2019. augusztus 1., csütörtök

Strategies and Tactics to Combat Segregation of Roma Children in Schools

link: https://cdn2.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/114/2017/12/Roma-Segregation-full-final.pdf

Strategies and Tactics to Combat Segregation of Roma Children in Schools


Case studies from Romania, Croatia, Hungary, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, and Greece 
FXB Center for Health and Human Rights Harvard University 2015 

Roma children enter the world with the heavy baggage of intergenerational inequality, born into societies where discrimination and social-economic struggles are part of daily life. Researchers and policymakers agree that, across Europe, Roma children experience widespread, systematic exclusion from education, leading to significant gaps in participation and achievement. School segregation appears to be a major contributing factor to these gaping discrepancies in education.

This report aims to review and synthetize the desegregation strategies and tactics of six nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Central, Eastern, and Southern European countries. The report captures evidence-based data on the negative outcomes of segregation of Roma children in schools and highlights effective initiatives employed by the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC) in Croatia and Hungary, Romani CRISS in Romania, Life Together in Czech Republic, Integro in Bulgaria, and Antigone in Greece. These organizations comprise DARE-Net, a 2012 initiative led by Romani CRISS. During the project’s implementation, the Chance for Children Foundation (CFCF) joined the network and focused primarily on activities implemented in Hungary.

The initiatives described in this report are presented as six case studies. Each case study summarizes findings based on an in-depth literature review and semi-structured interviews with communities, experts, and stakeholders. The case studies describe the work that has been done to advocate for changes in policy, legislation, curricula, and/or practice in political and societal environments that have been resistant to change. The Report Digest is available at http://fxb.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/ sites/5/2015/02/Romani-Segregation-2015-brief-version-final.pdf

Despite the fact that the vast majority of Roma children enroll in school, only half complete primary education. Moreover, most do not even reach the level of secondary education,3 and less than one percent participate in tertiary education in some Central, Eastern, and Southern European countries.4 A broad range of factors determines these gaps, and in this report, we focus primarily on school segregation. Roma children continue to be placed in separate classes based solely on their skin color, ethnicity, and socio- economic situation; often they are placed into separate buildings, separate schools and classes, including special schools. As a result, Roma receive inferior education and endure discriminatory treatment from teachers and school administrators. 

Even when not physically separated, Roma children are routinely placed in the back of the class, receive less attention from their teachers, and endure bullying and stigma. Discriminatory treatment is often compounded by national education systems that lack the capacity to address the needs of socially and ethnically disadvantaged students and provide intercultural and inclusive environments. School segregation is now prohibited by European Union’s Race Equality Directive (RED), and domestic laws of each country for which we developed a case study; however, the practice persists and has been widely documented by civil society organizations and scholars. 

Segregation keeps Roma children away from quality education, social networks, job, and better salaries opportunities. On the other hand, well designed desegregation efforts and positive interethnic interactions can stymie prejudice from non-Roma peers and contribute to the self-esteem and pride of Roma children.

For the last quarter of a century, improving access to education for Roma children has been a central feature in national and international commitments related to Roma inclusion in Europe. Yet addressing the policy or practice of streamlining Roma children into separate schools and classes based on their ethnicity—segregation—has been a challenging task, both politically and structurally, for those governments and institutions involved. Civil society representatives have therefore played a lead role in raising awareness of the phenomenon, convincing central and local authorities to take action, pushing for accountability, and providing technical guidance as needed.

Various organizations across Europe have worked to address the problem. Strategies have included everything from supporting the participation of Roma children in education to dismantling the legal and policy frameworks of segregation to piloting programs and initiatives to promote the integration of Roma children into mainstream schools and classes. It is, therefore, critical to identify and share such efforts with civil society representatives and policymakers from other regions and countries, so that they can learn from these initiatives and implement them accordingly to the needs of the communities they are working with. 

In each country we discuss in this report, we analyze the political context’s role and power in making change possible. The EU pre-accession requirements for non-discriminatory policies and actions as well as the ECtHR judgments made possible relevant gains in policy and legislative changes. Yet much is to be done in translating those documents into desegregation practices in all the countries studied in this report.

The report also addresses the challenges and obstacles encountered by civil society representatives throughout their journey towards school desegregation, but its main focus is on the strategies and tactics employed by NGOs to achieve desegregation. For example, judgments from the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) on segregation (commencing with 2007’s landmark D.H. and Others vs. Czech Republic), research, pilot projects, along with community work were explicitly and associatively used by the organizations involved to advocate for policy and legislative changes. Some of the organizations, such as the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC), were leading forces in bringing segregation cases before the ECtHR. 

We analyze the tactics and the actions of NGOs in their social and political environments and highlight their successes, as well as their lessons learned, for other organizations, institutions, scholars, and advocates. We aim to show models of advocacy and interventions that can potentially lead to change in law, policy, and practice in other regions and contexts. 

...

II. Methodology 


For the Strategies and Tactics to Combat Segregation of Roma Children in Schools report, we used a case study methodology to develop a practice-based inventory of desegregation. We documented and analyzed interventions that promote desegregation and help ensure equal opportunities for quality education. The interventions we analysed have been implemented or recommended by the project partner organizations working in six countries: Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, and Romania.6 The interventions include community projects, advocacy campaigns for changes in legislation and policy, curriculum revision for minority inclusion, and strategic litigation. Therefore, Harvard FXB only looked at the projects and initiatives undertaken by the DARE-Net members, and not at all effective desegregation practices existing in the region.

In each case study, we single out the history, challenges, and breakdowns encountered by an organization in implementing a desegregation intervention, placing particular emphasis on the effective desegregation interventions and tactics that NGOs used. We also analyze NGO actions by taking into consideration the political context in which they have been developed.

The findings in this report are based on desk research (online desk research, government and NGO published data), individual semi-structured interviews and group interviews conducted in all project countries. Respondents included Roma adolescents and parents, Roma community leaders, Roma and non-Roma civil society organizations, school teachers, principals, and administrators, local, regional, and national policymakers responsible for education and social inclusion matters, and various experts, including lawyers, economists, and university professors. The analysis included in one of the case studies was also based on direct field experience from one of the authors.

The desk research information derives from documents made available by the partner organizations (annual reports, articles, publications, research, videos, audio materials, project reports, external or internal evaluations of the desegregation project, etc.) as well as documentation and publications by local and international organizations, reports and materials published by intergovernmental and national institutions, ECtHR jurisprudence, and academic papers. 

Initial country selection for membership in the DARE-Net, and consequently in the case study report, was based on demographic and NGO strategic relevance. The majority of the countries have national and/or European Court of Human Rights’ jurisprudence on segregation of Roma children. The partner organizations in this transnational project have initiated desegregation projects using different approaches, usually in accordance with their mandate and previous experience. The projects used different strategies and methods, each project tackling segregation from a specific angle, including building policy and legislation, imposing sanctions, and creating an intercultural school and community empowerment. The desegregation projects they implemented have showed effectiveness in addressing desegregation at local or national level. Put together, the tactics do not conflict but rather show the complexity of desegregation processes and issues that need to be addressed to achieve desegregation and good quality education.

To more accurately present the complexity of this issue, the obstacles, and available strategies to achieve desegregation, the report includes a range of expert opinions. We conducted the a number of 92 semi-structured individual or group interviews as follows: 12 interviews with 15 stakeholders in Bulgaria, 13 interviews with 15 stakeholders in the Czech Republic, 13 interviews with 30 stakeholders in Croatia, 9 interviews with 12 or more stakeholders in Hungary, 5 interviews with 10 stakeholders in Greece, and 9 interviews with nine stakeholders in Romania. 

The Roma community members we had interviews with included parents and plaintiffs involved in two legal cases: Oršuš and Others vs. Croatia and D.H. and Others vs. Czech Republic. Additional information on Horvath and Kiss vs. Hungary was gathered from one of the plaintiffs by project partners, CFCF and Romani CRISS. We visited and interviewed representatives of schools and kindergartens in Kutina, Croatia, Mursko Sredisce, Croatia, Thessaloniki, Greece, Zavet, Bulgaria, and Horni Suca, Czech Republic. We interviewed 26 representatives of civil society, 4 scholars, 1 attorney, and 15 representatives of regional and central institutions.

Each interview was conducted by a team of two researchers, while each case study was drafted by one lead researcher in partnership with the other staff. This team included Arlan Fuller, Harvard FXB’s Executive Director, Margareta Matache, Roma rights advocate and Harvard Chan School Instructor, and Sarah Dougherty, former Harvard Chan School Research Associate. The opinions included in this report do not necessarily reflect the views of the stakeholders the authors met and consulted with, but do sum up the conclusions reached by the research team analyzing the data. 

A limitation of this report was the small scope of our study. We of course could not cover all desegregation initiatives existing in the region. Moreover, Harvard FXB did not develop a methodology to select the initiatives included in this report. It focused primarily on the project partners’ work. 

The peer review process was ensured internally by prof. Jacqueline Bhabha (professor of law, Harvard University) and externally by Dr. Marius Taba (sociologist). We also asked the DARE-Net organizations to provide feedback for each country-based study. In addition, Biserka Tomljenović (independent expert) provided us feedback on the Croatia case study.

The report will be disseminated to various governmental, academic, and civil society stakeholders in the partner countries as well as in other countries in Europe. The report will also serve students and the community at large interested in learning advocacy strategies aimed at policy and legislative changes.

III. Case Study Advocacy for Desegregation Policies and Measures 

.... 

2019. február 4., hétfő

József Főherceg cigány levelezései: Soós István

Elena Gabor : Gypsy Stereotypes and Ideology Levels in two European Feature Films




Intercultural Communication Studies XVI : 2 2007

Gypsy Stereotypes and Ideology Levels in two European Feature Films  

Elena Gabor, Purdue University 


Abstract The dominant ideology in Eastern Europe has kept and still keeps Roma people (the Gypsies) at the lowest level of society through a long list of stereotypes and active discrimination. Up to the end of the twentieth century, cinematography tended to portray Gypsies as an exotic element in romantic settings, avoiding social and political issues such as poverty, discrimination and marginalization. The fall of communism marked a change, as more films used stereotypes to speak against the dominant ideology and to create a cultural space where mutual respect, solidarity and human rights can be learned and internalized by both Gypsies and gadje (nonGypsies). In a similar vein as Hasewaga (2006) who looked at TV messages changing Japanese perceptions of Koreans, and (Tung 2006) who analyzed the under-representation of Asians on American television, this paper takes an interpretive approach to examine socio-cultural stereotypes used to portray Gypsies, and to identify the levels of ideology present in two movies: Gadjo Dilo (Tony Gatlif, 1997, France) and Time of the Gypsies (Emir Kusturica, 1989, Yugoslavia).


Although several studies have assessed the image of Gypsies in European print and broadcast media (Breary, 2001; Fawn, 2001; Erjavec, 2001), there has been very little written about the presence of Gypsies in movies. This paper does not aim at an exhaustive and positivist analysis of all films made after 1989 featuring Gypsies, but it will take an interpretive approach as it focuses on two European movies. These movies were selected for two reasons: first, they feature Gypsies as main characters. Second, they depict rich social and cultural contexts, while using stereotypes in different ways to portray their main characters.

The goal of this article is two-fold: it will aim first to assess the stereotype use in these movies. Second, through the analysis of stereotype use, it will attempt an interpretation of both films from the perspective of ideological theory in film. Both feature films were made after the fall of the Iron Curtain. The films are Time of the Gypsies (Emir Kusturica, 1989) and Gadjo Dilo (Trans. The Crazy Stranger, Tony Gatlif, 1997).

