANTHONY TOMMASINI




The excellence of the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra's New York debut
concert on Sunday afternoon at Avery Fisher Hall was a testimony to the
budget priorities of the Finnish government. Put some real money into music
institutions and music education, as Finland has for decades, and this is
what you get: a fine orchestra (one of several there) with skilled,
enthusiastic and noticeably young players, and a dynamic, technically
formidable conductor, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, who has been the orchestra's
music director for 12 high-growth years. Not to mention, back in Finland, a
nation of musically informed concertgoers.

For this important appearance, Mr. Saraste made a statement about the
vitality of Finnish music by beginning the program with the New York
premiere of a recent work by a Finnish composer, Esa-Pekka Salonen, better
known of course as the conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. The work,
"Foreign Bodies," a 20-minute piece written in three connected movements, is
scored dazzlingly for an enormous orchestra with a huge battery of
percussion.

Its glistening color effects come as no surprise from a composer who
understands the orchestra so thoroughly. There is a manic, jittery energy to
the music, especially the outer movements, which dance and flail, as
rhythmic riffs and thematic bits ricochet among instrumental sections.
Stravinsky is a clear influence, if you imagine the wildness of "The Rite of
Spring" compacted into the formal confines of the Symphony in Three
Movements.

Yet for all the density of the music, the actual musical materials are
sometimes thin. Only in the more ruminative middle movement, when the
textures are pared down, does Mr. Salonen's harmonic language seem piercing,
spiky and original. "Foreign Bodies" received an exuberant performance from
the orchestra and Mr. Saraste, who also conducted its premiere in 2001.

After this bracing beginning came Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3 in a
fresh, involving performance with the Austrian pianist Till Fellner as
soloist. At 30, Mr. Fellner could pass for a tall, gangly, teenage Tobey
Maguire. Yet in his manner and his music making, he exudes calm, elegance
and a mature grasp of the Viennese Classical heritage.

The pearly tone, nimble passagework and lucid phrasing he brought to the
Beethoven were admirable. But there was more: a youthful, impish imagination
that emboldened him to emphasize startling turns in the music and punctuate
phrases with whiplash accents. This was at once a refined and impetuous
performance, and Mr. Saraste and the orchestra were with him completely.

Having begun with a new Finnish work, the program ended with an early
20th-century Finnish masterpiece, Sibelius's Fifth Symphony, in an incisive
and luminous performance alive to the work's radical structure and attuned
to its evocations of what Sibelius called the "natural essences" of his
homeland. After the ovation, you could have predicted the encore:
"Finlandia," played with uncommon rigor. The second encore, also by
Sibelius, was a surprise: a sighing, bittersweet account of the seldom heard
"Valse Triste." Then the orchestra musicians bowed in sync to the audience,
shook each other's hands and amiably left the stage. That's what you call
ensemble.


January 2, 2003
Finnish Prisons: No Gates or Armed Guards
By WARREN HOGE


KERAVA, Finland - Going by the numbers, Antti Syvajarvi is a loser. He is a
prison inmate in Finland - the country that jails fewer of its citizens than
any other in the European Union.

Still, he counts himself fortunate.

"If I have to be a prisoner," he said, "I'm happy I'm one in Finland because
I trust the Finnish system."

So, evidently, do law-abiding Finns, even though their system is Europe's
most lenient and would probably be the object of soft-on-criminals derision
in many societies outside of the Nordic countries.

In polls measuring what national institutions they admire the most, Finns
put their criminal-coddling police in the No. 1 position.

The force is the smallest in per capita terms in Europe, but it has a
corruption-free reputation and it solves 90 percent of its serious crimes.

"I know this system sounds like a curiosity," said Markku Salminen, a former
beat patrolman and homicide detective who is now the director general of the
prison service in charge of punishments. "But if you visit our prisons and
walk our streets, you will see that this very mild version of law
enforcement works. I don't blame other countries for having harsher systems
because they have different histories and politics, but this model works for
us."

Finland, a relatively classless culture with a Scandinavian belief in the
benevolence of the state and a trust in its civic institutions, is something
of a laboratory for gentle justice. The kinds of economic and social
disparities that can produce violence don't exist in Finland's welfare state
society, street crime is low, and law enforcement officials can count on
support from an uncynical public.

Look in on Finland's penal institutions, whether those the system
categorizes as "open" or "closed," and it is hard to tell when you've
entered the world of custody. "This is a closed prison," Esko Aaltonen,
warden of the Hameenlinna penitentiary, said in welcoming a visitor. "But
you may have noticed you just drove in, and there was no gate blocking you."

Walls and fences have been removed in favor of unobtrusive camera
surveillance and electronic alert networks. Instead of clanging iron gates,
metal passageways and grim cells, there are linoleum-floored hallways lined
with living spaces for inmates that resemble dormitory rooms more than
lockups in a slammer.

Guards are unarmed and wear either civilian clothes or uniforms free of
emblems like chevrons and epaulettes. "There are 10 guns in this prison, and
they are all in my safe," Mr. Aaltonen said.

