Karasjok kommune
Kárašjoga gielda Kaarasjoki | |
---|---|
Municipality | |
Coordinates: 69°28′55″N 25°06′18″E / 69.48194°N 25.10500°E | |
Country | Norway |
Established | 1 Jan 1866 |
Administrative centre | Karasjok |
Government | |
• Mayor (2023) | Svein Atle Somby (Ap) |
Area | |
• Total | 5,452.95 km2 (2,105.40 sq mi) |
• Land | 5,209.46 km2 (2,011.38 sq mi) |
• Water | 243.49 km2 (94.01 sq mi) 4.5% |
• Rank | 2 in Norway |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 2,628 |
• Rank | 245 in Norway |
• Density | 0.5/km2 (1/sq mi) |
• Change (10 years) | −5.8% |
Demonym | Karasjoking[1] |
Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
ISO 3166 code | NO-5437 |
Official language form | Bokmål and Northern Sami[2] |
Website | karasjok |
Karasjok (Northern Sami: Kárášjohka [ˈkʰaːraːʃˌjohka];[3] Kven: Kaarasjoki) is a municipality in Finnmark county, Norway.
The municipality (of which the urban area is a part,) has Sami (or Sámi) and Norwegian as official languages.
The municipality is one of two in Norway where the majority of inhabitants speak Sami and have it as their main language.[4]
Before the beginning of the 1700s, there might not have been a permanent population there.[5] However the area was used by nomads.[5]
During World War II a Nazi concentration camp was built in Karasjok: Lager IV Karasjok (German for "Karasjok Camp No.4", Norwegian: Karasjok fangeleir).[6][7] The camp was run by SS, and it was among[8] the first four Nazi concentration camps in Northern Norway.
In July 1943, 374 political prisoners and POWs prisoners [mostly Yugoslav,] were brought to the concentration camp. They were tasked with widening the road to Karigasniemi, Finland.[9] After four or five months, only 111 of these prisoners were still alive.[9] At the end of the prisoners' stay in Karasjok, before transportation out of Karasjok, 45 prisoners were massacred by the firing of small arms.[9] At least one former prisoner is (as of 2013) still alive.[10]
In 2015 the second edition of Sapmi Pride, the LGBT pride festival, was held in Karasjok.[11] To protest homosexuals attending the Karasjok Church, and to protest that a female priest held the services, Norges Samemisjon cancelled one of their radio broadcasts. [11]
Regarding all the students in elementary schools grades one, two and three: For the last three years (as of 2024), all those students are in classes that have [Northern] Sami as the main language (of those classes).[12]
The Sami secondary school, is one of two in Norway (as of 2014);[13] 73% of the schools students say that Sami is their main language; 27% say that Sami is their second language (as of the school year that started in [August] 2009 and ended in [June] 2010);[14] That school is run by the government.
The municipal council is elected until late 2027.[15]
(The 19 council members were elected during the 2023 Norwegian local elections.)