This interpretive study starts from the assumption that stereotyping is a tool used in the film world and in mass media in general to provide a set of symbols that culturally diverse audiences can comprehend (Hayward, 1996). Through the use of conventions and stereotypes, films can be understood and appreciated not only by the audience of one country or community, but also by audiences in other countries. At the same time, stereotyping seems hardly avoidable, since the narrative process usually involves a process of selection, simplification and codification. As Douglas Kellner (1999) noted,  Films take the raw material of social history and of social discourse and process them into products which are themselves historical events and social forces. Films can provide information about the “psychology” of an era and its tensions, conflicts, fears, and fantasies, but it does so not as a simple representation or mirroring of an extra-cinematic social reality. Rather, films refract social discourses and content into specifically cinematic forms which engage audiences in an active process of constructing meaning. (p.3)

Directing a movie is a constant decision-making process in terms of what to include and what to leave out. As a communication medium, film also allows for various, creative ways of story telling, while being able to exert a cultural pressure on the audience as well. As Giannetti (2002) pointed out, "ideology is another system in film, albeit an often disguised language that often speaks in codes" (p. 417). This paper will interpret the ideological content and cinematographic techniques of two European films featuring Gypsy characters from the perspective of ideological film theory in the attempt to answer the following questions: What stereotypes have been used to portray Gypsies in two movies where the plot focuses on their social life? How does the use of stereotypes influence the ideological outcome of the film?

Tony Gatlif was born in Algeria in 1948 of Algerian and Gypsy parents and later moved to France (his real name is Michel Dahmani). Some of his films [Swing (2002), Gadjo Dilo (1997), Latcho Drom (1993), Les Princes (1983)] portrayed the Roma as victims of the gadje discrimination (gadje is the Gypsy word for the non-Gypsies) and talented musicians. One can say that Gatlif's films of Gypsy inspiration have often shown a political agenda and have provided the Western World with a view inside the life of the Gypsies (Devi, 1997; Fuller, 1998). His films have often incorporated ideological protest against the marginality of the Gypsies, encouragement to become familiar with their culture, and insight into the destructive impact of ethnic conflicts; Gadjo Dilo (1997) is the perfect illustration of that perspective. Some critics (Devi, 1997; Fuller, 1998) talk about Gatlif in terms of a Gypsy auteur, since three of his films form a “Gypsy trilogy” (Les Princes, 1983; Latcho Drom, 1993, and Gadjo Dilo, 1997). In many of his films, Tony Gatlif was simultaneously involved in several sectors of the film work: script writing, casting, directing, producing, or supervising the music. 

Emir Kusturica (born in Sarajevo, Bosnia in 1955) is better known by the American audience for Underground (1995) and Arizona Dream (1992). In Europe, he became famous in mid ‘80s with Do You Remember Dolly Bell? (prizewinner at the Venice Film Festival, 1981) and When Father Was Away On Business (best-film at Cannes, 1985). Both Time of the Gypsies (1989) and Black Cat, White Cat (1998) have their plots built around Gypsy life in former Yugoslavia, under the economic and social pressure brought by the fall of the communist structures and the difficulties under new born market economy.

Although not a Gypsy himself, Kusturica has a special appreciation of outsiderness. As Horton (2000) noted for Central Europe Review, his Gypsy films draw on his childhood lived in "a sprawling near-shanty-town of a suburb at the edge of multi-ethnic Sarajevo." According to the interview, Kusturica considered himself lucky to have grown up among the Roma who “started drinking earlier than us, they started sleeping with girls earlier than we did. So, every spiritual process that every man has to go through they had instantly and with no problems" (Horton, 2000, para 5). 

Method 


The theoretical pillars of this paper are the socio-psychological theory of stereotypes and the ideological theory in film. The unit of analysis will be the stereotype, defined as “a set of beliefs about the personal attributes of a social group. First, this paper will analyze what stereotypes have been used in the two movies and secondly how they are shown on the screen (content and form).  

The Roma linguist Ian Hancock (1987) identified a few negative stereotypes used in nineteenth and twentieth century American media, such as baby theft, stealing, carefree wandering, Gypsy men as sexual threat to non-Gypsy women, and lack of political and religious causes. Gypsies have also developed certain stereotypes about the non-Gypsies, the gadje. Fraser (1995), Crowe (1991, 1994), Barany (2002), and Stewart (1997) studied Roma and found that the Gypsies often view the gadje negatively as oppressive, domineering, source of trouble, easy victims of Gypsy cunning, or sometimes positively as trustworthy, but most significantly, the gadje are considered impure because they don't respect the Gypsy code of hygiene—marimé. 

In the process of assessing the stereotypes, I will look at how both groups (minority and majority) are represented in: details or simplified? How complex are the relationships between the two groups: adverse, neutral, or cooperative? What are the cultural elements used to stereotype the Gypsy group? To assess the levels of ideology I will use the classifications provided by Prince (1997) and Giannetti (2002) and I will also look at the cinematic procedures (the use of camera, light, editing and sound) that the film crew has employed to build a certain tone and make the ideological message readable.

Literature Review  


The study of stereotypes :
Ashmore and Del Boca (1981) define a stereotype as “a set of beliefs about the personal attributes of a social group” (p. 16). There are three orientations within stereotype theory: sociocultural, psychodynamic, and cognitive. According to the sociocultural orientation, which is most relevant for this paper, the main function of the stereotypes is to facilitate the manifestation of cultural values and to specify the nature of various social groups. In this functionalist view, stereotypes support norms about how these groups and individual group members are expected to behave and how they should be treated. The assumptions behind this orientation are dichotomous in nature: first, that society is characterized by consensus and “individual conduct is determined by institutionalized patterns” (Ashmore & Del Boca, 1981, p. 23) and second, that society is formed by groups with different values and these groups compete with each other. The research done under this orientation focuses on level of agreement among a group of perceivers on the characteristics of a targeted social group. According to the same orientation, at the societal level, stereotypes also serve a valueexpressive function. For example, negative images about the dirty migratory Gypsy caravans reinforce the cultural values of the stable populations concerning stability, comfort and neatness. Katz & Braly (1933) were the first to do research in the sociocultural direction, especially with their work on prejudices. Later, Gilbert (1951), Fishman (1956), Gardner, Rodensky & Kirby (1970), Bowker & Carrier (1976). Bargh (1989, 1997) and others made relevant contributions to the study of stereotypes.

The second orientation within stereotype theory, the psychodynamic approach, is based on Freud’s psychoanalytic theory and explains social phenomena in terms of psychological factors. Underlying this orientation are two major assumptions: first, human psychic and behavior are assumed to be intrapsychically determined. Second, the most important features of adult personality are believed to be determined by the manner in which the individual resolves the psychological conflicts that arise in the first years of life. According to Ashmore and Del Boca (1981), this theoretical orientation views human beings as “closed energy systems propelled by unconscious sexual and aggressive drives” (p. 27). Stereotypes are developed in the process of developing and strengthening one’s identity, through defense mechanisms like displacement and projection (e.g., outgroup hostility, prejudices). In other words, people develop stereotypes as a response to their social fears in an attempt to select who can be a friend and who cannot. 

The cognitive orientation, like the psychodynamic one, focuses on action at the individual level, rather than the social. The assumptions used in this orientation find their root in the definition of stereotype as a “normal” cognitive structure, falling under the imperfections and limitations of the human mind, as any other piece of information. Lippmann (1922) was the first one to point out that reality is too complex to be fully comprehended and responded to, which is why people tend to simplify and categorize. The act of categorization is fundamental to the cognitive approach of the stereotyping process. When we categorize, “we do not stereotype a person, we stereotype a person-as-a-member-ofa-group” (Taylor, 1981, p. 96). Gordon Allport (1954) agreed with Lippmann that stereotyping is the result of normal cognitive processes. He suggested that the primary basis for categorization is a perceived similarity-dissimilarity; for instance, objects are grouped on basis of similarity of function or appearance. Stereotypes, both benign and pernicious, evolve to describe categories of people, just as balls are characterized as round. An important finding in the stereotype literature is that once people are categorized into ingroups or outgroups, ingroup favoritism and outgroup discrimination often result (Billig, 1976; Fiske; 1998). The three different perspectives of stereotype theory do not exclude each other, but rather build on each other.

The Automaticity Theory developed by Posner and Snyder (1975) and refined by Bargh (1989, 1997) is very important for the study of stereotypes. It postulates that stereotypes have all the ingredients of an automatic process. A stereotype, once it is formed, is automatically activated when the stimulus is present. In other words, people may not even have the intention to stereotype, but their mind does it for them. The good news is that the default process can be adjusted or corrected “in a second effortful processing stage–only if the person has the time, attentional capacity and interest in doing so” (Higgins & Kruglanski, 1996, p. 173). 

Despite some positive stereotypes (e.g., Gypsies have a natural talent for music), the stereotypes about Gypsies are overwhelmingly negative. The dominant groups in Eastern Europe regard Gypsies as uneducated, conniving, dirty, and lazy (Hancock, 1987). Identification of a Gypsy is made by physical appearance (e.g., dark skin and hair), attire (e.g., women wear the traditional Kaldarashi costume with multiple colorful aprons and hair separated in braids decorated with coins) or language spoken (Romanes, the language spoken by Roma in Eastern Europe).


The Ideological Theory in Film 

The ideological theory in film has been used to analyze the ideological elements, contexts and effects of films in society, more precisely the political and socio-psychological implications of film representations. Its basic assumption originates with Plato’s dialogues that representation conceals a gap between art and life.

The problem of representation is central to ideological theory, as films may promote, entrench, or mask dominant ideologies embedded in certain rhetorical practices. In other words, almost willy-nilly each cultural product radiates ideology, and it is even more so in film for two reasons: first, inevitably each frame carries an ideological message as it conceals the gap between art and life. Second, films are the product of a group of people (not just an individual) who can consciously leave their ideological mark on the final product. Jarvie (1978) points out that "movies are sensitive to the national mood for simple reasons. They are not created by a single individual with a camera. They are created at all stages by a group" (p. 104). Equally important, they are created for a group-the audience. The world of film comes into existence only when it is seen by a group of people. If that audience is perceptively educated, it takes only a few suggestive strokes to suggest an atmosphere or a specific genre (e.g., western or samurai movies). This is where the use of conventions or stereotypes comes into play. Carried over from previously popular theater genres like melodrama and Vaudeville, stereotypes began to be used in film to help the audience understand the narrative. Economically speaking, a typified character was in no need of elaborated construction. Like writers, film creators have an audience (or several) in mind. Jarvie (1970) thinks that “the really successful creator knows or feels something that is shared by several publics" (p. 105). 

Film theorists have tried to establish criteria that would categorize the ideological content of a film in a manner that could be used in any process of movie interpretation. They have established as point of reference the dominant ideology existent in society at the time when the film has been produced and from here films could basically promote or oppose that ideology, in various degrees of intensity. Comolli and Narboni (1969) emphasized the relationship between economics and ideology. “Because every film is part of the economic system it is also a part of the ideological system, for ‘cinema’ and ‘art’ are branches of ideology” (p. 754). 

