Saturday, October 12, 2013

The Romani Holocaust and moden discrimination

This is something in the back of my mind that I have been wanting to make a post about for a long time. 

One very troubling aspect of living in Europe was seeing how Romani (Gypsy) people are viewed.  I have talked with Europeans that consider themselves objective, open minded and egalitarian only to be shocked at derogatory comments that they later make about Gypsies. 

There is also a strange idea that Gypsies are not "Europeans;" however, they have been in Europe for over 700 years.  They traveled from India through Central Asia to Europe.  Incidentally, speakers of the Indo-European language family that were ancestors of traditional Europeans, also traveled to Europe from Central Asia.  To add another connection, the traditional Romani language is also an Indo-European language. 

There are insidious self-fulfilling cycles that reenforce negative views of the Romani.  For example, I read an article a few years ago, in the US, about a physician in Europe that was Romani.  He could not tell anyone he was a Gypsy or they would not come to him as a doctor; however, these same people that were his patients would see gypsies as people that do not have socially prestigious careers like being a physician.  He could not serve as an example, or as a positive role model; or his practice would disappear and he would then no longer have that career. 

There is also an issue about Romani families not registering their children for the public school system, etc.  Before WWII there were about a million Gypsies in Europe.  The holocaust killed a quarter of them, ~250,000.  Part of how they were rounded up was because they had to register--at the same courthouses that stand today and insist they register again. 

...I will update when a have a bit more time...

[notes to add -- recognition of Gypsy Holocaust in Europe, Gypsies as an ethnic minority, EU citizenship note]

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