"The only time I take them out is for transfer of prisoners."

At the "open" prisons, inmates and guards address each other by first name.
Prison superintendents go by nonmilitary titles like manager or governor,
and prisoners are sometimes referred to as "clients" or, if they are youths,
"pupils."

"We are parents, that's what we are," said Kirsti Njeminen, governor of the
Kerava prison that specializes in rehabilitating young offenders like Mr.
Syvajarvi.

Generous home leaves are available, particularly as the end of a sentence
nears, and for midterm inmates, there are houses on the grounds, with
privacy assured, where they can spend up to four days at a time with
visiting spouses and children.

"We believe that the loss of freedom is the major punishment, so we try to
make it as nice inside as possible," said Merja Toivonen, a supervisor at
Hameenlinna.

Natalia Leppamaki, 39, a Russian immigrant convicted of drunken driving,
switched off a sewing machine she was using to make prison clothing and
picked up on Ms. Toivonen's point. "Here you have work, you can eat and you
can do sports, but home is home, and I don't think you'll see me in here
again," she said.

Thirty years ago, Finland had a rigid model, inherited from neighboring
Russia, and one of the highest rates of imprisonment in Europe. But then
academics provoked a thoroughgoing rethinking of penal policy, with their
argument that it ought to reflect the region's liberal theories of social
organization.

"Finnish criminal policy is exceptionally expert-oriented," said Tapio
Lappi-Seppala, director of the National Research Institute of Legal Policy.
"We believe in the moral-creating and value-shaping effect of punishment
instead of punishment as retribution."

He asserted that over the last two decades, more than 40,000 Finns had been
spared prison, $20 million in costs had been saved, and the crime rate had
gone down to relatively low Scandinavian levels.

Mr. Salminen, the prison service director, pulled out a piece of paper and
drew three horizontal lines. "This first level is self-control, the second
is social control and the third is officer control. In Finland," he
explained, "we try to intervene at this first level so people won't get to
the other two."

The men and women who work in the prisons also back the softer approach.
"There are officers who were here 20 and 30 years ago, and they say it was
much tougher to work then, with more people trying to escape and more prison
violence," said Kaisa Tammi-Moilanen, 32, governor of the open ward at
Hameenlinna.

She conceded that there were people who took advantage of the leniency.
Risto Nikunen, 41, a grizzled drifter who has never held a job and has been
in prison 11 times, was asked outside his drug rehabilitation unit if he
might be one of them. "Well," he shrugged, "many people do come to prison to
take a break and try to get better again."

Prison officials can give up to 20 days solitary confinement to inmates as
punishment for infractions like fighting or possessing drugs, though the
usual term is from three to five days. Mr. Aaltonen said he tried to avoid
even that by first talking out the problem with the offending inmate.

Finnish courts mete out four general punishments - a fine, a conditional
sentence, which amounts to probation, community service and an unconditional
sentence. Even this last category is made less harsh by a practice of
letting prisoners out after only half their term is served. Like the rest of
the countries of the European Union, Finland has no death penalty.

According to the Ministry of Justice in Helsinki, there are a little more
than 2,700 prisoners in Finland, a country of 5.2 million people, or 52 for
every 100,000 inhabitants. Ministry figures show the comparable rate is 702
per 100,000 in the United States, 664 in Russia and 131 in Portugal, the
highest in the European Union.

Finland's chief worry now is the rise in drug-related crimes that do result
in prison sentences and the growing number of Russians and Estonians, who
Mr. Lappi-Seppala said were introducing organized-crime activities into
Finland.

Finns credit their press and their politicians with keeping the law-and-
order debate civil and not strident. "Our newspapers are not full of sex and
crime," Mr. Salminen said. "And there is no pressure on me to get tough on
criminals from populist-issue politicians like there would be in a lot of
other countries."

One reason why the Finnish public may tolerate their policy of limited
punishment is that victims receive compensation payments from the
government. Mrs. Tammi-Moilanen was asked if this was enough to keep them
from getting angry over the system of gentle justice.

"My feeling is that victims wouldn't feel that justice is better done by
giving very severe punishment," she said. "We don't believe in an eye for an
eye, we are a bit more civilized than that, I hope."

Mr. Syvajarvi, a muscular 21-year-old with close-cropped hair who become a
heroin addict at age 14, received a six-year sentence for drug selling and
assaults. As a young offender, he will serve only a third of that time, and
he is expected to be out in a year.

He is now the appointed "big brother" peer counselor to other youths in the
jail, must submit to random drug checks to make sure he remains off the
habit and has undergone training with anger management specialists that he
says has prepared him to rejoin society with a new outlook.

"Before, I wanted to be like those drug dealers in the States," he said,
adding in English, "I was a gangster wannabe." He went into a boxer's crouch
and popped punches in the air. "I used to think the most important thing was
to stand up for yourself.

"Now I've learned that it takes more courage to run away."



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