Like Jarvie (1970) and Monaco (2000), Comolli and Narboni (1969) consider every film to be political. In their view, the art of cinema is even more under the power of ideology, “because unlike other arts or ideological systems its very manufacture mobilizes powerful economic forces” (p. 754). Since making a movie is generally expensive and its success depends ultimately on consumers who agree to pay for the ticket, film walks a very delicate path. Comolli and Narboni (1969) identified seven possible ideological degrees in films ranging from those productions “imbued through and through with the dominant ideology in pure form, that give no indication that their makers were even aware of the fact,” to films “where the director is not satisfied with the idea of the ‘camera seeing through appearances,’ but attacks the basic problem of depiction by giving an active role to the concrete stuff of his film” (p. 758). It seems that the authors put great emphasis on the ideological degree of both the signified (message/topic) and the signifiers (the cinematic means used to build the message). For them, a movie that wishes to contradict the dominant ideology does not accomplish its mission unless both levels of meaning construction challenge the traditional modes of depiction. 

In a simpler manner, Prince (1997) classifies the presence of ideology in films as direct or first-order (with overt ideological messages), and indirect or second-order (with implicit, subtle social messages). A similar classification is offered by Giannetti (2002) where he discusses three levels of ideologies: neutral (e.g., escapist films and light entertainment movies where issues of right and wrong are treated superficially, with no analysis), implicit (where conflicting value systems are represented, but they are not dwelled on) and explicit (as in patriotic films, or many documentaries). 

Prince (1997) also elaborates on a second important component of ideological critique—the point of view. A film can be explicitly or implicitly ideological, but the point of view can establish the position towards that ideology. He discusses three possible positions: "the ideological support," when the film supports and promotes the dominant ideology; "the ideological critique," when the film offers a critical view of the established values, and "the ideological incoherence," when the film offers “an ideological mix meant to produce an ambiguous product that would attract as many members of the targeted audiences as possible while offending as few as possible” (Prince, 1997, p. 359). It is through the last three classifications (Comolli & Narboni, 1969; Prince, 1997; Giannetti, 2002) that I am going to interpret the two movies selected for my analysis. 

Gadjo Dilo (Gatlif, 1997)
 

In this film, Gatlif’s primary goal was to show Gypsies “as they really are.” He wrote: It took me fifteen years to accomplish this film trilogy. The more I shot the Gypsies, the more I discovered I didn’t know about them. I wanted to put myself in their shoes, so I kept living with them. I wanted to free myself of the nasty look of outsiders, who kept telling me stupid things about Gypsies. (Gatlif quoted in Peary, 1998, para 3) Gadjo Dilo, the final film of the trilogy, presents the story of a young Parisian man (Stéphane) arriving in a Gypsy village in Romania searching for a Gypsy female singer, Nora Luca. He has an audiotape with her songs from his father, who was also fascinated by her music. The village he enters on a gray winter evening is located in a flat and cold plain. The first person he encounters is Izidor, a Gypsy man whose son had just been arrested by the Romanian police earlier that day. Izidor takes Stéphane to his modest home and adopts him, presenting him to the village as the foreigner who wants to learn the Romani language (the Romani language is the Romanes spoken by the Roma and is different from the Romanian language spoken by Romanians). Thus Stéphane begins a process of integration and learning about Gypsy life, language and community that will change him fundamentally over the winter and spring that follow. The love story with Sabina brings Stéphane even closer to the Gypsies. 

 The film tells the story from the point of view of Stéphane, a Westerner integrating relatively easily within the Gypsy community. Thus, the Western audience finds it easier to identify with Stéphane, as his reactions could be their reactions. As he becomes more and more naturalized in the Gypsy community, the identification later includes the Roma, and when the climax arrives—the ethnic conflict between Romanians and the Gypsies—the viewer sees it through the desperate eyes of both Stéphane and the Roma. The plot takes a quick turn when Izidor's son is liberated from prison. After the Gypsy village is burned to the ground and Izidor’s son is burned alive, nothing is as it used to be. Stéphane's action in the end, when in a Roma-like ritual he burns the tapes he had recorded for several months as carefully as an ethnographer, becomes a value statement directed at the non-Gypsy audience. Stéphane realizes that he had acted like a tourist in search of souvenirs trying to capture the Gypsy song and culture on tape. The striking tragedy of the ethnic conflict shows him the superficiality of his attitude—looking for the exotic in a community that has pains and tragedies which cannot be recorded on tape. 

In the beginning of the film Izidor gives Stéphane a ride to his home in his cart. Hospitable, Izidor lets Stéphane sleep in his one-room house on the bed, while he goes to sleep in the barn. The next morning, the entire village gathers at Izidor’s windows to see the “crazy stranger” (dilo in Romani language means crazy and also foolish). They look at his torn shoes and categorize him as a “bum.” As Stéphane stands in the door’s frame, the Roma surround him with suspicion. Stéphane smiles and walks away. One Gypsy goes into the house to check whether he had stolen something, and a Gypsy woman asks ironically “What’s there to steal? The fire in the chimney?” Thus the viewer finds out that this Gypsy community is quite poor, after already receiving similar clues: muddy roads, poor improvised tents and houses built with wood and mud bricks. It is also interesting to note that the suspicion toward the stranger is the same suspicion that Gypsies receive every day from the gadje. Another woman warns that nobody should go in the house after the foreigner had slept there, as he might have left a curse behind. This is the marimé code of Gypsy culture. According to this Gypsy code, if a non-Gypsy sleeps in a Gypsy bed, the sheets will have to be thoroughly washed and disinfected. 

One of the next shots focuses on Sabina at the entrance of a tent watching the Gypsy confusion about the stranger, while holding a baby (not hers) in her arms and smoking. She is dressed as Roma women from the Kaldarashi tribe as they usually are in Romania–with long, colorful multi-layered aprons, her long dark hair covered by a scarf signifying her matrimonial status. She has a silver tooth, which in the Gypsy culture is considered jewelry, and a sign of richness. Her status in the village is special. We learn that after spending some time in Belgium with her husband and making a living as a dancer, she left him and returned to her father’s house alone. She is considered a “slut” because she has no husband and no children.

Perhaps it is worth mentioning here that Rona Hartner won the best actress prize at Lucarno for her interpretation of Sabina. The Romanian actress Rona Hartner and the French actor Romaine Duris (Stéphane) are the only professional actors used in the film. Izidor, the third main character, is a real Gypsy from the region of Transylvania (Romania) who had never acted before. 

In an interview for the Boston Phoenix, Gatlif said: “When we shot, many of the crew were scared of catching lice and fleas. But Rona lived with the Gypsy women in their tent, held their babies. The more she did it, the more she was a true Gypsy” (Peary, 1998). Tony Gatlif’s love for realism is obvious in this statement. He put all his knowledge about Gypsy traditions and culture in this film and he paid special attention to what he considered true Gypsiness. What makes a true Gypsy?—we may ask. From Gatlif’s perspective, a Gypsy is somebody who can be recognized as such on the screen. Rona Hartner confessed in one of her interviews that Gatlif wanted non-professional actors as examples. He was looking at them and then to me and would say ‘You’re not a Gypsy yet’ and I didn’t understand what he wanted. He’d say, ‘No, no, no, I don’t want a character, I want you to be yourself because you have enough gypsy in you.' (Kaufman, 1998, para 4 )

Worthy of emphasize here is that the search process in which Gatlif engaged Hartner—to search for the Gypsy in her—comprises a selection and simplification that may have something in common with the formation of stereotypes. As Hartner confessed, it was a difficult, mentally painful process that required her to learn a great deal about the Gypsy life, language and dance. Gatlif did not portray Gypsies and Romanians one-sidedly or idealistically. Although the movie underlies an ethnic conflict between the two ethnic groups, not all Romanians are bad and not all Gypsies are good. In the geography of the film, the Romanian pub becomes the place where ethnic tensions can be expressed in the form of jokes, ironies or fights, because it is the only place where the two neighboring groups meet. When the bartender asks maliciously if there are many Gypsies in France, Izidor answers emphatically on behalf of his friend, saying that there are a lot of Gypsies in France—colonels, lawyers, doctors: In France, nobody calls the Gypsies thieves. No one points their finger at them in France! They travel where they want in their houses on wheels. They repair everything–radios, television they make saucepans, wagons. Everyone loves them because on this Earth no one works as well as they do. 

This is where all the Romanians at the tables begin to laugh ironically at Izidor’s utopian peroration. One Romanian speaks out and shatters Izidor’s fantasy: “You should go there, too. You and your whole family.” Behind the clown-like act of Izidor, the viewer perceives the nostalgia of a dream world where Gypsies do not suffer from discrimination and enjoy a better life and most importantly respect from other groups.

On the way back to the village, the two try to teach each other their own languages. Izidor tells him how to say “children” in Romanes, and Stéphane teaches him how to say “Paris,” “Mon cher,” “My mother is a steward,” and then “Le Pen,” “Le Pen is a motherfucker” in French. Izidor imitates every word and the effect is comic. Le Pen is a French extreme right politician who promotes harsh policies against minorities living in France, Gypsies included. The political message “Le Pen is a motherfucker” uttered by Izidor who does not even know what he just said could be seen as a form of Gypsy mockery–the ultimate resort to the symbolic energy of words from the author of the script, Gatlif, a Gypsy himself. The statement also hints at the idea that Gypsies seem to have a Le Pen everywhere. The spectator is drawn into the Gypsy culture at the same time as Stéphane. We learn from Stéphane’s mistakes. When he wants to surprise Izidor by cleaning his house, Izidor gets mad and asks him if he has turned into a woman. We learn that Gypsy society is rigidly patriarchal. 

The village that the Romanians burn down was a reconstruction designed by the architect working with Gatlif. Still the Roma that were present at the scene began shouting and protesting at the Romanian actors spreading the flames, as if it was a real event (Peary, 1998). Working with Roma proved to be an unusual experience for the actors and the crew. Rona Hartner remembered that, There was this scene where everybody was screaming “the Frenchman is going to steal our children,” Tony Gatlif had to stop them, because they really wanted to fight. He had to stop scenes all the time. . . . In one scene, my father in the movie was telling me that I shouldn’t be with the Frenchman and he had to scream at me. Gatlif didn’t put it into the movie, but the father really hit me. He hurt me. The women saved me. They were all very involved. (Kaufman, 1998, para 9) 

The Roma played themselves truthfully and with little theatricality. While Gatlif employed Gypsies as actors for the sake of truthfulness, he also had to deal with their deep psychological and ideological involvement in the movie. Tony Gatlif is very careful to make his ideological position clear. It is no secret that he wants to become the advocate of the Gypsies: I fight for the image of the Gypsy people who, ever since they arrived in Europe, were blamed for all the vices and sins. … What I like doing, and what I have always done, is not taking the viewer by the hand, but invite him in the house without cleaning it in advance. (Vigo, 1998, para 2) 

The images seem to invite the viewer into the Gypsy world without attracting too much attention to the camera techniques. Eric Guichard was responsible for the documentarylike images, with long takes, realistic shots of the set and minimal movement. One of the few times when the camera drew attention to itself was when it tracked the two naked lovers running through the woods. The same angle, technique and high speed of the camera are used in a later scene where Gypsies run from the burned village through the same woods, building a parallel effect. Also, Gatlif is careful in his use of framing to provide visual equality to Stéphane and his Gypsy friends. When Izidor and Stéphane are together they fill equal amounts of space on the screen. 

The editing done by Monique Dartow seems to have as its only purpose to advance the narrative, creating a realistic impression of time and space. The visual style is naturalistic, employing continuity editing and a linear narrative structure where events follow each other on a cause and effect relationship. It should be noted that Gadjo Dilo has a noncinematic referent in the real ethnic conflicts that occurred in Romania and Czech Republic after 1990 (Fawn, 2001; Barany, 2002). 

