Image: Henrik Montgomery / EPA

Finnish-language researchers and activists in Sweden say that it's getting more difficult to use Finnish in everyday life. They claim that use of Finnish in schools is restricted, and that Finnish-language media offerings have been cut back in recent years.

They say that some teachers have banned students from speaking Finnish during breaks, even though Finnish is an official minority language in Sweden. Some Finnish-speaking teachers have also been banned from speaking Finnish to each other in their cafeteria, some asked to switch to Swedish in the staff room.

"This is happening now," reads the op-ed. "All Finnish teachers are not treated in this way, but it is happening across the country, from the north to the south."

The authors of the letter include Satu Gröndahl of Uppsala University and Sirpa Humalisto, of the union of Finnish teachers in Sweden. They cite a survey conducted by union.

Libraries "neglecting Finnish"

"In these situations it is not a matter of a lack of information, but discrimination," reads the op-ed.

The authors outline a long list of grievances, including cutbacks in Finnish-language media, reductions in Finnish books in libraries and a refusal to invite Finnish-speaking people to libraries to read poetry in their own language—a courtesy apparently offered to other language groups.

Finnish has been an official minority language in Sweden since the year 2000, a decision that was accompanied by the creation of a so-called Finnish language administrative area incorporating more than 50 municipalities that guarantee early years education and old age care for residents in Finnish if they require it.

There are around 700,000 people in Sweden with Finnish roots, according to the Swedish statistics agency.