In terms of stereotype use, I have observed several stereotypes serving to identify members of a certain group, ranging from costumes to behaviors. Gypsies are identified through their costumes (especially the women’s colorful skirts and scarves), their jewelry (the opulent golden rings on one Gypsy’s hands, or the coins in the women's braids and necklaces) and their language (it is in the name of authenticity that the Gypsy characters speak their native language). 

One can say that the Romanian collective character defines itself solely through the opposition towards the Gypsy group. We see no glimpse into the daily life of a Romanian. The relationship between the two groups is tense from the beginning of the movie (Adriani’s arrest) until the end (the accidental murder triggering the violent reaction of the Romanians). In a way, Romanians are much more stereotyped and oversimplified than Gypsies in Gatlif’s movie. They appear rude, aggressive, and xenophobic in comparison with the Gypsy group that is sensitive, circumspect but hospitable, and culturally rich. 

Some of the negative stereotypes about Gypsies that the movie reinforces relate to education (illiteracy), conniving and violent behavior, sexual directness (apparent in the vulgar language used by Sabina, or when Izidor asks Sabina for “a little fuck”). The language use deserves separate attention, because the same vulgarity used in different contexts acquires different meanings. First, the vulgar language addressed to the non-Gypsies is a weapon of mockery and rejection (for example, in the opening scene where Stéphane meets the cart with the Gypsy women who mock him in Romanes). Second, when addressed to other Gypsies it feels like tender mockery, done with friendship (e.g., when Sabina encourages Stéphane to insult Izidor in Romanes instead of a salute). Finally, vulgarity becomes the language of  seduction in the love scene between Sabina and Stéphane, to such a degree that it leads Sabina to bite into a tree. According to the Comolli and Narboni’s classification (1969), Gadjo Dilo falls under the category of films which attack their ideological assimilation on two fronts.

First, by direct political action, on the level of the ‘signified,’ that is, they deal with a directly political subject. ‘Deal with’ is here intended in an active sense: they do not just discuss an issue, reiterate it, paraphrase it, but use it to attack the ideology. (p. 757) On the level of form (signifiers), Gadjo Dilo breaks from the ideological filter of narrative traditions by not putting an emphasis on formal beauty and classical dramaturgy. Instead of using professional actors, the movie used real Gypsies speaking Romanes, the unpopular language of the Gypsy minority. The movie goes beyond the general stereotypes about Gypsies (as talented musicians, poor, uneducated, careless people).

The signified, the final message and feeling of the movie, is opposed to the dominant ideology as well, as it sends the message that Roma people should be treated as equal human beings. The ideological effect is beneficial for the Roma precisely because they are portrayed as complex individuals with multiple strengths and weaknesses. Following Prince’s classification, Gadjo Dilo reflects a first order ideology. One could see only five minutes of the film, thirty minutes of it or the entire film and still conclude that the film “perspires” ideological messages through all its pores. Applying Prince’s point of view criterion, I found that in Gadjo Dilo the "ideological critique" is present, since the film offers a radical critique of the dominant ideology of discrimination. The Western viewers for whom the film was designed seemed to have liked the film. At the box office, Gadjo Dilo surpassed the results of the two previous films by Gatlif (Latcho Drom, 1993 and Mondo, 1994). At the Locarno film festival, three thousand people stood up and gave the director ten minutes of applause. Subtle camera techniques used in Gadjo Dilo, like close-ups, long shots and framing bring the Gypsies closer than the gadje viewers have ever been to a Gypsy. The identification that occurs between the non-Gypsy viewer and the Gypsy characters could potentially take the viewer’s mind beyond the well-known negative stereotypes about Gypsies. Thus a chance of revisiting and perhaps altering one’s stereotypes is born. 

Time of the Gypsies (Kusturica, 1989)  


Emir Kusturica is one of the best known contemporary directors from former Yugoslavia. As mentioned in the introduction, almost every film he made received awards at a major film festival in Europe. The aesthetic pleasure and surprise in his films is built by a careful dosage of naturalism and magic realism that critics say resembles the novels of the South-American writers Mario Vargas Llosa and Gabriel Garcia Marquez ( Dieckmann, 1997; Kuzmanovich, 1993; Horton, 1992). Time of the Gypsies had an interesting fate. After winning Kusturica the best director award at Cannes in 1989 and enjoying the financial support of Columbia Pictures, it was quickly discarded by Puttnam’s successor at Columbia studios, Dawn Steel. Dieckmann (1997) quotes Steel saying: What I didn’t know [coming in] was that there were many movies in production that were esoteric, uncommercial, and in languages other than English. In fact, one was Serbo--Croatian, a language so obscure that it had to be subtitled in its native Yugoslavia! (p. 44)

Steel’s statement is not entirely correct, because the language used in the movie is actually Romanes (the Gypsy language in Eastern Europe) with Serbo-Croatian influences. Time of the Gypsies is not about the relationships between a Gypsy minority and the gadje majority, but about the existing hierarchies and conflicts within the Gypsy minority. The gadje are barely included in short sequences as a doctor and a nurse in a hospital in Ljubliana, Italian police officers, or people in the squares of Italian cities. The movie demolishes the myth of cohesive and harmonious Gypsy groups and helps the viewer better understand the economic and social mechanisms at work in that part of Europe. If in Gatlif’s movie the viewer gets only rare glimpses into the economic relationships among the Gypsies, in Kusturica’s film, it is all about power dynamics and the struggle to access resources.

Perhan, the main character (played by Davor Dujmovic), is an orphan Gypsy teenager, an accordion player with telekinetic capacities and a candid soul. He lives with his grandmother, his sister Danira and his uncle Merdzan. Their income comes from occasional sale of limestone to villagers and his grandmother’s healing capacities. Danira has a crippled leg by birth and deals with daily physical pain. Merdzan is a womanizer and a compulsive gambler who keeps dreaming about going to Germany. The third important feminine character in Perhan’s life is his sweetheart, Azra. Unfortunately, his repeated marriage proposals are invariably rejected by Azra’s mother, who believes that his poverty makes him unsuitable.

The scene where the mafia boss Ahmed (Bora Todorovic) arrives in the village brings the first clue that dignity and self-reliance represent the psychological stake of the movie. Villagers, including Merdzan who is overwhelmed with gambling debts, surround his car complimenting Ahmed, kissing his hand, and asking for money, which he grandiloquently gives away. When Perhan’s grandmother cures Ahmed’s son, they strike a deal; Ahmed agrees to take Danira to a hospital in Ljubliana and pay all medical costs. Perhan decides to accompany his sister and promises to never leave her alone. Soon, as the car driving them to Ljubliana picks up children sold by their families to become Ahmed’s beggars and prostitutes, Perhan and Danira realize what Ahmed’s business is. Forced to leave his sister alone in the hospital, Perhan accompanies Ahmed to Italy. Once they arrive in the windswept trailer camp outside Milan, Ahmed’s band gets to “work” under the direct and abusive supervision of Ahmed and his two brothers. After repeated physical abuse and threats that Danira would not get the operation she needs, Perhan becomes Ahmed’s slave and specializes in breaking into houses. Perhan is also lured with the promise that Ahmed’s people are building a house for him and Azra back home. Ahmed leads his band with a combination of empty promises and iron fists. However, the dynamic of the group is not perfect. Ahmed suffers a stroke that leaves him partially paralyzed. His two brothers desert him, taking most of the “slaves” with them. Perhan stays with Ahmed and becomes his right hand. Ahmed sends him back to Bosnia to buy more children and to bring him another wife, and Perhan uses the opportunity to go back to his village only to find Azra pregnant, apparently by his uncle Merdzan. 

Perhan refuses to be persuaded by Azra that the child is his. Despite this, Perhan decided to marry Azra but with the understanding that he will sell the “bastard” child in Italy. He also finds out that the house Ahmed had promised to build for him does not exist. Things get worse for Perhan in Italy, where Azra gives birth to a boy, only to die immediately after the delivery, while still dressed in her wedding gown. In Ljubliana, Perhan finds out that his sister Danira The scene where the mafia boss Ahmed (Bora Todorovic) arrives in the village brings the first clue that dignity and self-reliance represent the psychological stake of the movie. Villagers, including Merdzan who is overwhelmed with gambling debts, surround his car complimenting Ahmed, kissing his hand, and asking for money, which he grandiloquently gives away. When Perhan’s grandmother cures Ahmed’s son, they strike a deal; Ahmed agrees to take Danira to a hospital in Ljubliana and pay all medical costs. Perhan decides to accompany his sister and promises to never leave her alone. Soon, as the car driving them to Ljubliana picks up children sold by their families to become Ahmed’s beggars and prostitutes, Perhan and Danira realize what Ahmed’s business is. Forced to leave his sister alone in the hospital, Perhan accompanies Ahmed to Italy. Once they arrive in the windswept trailer camp outside Milan, Ahmed’s band gets to “work” under the direct and abusive supervision of Ahmed and his two brothers. 

After repeated physical abuse and threats that Danira would not get the operation she needs, Perhan becomes Ahmed’s slave and specializes in breaking into houses. Perhan is also lured with the promise that Ahmed’s people are building a house for him and Azra back home. Ahmed leads his band with a combination of empty promises and iron fists. However, the dynamic of the group is not perfect. Ahmed suffers a stroke that leaves him partially paralyzed. His two brothers desert him, taking most of the “slaves” with them. Perhan stays with Ahmed and becomes his right hand. Ahmed sends him back to Bosnia to buy more children and to bring him another wife, and Perhan uses the opportunity to go back to his village only to find Azra pregnant, apparently by his uncle Merdzan. Perhan refuses to be persuaded by Azra that the child is his. Despite this, Perhan decided to marry Azra but with the understanding that he will sell the “bastard” child in Italy. He also finds out that the house Ahmed had promised to build for him does not exist. Things get worse for Perhan in Italy, where Azra gives birth to a boy, only to die immediately after the delivery, while still dressed in her wedding gown. In Ljubliana, Perhan finds out that his sister Danira  
 
In one of the first scenes in the movie the village fool, a man escaped from a mental hospital, looks straight into the camera and says: They want to clip my wings. What’s a spirit without wings? My soul is free. Free as a bird. . . . When God came down to earth, he couldn’t deal with the Gypsies and took the next flight back. Not my fault. This is the only character that looks straight at the camera, and the viewer understands that the fool “spoke the truth,” giving the key to the interpretation of the narrative. Perhan’s death is the end of an angelic and innocent soul who tried to deal with the Gypsies from inside the group and lost.

Several magic scenes that defy physical reality weave seamlessly in and out more realistic ones creating a hypnotic effect: the flying bridal veil, levitation of objects and people, walking carton boxes that serve as toys for Gypsy children or as hiding places for adults. Kusturica is not a fan of close-ups. He prefers deep-focus shots where he can manipulate multiple elements like in Italian neo-realist movies. The camera is used with creativity and imagination—we see low angle shots, high angle shots, tracking shots, used with more audacity than in Gadjo Dilo. These are some reasons why critics describe his style as “magic realism” (Cannon, 1998; Dieckmann, 1997; Kuzmanovich, 1993; Horton, 1992). 

Another major difference between the two movies is that Time of the Gypsies condenses stereotypes at the level of individual characters rather than groups. Perhan’s transformation, for instance, is visible at the level of his physical appearance. At the beginning, while he is under Grandma’s wing, he looks childish, wearing a colorful hat, sweats and thick-framed glasses with a white patch on one lens to stimulate a lazy eye. In Italy, as his dignity and ideals go down, his appearance goes up. Towards the end, he looks like a young mafia boss. Still, the spectator receives several clues that Perhan’s kindness and sensitivity are not totally compromised. In one scene, where he breaks into a house to steal, he takes a moment to play his favorite song at a piano in the house. Later he saves a kitten from drowning. 

Ahmed is the cunning evil-doer, a grandiloquent liar, who is ready to swear on his life, child or bread to get what he wants. We actually notice that this kind of swearing up and down is done by negative Gypsy characters in the film” Merdzan and Ahmed. Towards the end of the film when Perhan swears “on my Gypsy heart” that he will reunite with his family, the viewer gets the feeling he will not. 

Grandma is a woman who has a keen sense of survival. She does not seem to dwell much on events and their significance; unlike Perhan, she reacts fast and forgets quickly. She, her son Merdzan and Ahmed are the three characters who do not change. Everyone else suffers a transformation: Perhan loses his dignity and innocence; Azra loves, betrays and dies; Danira is kidnapped, forced to beg and survive among thieves, finally growing to be strong. 

The duplicity and the cunning manipulation of others are old stereotypes about Gypsies. However, in virtue of between-groups stereotypes, the non-Gypsy (gadje) viewer is used to Gypsies using duplicity on gadje, not on other Gypsies, especially not on innocent youth like Perhan and Danira. The feeling that something is seriously wrong in a community that has become destructive toward itself is the main ideological message of the film. Unlike Gatlif who was preoccupied with making Gypsies recognizable on the screen, Kusturica is focused on showing how economical pressures alter traditions and in-group ethical standards. In Gatlif’s films the evildoers are the discriminatory non-Gypsy people, the others, while in Kusturica’s movie the evildoers are other Gypsies.

In Time of the Gypsies, the Gypsy group appears less traditional than the one portrayed in Gadjo Dilo. Gypsy villagers are dressed just like rural non-Gypsies. Also, Azra has white skin, because she comes from a marriage between a Gypsy woman and a nonGypsy man. Because her skin is white, her mother increases the bride’s price when Perhan proposes. Besides external appearances that do not follow stereotypes, the female dominance in the family is another non-traditional characteristic shown in film. The entire village seems to be run by women. Azra’s father is totally subordinate to his loud wife, and when Merdzan leaves a teenager pregnant, it is her mother who comes to Grandma to claim justice, not her father. 

There are a number of negative stereotypes used regarding the Gypsies, such as kidnapping and exploiting children, deceitful behavior, begging and stealing. According to Prince’s (1997) classification, I found that in Time of the Gyspies we deal with a second-order ideology, or as Giannetti (2002) calls it, an implicit ideology. The movie, addressed primarily to European audiences, supports the dominant ideology. What the viewer sees on the screen are the experiences of a young Gypsy man in search of happiness and financial independence. It is relatively easy to identify with Perhan and his experience. His hopes and good intentions are met with injustice and crime, but this is not an exclusively Gypsy experience. 

Applying Prince’s (1997) concept of ideological point of view, I found that ideological support is manifest in the film. Time of the Gypsies supports both the dominant ideology of the gadje media condemning the illegal and abusive activities of the Gypsies, and the ideology of the Gypsies—expressed in their culture, language, and family relationships. Time of the Gypsies does not attack the dominant ideology, but by simply telling a story about Gypsies, it sends a message against the dehumanizing quality of most of the stereotypes about Gypsies. Because of this quality, the movie could be included in the category of “films which seem at first sight to belong firmly within the ideology and to be completely under its sway, but which turn out to be so only in an ambiguous manner” (Comolli and Narboni, 1969, p. 754).

Conclusion 


The dominant ideology has kept and still keeps Roma people at the lowest level of the society, through a long list of negative stereotypes and active discrimination. Up to the end of the twentieth century, cinematography tended to portray them as an exotic element in romantic approaches, avoiding social and political issues like poverty, discrimination and marginalization. The fall of communism marked a change, as more films dared to speak against the dominant ideology.

This paper has examined two movies that made a step in that direction: Gadjo Dilo, (Gatlif, 1997) and Time of the Gypsies (Kusturica, 1989). The main common element of the two films is the search for authenticity. They featured Eastern European Gypsies from Romania and former Yugoslavia as main characters and employed real Gypsies to play their heroes. There are three main reasons behind the involvement the Gypsy communities in the artistic effort: first, the number of Gypsies has increased significantly in the last 20 years, rendering them more "visible,” especially in Slovakia, Slovenia, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Russia, Serbia, Hungary or Romania (Barany, 2002; Fraser, 1995). Second, the fall of communism in 1989 facilitated the political emancipation of the Gypsies, a previously silent and ignored minority. Nowadays, there is an increasing political mobilization on the part of European Gypsy communities (Barany, 2002). Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the media have been freed from the communist censorship and the Western and Eastern distribution networks have enlarged and intersected their territories, thus bringing the Gypsy topic to audiences that were not familiar with it.

This paper has examined two movies that made a step in that direction: Gadjo Dilo, (Gatlif, 1997) and Time of the Gypsies (Kusturica, 1989). The main common element of the two films is the search for authenticity. They featured Eastern European Gypsies from Romania and former Yugoslavia as main characters and employed real Gypsies to play their heroes. There are three main reasons behind the involvement the Gypsy communities in the artistic effort: first, the number of Gypsies has increased significantly in the last 20 years, rendering them more "visible,” especially in Slovakia, Slovenia, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Russia, Serbia, Hungary or Romania (Barany, 2002; Fraser, 1995). Second, the fall of communism in 1989 facilitated the political emancipation of the Gypsies, a previously silent and ignored minority. Nowadays, there is an increasing political mobilization on the part of European Gypsy communities (Barany, 2002). Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the media have been freed from the communist censorship and the Western and Eastern distribution networks have enlarged and intersected their territories, thus bringing the Gypsy topic to audiences that were not familiar with it. 

As mentioned previously, stereotyping involves a process of selection and suggestion on the part of the film crew, and a process of interpretation on the part of the audience. Gypsy viewers who experienced the events described in the films can identify with the characters. As for the non-Gypsy viewers, the movie can offer an opportunity to learn more information about the Romani culture and social plight. Thus, the receptive viewer may become more sensitive to the needs of this minority. Less receptive and knowledgeable viewers may just find their stereotypes reinforced.

Movies like Gadjo Dilo and Time of the Gypsies teach us that cinema can constitute a place where conflicting ethnic groups could meet at the imaginary level and a process of stereotype change could be initiated. Movies have the power to create a cultural space where an elementary respect for dignity, solidarity and human rights can be learned and internalized by both Gypsies and gadje. 


References



Ashmore, R. D., & Del Boca, F. K. (1981). Conceptual approaches to stereotypes and stereotyping. In D.L. Hamilton (Ed.). Cognitive processes in stereotyping and intergroup behavior (pp. 1-36). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. 

Allport, G.W. (1954). The nature of prejudice. Cambridge, MA: Adison-Wesley. 

Barany, Z. (2002). The East European Gypsies – Regime change, marginality, and ethnopolitics. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. 

Bargh, J.A. (1989). Conditional automaticity: Varieties of automatic influence in social perception and cognition. In J. S. Uleman & J.A. Bargh (Eds.), Unintended thought (pp. 3-51). N Y: Guilford. 

etc..... 

Just looking for the Titel of the study, and you will see there... Sorry, but I do not have time.... 

 

2019. január 26., szombat

Duka Andrea Annamaria: "Mit keres egy bájos lány gyerek" a cigány telepeken


 Duka Andrea Annamaria: "Egy bájos lány gyerek" a cigány telepeken


Előzmények - Visszatekintés

     Minden azzal kezdődött, hogy úgy utáltam mindenkit, hogy a kollégiumban a szobatársaimat sem viseltem el magam körül, sőt szabály szerűen azt éreztem, hogy robbanok és mindenki mást is, ha rajtam múlik akkor inkább megsemmisítenék magam körül. Igazából az egész világot gyűlöltem, hozzám képest egy idegbeteg ember "kis piskótának számított". A lelkem sírt és tombolt egyszerre, törni - zúzni szerettem volna magam körül.

 2008-ban hangos volt a média különböző események miatt, de ami kihozta belőlem az antiszociális, pszihopata, egyben ambivalens viselkedést az a Csorba Robika (4) ügy volt. Rasszista indítékú gyilkosságok történtek Magyarország különböző helyein. Emberek, gyerekek azért haltak meg, sérültek meg, mert mások voltak, cigányok voltak.

Ültem a szobámban, szó nélkül és nem tudtam eldönteni, hogy ordítsak az idegtől vagy sírjak a szomorúságtól. Persze itt még nem álltam meg. Valahogy az internetes keresgélés közepette, felfedeztem olyan mérhetetlen mennyiségű "tudományosan megalapozott" írásokat, majd a youtube segítségével megnéztem különböző filmeket melyek tovább fokozták hangulatom. Az, hogy a fórumok milyen tartalommal rendelkeztek, vagy hogy a cigányokról milyen kisfilmeket lehetett találni, az még semmi, ami igazán bicska nyitogató hatással volt rám, inkább a kommentek voltak, melyek olyan remélhetőleg "meggondolatlan" gondolatokat tartalmaztak, mi szerint "az összes cigányt így kell kinyírni", "az összes cigányt gázkamrába kell zárni", "a cigányokból ki kell rugdosni a gyereket is", stb.

 Órákon át, néztem és olvastam a különböző véleményeket. Ledöbbentem, a gyűlölet még inkább izzott bennem, tényleg azt éreztem, hogy semmi keresni valóm ebben a világban, közben pedig rosszul voltam magamtól is, mert az előtt soha nem éreztem ennyi dühöt ami bennem volt. Magamat is utáltam, ezek miatt az érzések miatt. Senkivel nem beszéltem, senkihez hozzá sem szóltam, pár napon keresztül, volt, hogy még a főiskolai előadásokra sem mentem be, olyan intenzív hatással volt rám minden. Majd, megtört, és órákon keresztül sírtam, a dühtől, szomorúságtól és azoktól az érzésektől, melyektől magamtól is rosszul voltam.

 Pár órás sírás után jött a BUMM. Meg van! Arra kértem a jó Istent, hogy segítsen, valamivel segíteni szeretnék! Majd ime az eredmény ami végül nemzetközivé vált, számos kiállítás és publikáció eredménnyel, és sok olyan sikerrel ami bebizonyította, hogy folytani kell.


    Ebben az időben egy nemzetközi pályázatban benne volt a főiskolánk (AVKF) és Pázmány Ágnes tanárnő megkeresett azzal, hogy mit szólnék hozzá, ha egy interkultúra órát tartanék a mellettünk lévő általános iskolában, mert kultúrák közötti párbeszédre van szükség, az egyik osztályban sok a konfliktus a cigány és nem cigány gyerekek között. Természetesen elvállaltam és örültem is a felkérésnek.

 Majd pár nappal később oda mentem a tanárnőhöz és elmeséltem neki mi történt, és végül azt is, hogy mit szeretnék. Pázmány Ágnes tanárnő reagálása, rögtön kérdés nélkül az volt, - rendben Andi, akkor ez is benne lesz a projektben, veszünk fényképező gépet és menjen fotózni. Emlékszem szóhoz sem jutottam, erre nem számítottam, de azonnal volt is bennem egy aggódás, -jó Isten! Nemzetközi pályázat? -nah ha eddig nem tettem tönkre a főiskola hírnevét, ezek után tuti lesz a kirugás. Ezek voltak az első gondolataim, majd ahogy jöttek, úgy el is mentek.

Mindeközben a dologhoz az is hozzá tartozik, hogy a főiskola alatt nem kevés elfoglaltságom mellett mindig találtam olyan más tevékenységet is, amit mások csak úgy hívnak, hogy szétszórom magam, én meg úgy fogalmazom meg, hogy szeretem a komplex - és kiterjed dolgokat. Elkezdtem budapesti önkéntes munkámat a Magyar Szegénység Ellenes Hálózatnál, ahol akkoriban én voltam az egyik legfiatalabb önkéntes. Képzésen, képzéseken vettem részt, különböző demonstrációkra készültünk fel, azoknak az anyagaiban segítkeztem és még sok mással foglalkoztunk a Hallasd a Hangod csoportban, majd végül észre sem vettem de már különböző helyekre voltam én is delegálva hazai és nemzetközi szinten. A szervezet abban segített a legtöbbet, hogy egyben láttam Magyarország társadalmi problémáit, azon belül is inkább a perifériára szorultakra koncentráltunk függetlenül az etnikai hovatartozástól.
Másrészt, párhuzamosan a Hálózattal, tagja lettem az első magyarországi Roma szakkollégiumának, ahol az ország különböző városaiból, egyetemeiről - főiskoláiról, roma identitással rendelkező fiatalok találkoztak- majd különböző politikai, diplomáciai és egyéb képzést kaptunk, melynek fő fókuszaként a roma vonal volt a domináns.

Az hogy a Hálózat  és a Szakkollégiumunk egy időben párhuzamosan futottak egymás mellett azt idézte elő, hogy nem csak a roma téma iránt érdeklődtem, hanem nagy társadalmi kérdések is érdekelté váltak számomra.

Egy nyáriszünet követte minden tervünket a Müvészet mely hidat épít köztünk című projekt előtt, majd szeptemberben megkezdtük a munkát. Én kép pillérét vittem a projektnek, melyet könnyedén, játéknak fogtam fel. Az interkultúra óra összehozta a gyerekeket, 10 perc után, már beszélgettek, játszottak és együtt dolgoztak, óra végére pedig már egymásnak tanítottak táncot. Az osztály semmire nem volt előkészítve, teljes mértékben, spontán foglalkozásról beszeélhetünk, ami nagyon sikeres volt, és ténylegesen megmutatta, hogy érdekellté kell tenni a gyerekeket ahol önmaguk lehetnek, ahol beszélhetnek, beszélgethetnek egymással, miközben hasonlóságokról, különbségekről beszélgetünk, és végül konkúzióban ő maguk is meghatározzák, milyen jó, hogy sokfélék vagyunk.

Majd jött a kamerák megvásárlása. Nagyon boldog voltam, kijöttem a boltból, beültem a legközelebbi gyorsétterembe és mint egy karácsinyi ajándékot kiszedtem a dobozból, és percekig tágranyilt pupillákkal néztem. A gondolataim letisztultak voltak abból kifolyólag, hogy nem voltam. Csak ültem és néztem a gépem és közbe az járt a fejemben, hogy ha ez ennyire simán ment, akkor ez valóban Isteni akarat és valóban az a feladatom, hogy menjek és kezdjem el a cigány telepi fotózásom, melynek a legelsődleges célja az volt, hogy meg tudjam mutatni, hogy élnek a telepeken az emberek, hogy segítsek azt bemutatni milyen sokszínűek vagyunk. Ismeret terjesztés fotók segítségével, hiszen sok-sok előítélet és sztereotípia az ismeretlenségből fakad. Csak annyit szerettem volna, hogy  segítsek a párbeszéd kialakításában és higy az emberek akik majd látják a fotóimat kritikusabban gondolkadjanak és ne higyjenek abban higy csak fehér és fekete létezik.
Majd ezba folyamat során ugyan változott és kiderült, hogy nagyon komoly dologba fogtam, de én akkor ezzel tényleg nem voltam tisztában.

Az hogy fiatal voltam, és tényleg kimondhatjuk, higy gyerek voltam, sőt ahogy a címben láthatjátok, sokszor megkaptam ezeket a mondatokat, hiszen 23 évesen, tényleg, jó ha 16-17 évesnek néztek az emberek. Amikor kiállításokon vagy konferencián láttak, rögtön ezek voltak az első megjegyzések, amikre mindig csak egy mosojjal vagy csak annyival válaszoltam, hogy ,már 23 éves vagyok. Persze ekkor meg mindig az mosojgott akitől kaptam a megjegyzést.

Tehát az előzményekhez főként az tartozott a munkám kibontakoztatásában, hogy a rasszista indítékú gyilkosságok és a cigánysággal kapcsolatban olyan intenzív érzelmek láttak napvilágot melyek kihizták belőlem az aktív állampolgárságot és a tenni akarást a hidak felállításában, a társadalmi tükrök megalkotásában, melyek minden irányban mutatnak olyan képeket melyek a felelősség vállalást kérdőjelezi vagy épp annak hiányát mutatják be. Számomra mindíg is felháborítóak voltak az igazságtalanságok egyéni és nagy közösségi színtereken is egyaránt.




Identity vs outsider

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bq5kb47lixm/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=n1s0ity4lon6


How do you identify yourself? Identity vs outsider ...








2018. december 27., csütörtök

Egy új könyv születése: Gasztroarcok

https://www.facebook.com/2304381826450716/posts/2315088688713363/

Gasztroarcok - Pohár és tányértörténetek

Egy étteremkritikus, egy író és egy fotós elindul az országban, hogy felfedezzék a legjobb éttermeket, bemutassák a legizgalmasabb gasztronómiai újdonságokat, megkóstolják a legízletesebb kézműves termékeket és megízleljék az ország sörének, borának és pálinkájának színe-javát.

Rauf Sven Tamás évek óta étteremkritikusként pubikál több európai,turistáknak kiadott lapban.
Horváth Norbert író és coach az emberi lélek és a gasztronómia kapcsolatát kutatja. Duka Andrea fotós pedig arra hivatott, hogy megörökítse a pillanatot, mert amikor mások tátott szájjal ámulnak, ő éppen exponál.
Ez az oldal készülő könyvük kulisszái mögé enged betekintést.


2018. november 19., hétfő

DONALD KENRICK: HISTORICAL DICTIONARY of the Gypsies



Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies (Romanies)
 Second Edition Donald Kenrick 


Historical Dictionaries of Peoples and Cultures, 
No. 7 The Scarecrow Press, Inc. Lanham, 
Maryland • Toronto • Plymouth, UK 2007



Editor’s Foreword vii This volume, which was previously in the Europe country series, is now where it belongs, in a special series of Historical Dictionaries of Peoples. Like many other peoples, the Gypsies, or Romanies, or whatever other names they are known by, cannot be defined simply by the country they live in, and this far-flung community inhabits several dozen countries. Indeed, while many of them have settled down voluntarily or through official persuasion, large numbers still move about within and among countries, being genuine Travelers, another alternative name. But while they do live in different places and have different characteristics depending on where they live, which language they speak, and which clans they belong to, they nevertheless recognize one another and themselves as part of a special people, and they have increasingly created organizations and engaged in cultural and other activities to express this solidarity. There is also no doubt that outsiders regard them as a different group no matter what their passports may say. 
Thus, Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies (Romanies): Second Edition has to cover a very broad field, providing information of a fairly general nature, so we can learn more about this people, but also specific entries on the different countries they live in, where the situation may differ substantially from place to place and also one period to another. Other entries present important figures, traditional leaders, politicians and civil rights workers, writers, artists, and musicians—persons in different walks of life who have contributed to the community. There are also entries on various publications and organizations. This comprises most of the dictionary section. The introduction describes the overall situation and how it has been evolving, while the chronology traces the major events from year to year. Of particular interest is the bibliography, which helps readers track down books and articles on multiple 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:10 AM Page vii aspects of the Gypsies, their history, and their culture that are not easily found by the general public. It must be obvious that writing a reference work on such a dispersed population, and especially one that has not been sufficiently researched and where much of what is written is not necessarily reliable, is a particularly arduous task. It requires someone who is familiar with many facets and has a passion for detail—someone like Donald Kenrick, who wrote the first edition as well. He has been involved with Gypsy studies for nearly four decades now. Academically, he studied linguistics with special emphasis on Romani dialect. Dr. Kenrick not only has lectured and written extensively on the Gypsies but has also been involved in the Gypsy civil rights movement as secretary of the Gypsy Council and the National Gypsy Education Council in Great Britain. More practically, he served as an interpreter at four World Romany Congresses. The result is an expanded and updated second edition that tells us considerably more than before.

    Jon Woronoff Series Editor

Chronology of Gypsy History


 224–241 Persia: In the reign of Shah Ardashir, Gypsies first come from India to work. 

420–438 Persia: Bahram Gur, Shah of Persia, brings Gypsy musicians from India. 

661 Arab Empire: Indians (Zott) brought from India to Mesopotamia.

669/670 Arab Empire: Caliph Muawiya deports Gypsies from Basra to Antioch on the Mediterranean coast. c. 

710 Arab Empire: Caliph Walid resettles Zott from Mesopotamia to Antioch. 

720 Arab Empire: Caliph Yazid II sends still more Zott to Antioch. 

820 Arab Empire: Independent Zott state established in Mesopotamia. 

834 Arab Empire: Zott defeated by Arabs and many of them resettled in border town of Ainzarba. 

855 Arab Empire: Battle of Ainzarba fought. Greeks defeat the Arabs and take Zott soldiers and their families as prisoners to Byzantium. c. 

1050 Byzantium: Acrobats and animal doctors active (called athingani) in Constantinople. 

1192 India: Battle of Terain fought. Last Gypsies leave for the west.

1290 Greece: Gypsy shoemakers appear on Mount Athos. 

1322 Crete: Nomads reported on the island. 

1347 Byzantium: Black Death reaches Constantinople. Gypsies move west again.  

1348 Serbia: Gypsies reported in Prizren. 

1362 Croatia: Gypsies reported in Dubrovnik. 

1373 Corfu: Gypsies reported on the island. 

1378 Bulgaria: Gypsies living in villages near Rila Monastery. 

1384 Greece: Gypsy shoemakers reported in Modon. 

1385 Romania: First transaction recorded of Gypsy slaves. 

1399 Bohemia: The first Gypsy is mentioned in a chronicle. 

1407 Germany: Gypsies visit Hildesheim. 

1416 Germany: Gypsies expell 

1489 Hungary: Gypsy musicians play on Czepel Island. 

1492 Spain: First draft of the forthcoming law of 1499 drawn up. 

1493 Italy: Gypsies expelled from Milan. 

1498 Germany (Holy Roman Empire): Expulsion of Gypsies ordered.

 1499 Spain: Expulsion of the Gypsies ordered (Pragmatica of the Catholic Kings). 

1500 Russia: Gypsies first reported. 1504 France: Expulsion of Gypsies ordered. 

1505 Denmark: Two groups of Gypsies enter the country. Scotland: Gypsy pilgrims arrive, probably from Spain. 

1510 Switzerland: Death penalty introduced for Gypsies found in the country. 

1512 Catalonia: Gypsies expelled. Sweden: First Gypsies arrive. 

1514 England: Gypsies first mentioned in the country. 

1515 Germany: Bavaria closes its borders to Gypsies.

1516 Portugal: Gypsies mentioned in literature. 

1525 Portugal: Gypsies banned from the country. Sweden: Gypsies ordered to leave the country. 

1526 Holland: Transit of Gypsies across country banned. 

1530 England and Wales: Expulsion of Gypsies ordered. 

1534 Slovakia: Gypsies executed in Levoca. 

1536 Denmark: Gypsies ordered to leave the country. 

1538 Portugal: Deportation of Gypsies to colonies begins. 

1539 Spain: Any males found nomadizing to be sent to galleys. 

1540 Scotland: Gypsies allowed to live under own laws. 

1541 Czech lands: Gypsies accused of starting a fire in Prague. 

1544 England: Gypsies deported to Norway. CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY •  

 1547 England: Boorde publishes specimens of Romani. 

1549 Bohema: Gypsies declared outlaws and to be expelled. 

1553 Estonia: First Gypsies appear in the country. 

1554 England: The death penalty is imposed for any Gypsies not leaving the country within a month. 

1557 Poland and Lithuania: Expulsion of Gypsies ordered. 

1559 Finland: Gypsies appear on the island of Åland. 

1562 England: Provisions of previous acts widened to include people who live and travel like Gypsies. 1563 Italy: Council of Trent affirms that Gypsies cannot be priests. 

1573 Scotland: Gypsies to either settle down or leave the country. 

1574 Ottoman Empire: Gypsy miners working in Bosnia.

1579 Portugal: Wearing of Gypsy dress banned. Wales: Gypsies first reported.

1580 Finland: First Gypsies reported on the mainland. 1584 Denmark and Norway: Expulsion of Gypsies ordered. 

1586 Belarus: Nomadic Gypsies expelled.

1589 Denmark: Death penalty imposed for Gypsies not leaving the country. 

1595 Romania: Stefan Razvan, the son of a slave, becomes ruler of Moldavia. 

1611 Scotland: Three Gypsies hanged (under 1554 law). 

1633 Spain: Pragmatica of Felipe IV takes effect. Gypsies expelled. 

1637 Sweden: Death penalty introduced for Gypsies not leaving the country. 

1692 Austria: Gypsies reported in Villach. 1714 Scotland: Two female Gypsies executed. xxii • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page  

1715 Scotland: Ten Gypsies deported to Virginia. 

1728 Holland: Last hunt clears out Gypsies. 

1746 Spain: Gypsies to live in named towns. 

1748 Sweden: Foreign Gypsies expelled. 

1749 Spain: Round-up and imprisonment of all Gypsies ordered. 

1758 Austro-Hungarian Empire: Maria Theresa begins assimilation program. 

1759 Russia: Gypsies banned from St. Petersburg. 1765 Austro-Hungarian Empire: Joseph II continues assimilation program. 

1776 Austria: First article published on the Indian origin of the Romani language. 

1782 Hungary: Two hundred Gypsies charged with cannibalism. 1783 Russia: Settlement of nomads encouraged. Spain: Gypsy language and dress banned. United Kingdom: Most racial legislation against Gypsies repealed. 

1791 Poland: Settlement Law introduced. 

1802 France: Gypsies in Basque provinces rounded up and imprisoned. 

1812 Finland: Order confines nomadic Gypsies in workhouses. 

1822 United Kingdom: Turnpike Act introduced: Gypsies camping on the roadside to be fined. 

1830 Germany: Authorities in Nordhausen remove children from their families for fostering with non-Gypsies. 

1835 Denmark: Hunt for Travelers in Jutland. United Kingdom: Highways Act strengthens the provisions of the 1822 Turnpike Act. 

1837 Spain: George Borrow translates St. Luke’s Gospel into Romani. 

1848 Transylvania: Serfs (including Gypsies) emancipated. 

1849 Denmark: Gypsies allowed into the country again. CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY •  07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page  

1855 Romania: Gypsy slaves in Moldavia emancipated. 

1856 Romania: Gypsy slaves in Wallachia emancipated. 

1860 Sweden: Immigration restrictions eased. 

1865 Scotland: Trespass (Scotland) Act introduced. 

1868 Holland: New immigration of Gypsies reported. 

1872 Belgium: Foreign Gypsies expelled. 

1874 Ottoman Empire: Muslim Gypsies given equal rights with other Muslims. 

1875 Denmark: Gypsies barred from the country once more. 

1876 Bulgaria: In a pogrom, villagers massacre the Muslim Gypsies in Koprivshtitsa. 

1879 Hungary: National conference of Gypsies held in Kisfalu. Serbia: Nomadism banned. 

1886 Bulgaria: Nomadism banned. Germany: Bismarck recommends expulsion of foreign Gypsies. 

1888 United Kingdom: Gypsy Lore Society established. 

1899 Germany: Police Gypsy Information Service set up in Munich by Alfred Dillmann. 

1904 Germany: Prussian Parliament unanimously adopts proposal to regulate Gypsy movement and work. 

1905 Bulgaria: Sofia conference held, demanding voting rights for Gypsies. Germany: A census of all Gypsies in Bavaria is taken. 

1906 Finland: Mission to the Gypsies set up. France: Identity card introduced for nomads. Germany: Prussian minister issues special instructions to police to “combat the Gypsy nuisance.” 

1914 Norway: Some 30 Gypsies are given Norwegian nationality. Sweden: Deportation Act also makes new immigration of Gypsies difficult. 
1918 Holland: Caravan and House Boat Law introduces controls. 

1919 Bulgaria: Istiqbal organization founded.  • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page  
1922 Germany: In Baden, all Gypsies are to be photographed and fingerprinted. 

1923 Bulgaria: Journal Istiqbal [Future] starts publication. 

1924 Slovakia: A group of Gypsies is tried for cannibalism; they are found innocent. 

1925 USSR: All-Russian Union of Gypsies established. 

1926 Germany: Bavarian state parliament brings in a new law “to combat Gypsy nomads and idlers.” Switzerland: Pro Juventute starts a program of forced removal of Gypsy children from their families for fostering. USSR: Fi Latvia: St. John’s Gospel translated into Romani. Romania: General Association of the Gypsies of Romania founded. National conference held. Journals Neamul Tiganesc [Gypsy Nation] and Timpul [Time] start publication. USSR: Teatr Romen performs the opera Carmen. 
1934 Germany: Gypsies who cannot prove German nationality expelled. Romania: Bucharest “international” Congress. 
1935 Germany: Marriages between Gypsies and Germans banned. Yugoslavia: Journal Romano Lil starts publication. 1936 Germany: The right to vote removed from Gypsies. June— Internment camp at Marzahn opened. General Decree for Fighting the Gypsy Menace instituted. November—Racial Hygiene and Population Biological Research Unit of the Health Office begins its work. The minister of war orders that Gypsies should not be called up for active military service. 

1937 Poland: Janusz Kwiek elected king of the Gypsies. 

1938 Germany: April—Decree on the Preventative Fight against Crime: All Gypsies classed as antisocial. Many Gypsies arrested to be forced labor for the building of concentration camps. June—Second wave of arrests to provide labor to build the camps. Autumn—Racial Hygiene Research Center begins to set up an archive of Gypsy tribes. October—National Center for Fighting the Gypsy Menace established. December—“Fight against the Gypsy Menace” ordered. USSR: Government bans Romani language and culture. 

1939 Germany: September—Deportation of 30,000 Gypsies planned. October—Settlement Decree: Gypsies not allowed to travel. November— Gypsy fortune-tellers arrested and sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp.German-occupied Czech lands: Nomadism forbidden. Germanoccupied Poland: Special identity cards issued for Gypsies. 

1940 Austria: August—Internment camp built in Salzburg. October— Internment of the Gypsies in Burgenland ordered. November— Internment camp for Gypsies set up in Lackenbach. Czech lands: August—Labor camps set up in Lety and Hodonín. France: April— Government opens internment camps for nomads. Germany: Heinrich Himmler orders the resettlement of Gypsies in western Poland. xxvi • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page 

1941 Baltic States: December—Governor Hinrich Lohse orders that Gypsies should “be given the same treatment as Jews.” Croatia: Jasenovac concentration camp opened. Czech lands: October—Decision that Gypsies from the so-called Protectorate are to be sent to a concentration camp. Germany: March—Exclusion of Gypsy children from school begins. July—Reinhard Heydrich, Heinrich Himmler’s deputy, brings the Gypsies into the plans for a Final Solution to the “Jewish problem.” Latvia: December—All 101 Gypsies in the town of Libau are executed. Poland: October—A Gypsy camp is set up in the Jewish ghetto of Lodz for 5,000 inmates. Serbia: May—German military commander states that Gypsies will be treated as Jews. November—German military command orders the immediate arrest of all Jews and Gypsies, to be held as hostages. Slovakia: April—Decree separating the Gypsies from the majority population. USSR: June—Schutzstaffel (Storm Troopers) Task Forces move into the occupied areas and systematically kill Jews and Romanies. September—Task forces carry out mass executions of Jews and Romanies in the Babi Yar valley. December—Task Force C murders 824 Gypsies in Simferopol. Yugoslavia: October—German army executes 2,100 Jewish and Gypsy hostages (as reprisal for soldiers killed by partisans). 

1942 Bulgaria: August—6,500 Gypsies registered by the police on one day. Croatia: May—The government and the Ustasha order the arrest of all Gypsies and their deportation to the extermination camp in Jasenovac. Germany: March—A special additional income tax is levied on Gypsies. July—A decree of the army general staff again orders that Gypsies not be taken for active military service. September— Himmler and Justice Minister Otto Thierack agree to transfer any Gypsies in prison to concentration camps. December—Himmler issues the order to deport the Gypsies in Greater Germany to the concentration camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Poland: January—All Sinti and Romanies from the Lodz ghetto are transported and gassed at Chelmno. April—Romanies are brought into the Warsaw ghetto and kept in the prison in Gesia Street. May—All Gypsies in the Warsaw district to be interned in Jewish ghettoes. July—Several hundred Polish Romanies killed at Treblinka extermination camp. Romania: Spring and Summer —Some 20,000 Romanies are deported to Transnistria. Serbia: August—Harald Turner, head of the German military administration, announces that “the Gypsy question has been fully solved.” CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY • xxvii 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxvii 

1943 Poland: January—Gypsies from Warsaw ghetto transferred to the extermination camp at Treblinka. February—First transports of Sinti and Romanies from Germany are delivered to the new Gypsy Section in Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. March—At Auschwitz, the Schutzstaffel (Storm Troopers) (SS) gasses some 1,700 men, women, and children. May—A further 1,030 men, women, and children gassed by the SS at Auschwitz. SS major Dr. Josef Mengele transferred at his own request to Auschwitz. July—Himmler visits the Gypsy Section in Auschwitz and orders the Gypsies killed. USSR: November—Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories orders all nomadic Gypsies in the territories are to be treated as Jews. 

1944 Belgium: January—A transport of 351 Romanies and Sinti from Belgium dispatched to Auschwitz. Holland: May—A transport of 245 Romanies and Sinti sent to Auschwitz. Poland: 2 August—1,400 Gypsy prisoners are sent from Auschwitz to Buchenwald concentration camp. The remaining 2,900 Gypsies are killed in the gas chamber. Slovakia: Autumn—Romanies join the fight of partisans in the National Uprising. 1945 27 January—At 3:00 P.M., the first Soviet soldiers reach the main camp at Auschwitz and find one Romany among the survivors. May—World War II ends in Europe. All surviving Gypsies freed from camps. Bulgaria: Gypsy Organization for the Fight against Fascism and Racism set up. Germany: Nuremburg Trials of Nazi leaders begin. Crimes against Gypsies are included in the charges. 

1946 France: Mateo Maximoff’s novel The Ursitory published. Poland: Roma Ensemble founded. 

1947 Bulgaria: Teatr Roma established in Sofia. 1951 Bulgaria: Teatr Roma in Sofia closed. 

1952 France: The Pentecostal movement among Gypsies starts. 1953 Denmark: Gypsies readmitted to the country. 1958 Bulgaria: Nomadism banned. Czechoslovakia: Nomadism banned. Hungary: National Gypsy organization established. 

1960 England and Wales: Caravan Sites Act reduces provision of caravan sites. France: Communauté Mondiale Gitane established. xxviii • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 

1962 German Federal Republic: Courts rule that Gypsies were persecuted for racial reasons. Norway: Government Gypsy Committee established. 1963 Ireland: Report of the Commission on Itinerancy published. Italy: Opera Nomadi education scheme set up. Yugoslavia: Gypsies move to Shuto Orizari after Skopje earthquake. 

1964 Ireland: Itinerant Action Group set up. 

1965 France: Communauté Mondiale Gitane banned. Comité International Tzigane set up. Italy: Pope Paul VI addresses some 2,000 Gypsies at Pomezia. 

1966 United Kingdom: Gypsy Council set up. 

1967 Finland: National Gypsy Association established. 

1968 England and Wales: Caravan Sites Act: Councils to build sites. Holland: All districts must build caravan sites. 1969 Bulgaria: Segregated schools are set up for Gypsies. Europe: Council of Europe Assembly passes a positive resolution on Gypsies. Yugoslavia, Macedonia: Abdi Faik elected a member of Parliament. 1970 Norway: Report published on proposed work with the Gypsies. United Kingdom: National Gypsy Education Council established. 

1971 United Kingdom: First World Romany Congress held near London. Advisory Committee on the Travelling People starts work in Scotland. 1972 Czechoslovakia: Sterilization program for Gypsies begins. France: Band known as Los Reyes (later the Gypsy Kings) founded. Sweden: Stockholm’s Finska Zigenarförening founded. United Kingdom: Romany Guild founded. 

1973 German Federal Republic: Three Gypsies shot by farmer in Pfaffenhofen. Scandinavia: Nordiska Zigenarrådet set up to link organizations. Yugoslavia, Macedonia: Radio broadcasts in Romani start from Tetovo. 1975 Europe: Council of Europe Committee of Ministers adopts a positive resolution on nomads. Hungary: The first issues of the magazine Rom som [I Am a Romany] appear. CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY • xxix 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxix 

1977 Netherlands: Legalization of 500 “illegal” Gypsy immigrants. United Kingdom: Cripps Report on Gypsies published. United Nations: Subcommission passes resolution on protection of Gypsies. 

1978 Switzerland: Second World Romany Congress held in Geneva. 

1979 Hungary: National Gypsy Council formed. First national exhibition of self-taught Gypsy artists held. Norway: ABC Romani primer produced for mother-tongue teaching. Romania: St. John’s Gospel published underground in Romani. United Nations: International Romani Union recognized by the United Nations Economic and Social Council. 1980 Yugoslavia: Romani grammar in Romani published in Skopje. 1981 Europe: Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe resolution on helping nomads held. German Federal Republic: Third World Romany Congress in Göttingen held. Poland: Pogrom instigated in Oswiecim. Yugoslavia: Gypsies granted national status on an equal footing with other minorities. 

1982 France: New François Mitterrand government promises to help nomads. 

1983 Europe: Council of Ministers passes a resolution on stateless nomads. Italy: Gypsy caravans removed from Rome at the start of the Annus Sanctus. United Kingdom: First national Pentecostal convention held. Belfast Traveller Education Development Group established in Northern Ireland. Yugoslavia, Kosovo: Romani teaching begins in one school. 

1984 Europe: European Parliament passes a resolution on aiding Gypsies. India: Chandigarh Festival held. 

1985 France: First International Exhibition (Mondiale) of Gypsy Art held in Paris. Ireland: Report of the Travelling People Review Body published. Sweden: Gypsy family attacked in Kumla with stones and a firebomb.

1986 France: International Gypsy conference held in Paris. Spain: Gypsy houses set on fire in Martos. Yugoslavia, Sarajevo: International Romany seminar held. xxx • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxx 

1988 Hungary: Organization Phralipe founded. 

1989 Europe: Council of the Europe resolution on promoting school provision for Gypsy and Traveler children held. Germany: Government initiates the deportation of several thousand foreign Gypsies from the country. Gypsies demonstrate at the site of the concentration camp at Neuengamme against the deportation of asylum seekers. Hungary: Roma Parliament set up. Poland: First Romane Divesa Festival held. Romania: Border guards shoot party of Gypsies. Spain: Gypsy houses attacked in Andalusia. 1990 Poland: Permanent exhibition on Romanies opens in Tarnow. Fourth World Romany Congress held near Warsaw; standard alphabet for Romani adopted by the Congress. Journal Rrom p-o Drom [Romanies on the Road] starts publication. Romania: Miners attack Romany quarter in Bucharest. Yugoslavia: Egyptian Associations formed in Kosovo and Macedonia. 

1991 Czech Republic: Romani teaching starts at Prague University. Italy: Ostia international conference held. Macedonia: Romanies have equal rights in new republic. Poland: Pogrom instigated in Mlawa. Slovakia: Government gives Romanies nationality status and equal rights. Ukraine: Police attack settlement of Velikie Beryezni. 

1992 Hungary: Arson attack occurs on Gypsies in Kétegyháza. Poland: Attack occurs on remaining Gypsies in Oswiecim. Slovakia: Romathan Theater established in Kosˇice. Ukraine: Mob attacks Gypsy houses in Tatarbunary. United Nations: Commission on Human Rights passes resolution on protection of Gypsies. Gypsies recognized as an ethnic group. 

1993 Bulgaria: A crowd of Bulgarians attacks the Gypsy quarter in Malorad, killing one Romany man. Czech Republic: Tibor Danihel drowns running away from skinhead gang. Seven Romanies deported from Ustí nad Labem to Slovakia. Europe: Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe Resolution on Gypsies held. Germany: First International Conference on Romani Linguistics held in Hamburg. Hungary: Gypsies recognized as a national minority. International Conference held in Budapest. Macedonia: Romani language officially introduced in CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY • xxxi 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxxi schools. Romania: Three Gypsies killed in pogrom in Hadareni. Slovakia: Cyril Dunka beaten up by police after a parking incident. United Kingdom: Scottish Gypsy/Traveller Association set up. United Nations: Romany Union upgraded to Category II consultative status. 

1994 France: Standing Conference of Romany Associations formed in Strasbourg. Hungary: Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe meeting sets up Contact Point for Roma and Sinti Issues in Budapest, based initially in Warsaw. Gypsies vote for their local Romany councils. Poland: Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights organizes Warsaw seminar on Romanies. Gypsy boy beaten up and houses inhabited by Romanies attacked in Debica. Spain: European Congress held in Seville. United Kingdom: Criminal Justice Act: Nomadism criminalized. 

1995 Austria: Four Roma killed by a bomb in Oberwart, Burgenland. Bulgaria: One Gypsy dies following an arson attack on a block of flats in Sofia. Angel Angelov shot by police in Nova Zagora. Czech Republic: Tibor Berki killed by skinheads in Zdár nad Sázavou. Europe: Council of Europe sets up specialist advice group on Romanies. Hungary: Second International Exhibition (Mondiale) of Gypsy Art held. International Romani Union organizes “Sarajevo” Peace Conference in Budapest. Gypsies attacked and injured in Kalocsa. Poland: Gypsy couple murdered in Pabianice. Grota Bridge settlement of Romanian Gypsies in Warsaw dispersed by police. Residents deported across the border to Ukraine. Slovakia: Mario Goral burned to death by skinheads in Ziar nad Hronom. Turkey: Zehala Baysal dies in police custody in Istanbul. 

1996 Albania: Fatmir Haxhiu dies of burns after a racist attack. Bulgaria: Kuncho Anguelov and Kiril Perkov, deserters from the army, shot and killed by military police. Three Romanies beaten by skinheads in Samokov. Czech Republic: Romany children banned from swimming pool in Kladno. Europe: European Court of Human Rights rejects the appeal by Mrs. Buckland against the refusal of planning permission in England for her caravan. First meeting of the Committee of Experts of the Council of Europe held. France: Second meeting of the Standing Committee of Gypsy Organizations in Strasbourg held. Greece: Police raid camp in Attica. Police officer shoots Anastasios Mouratis in Boetia. Hunxxxii • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxxii gary: European Roma Rights Center set up in Budapest. Ireland: National Strategy on Traveller Accommodation proposed. Poland: Houses occupied by Romanies attacked in Wiebodzice. Romania: Twenty-one Romany houses burned down in Curtea de Arges. Mircea-Muresul Mosor shot and killed by chief of police in Valcele. Serbia: Gypsies attacked in Kraljevo. Slovakia: Eighteen-year-old Romany youth beaten to death by skinheads in Poprad. Jozef Miklos dies when his house is set on fire in Zalistie. Spain: Romany Union’s second “Sarajevo” Peace Conference, in Gasteiz (Vittoria). Turkey: Five thousand evicted from Selamsiz quarter of Istanbul. Ukraine: “Mrs. H” raped by police in Mukacevo. Two brothers shot by police in Velikie Beryezni. 

1997 Bulgaria: February—Killing of three Gypsies by police reported. Police attack the Gypsy quarter in Pazardjik. November— International conference on Gypsy children and their education held. Czech Republic: February—Appeals court in Pilsen quashes acquittal of inn owner Ivo Blahout on a charge of discrimination. March— Four skinheads sentenced to prison in connection with the 

1993 death of Tibor Danihel. August—Several hundred Romanies fly to Canada to seek asylum. Monument erected at Hodonin to concentration camp victims. France: March—Jose Ménager and Manolito Meuche shot dead by police in Nantes. Greece: April—One hundred families evicted from Ano Liosia. Partially resettled in a guarded camp. Hungary: February—Gypsies beaten up in Szombathely police station and in a police car in Mandatany in separate incidents. May—Fifth annual International Conference on Culture held in Budapest. Norway: November—In Bergen, Ian Hancock receives Thorolf Rafto Prize on behalf of the Romany people. Poland: June—Romanies attacked in Wiebodzice. Romania: January—Mob attacks Gypsy houses in Tanganu village. Spain: November—European Congress of Gypsy Youth held in Barcelona. Turkey: January—Mob attacks Gypsies in Sulukule district of Istanbul. Ukraine: January—Gypsies beaten by police in four separate incidents in Uzhorod. United Kingdom: November—National Front demonstrates in Dover against asylum seekers from the Czech and Slovak republics. 

1998 Bulgaria: November—Prince Charles of Britain visits Stolipino, Romany quarter of Plovdiv. Czech Republic: 4–6 September— International Romany cultural festival RESPECT held in Prague. CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY • xxxiii 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxxiii December—International Conference on the Roma at Castle Stirin. United Kingdom: 16 May—Music festival in London with Czech and Polish Gypsy bands composed of asylum seekers. October—Home Secretary Jack Straw introduces visas for Slovak citizens to keep out asylum seekers. 19 October—In Wales, Cardiff County Council organizes a Gypsy and Traveller Awareness Day. United States: New Jersey governor Christine Whitman signs Assembly Bill 2654, which rescinds the last anti-Gypsy law of any U.S. state. December—International Romani Union delegation, led by Rajko Djuric´, attends Nazi Gold Conference on Holocaust assets in Washington. 1999 Bulgaria: June—Sofia Conference on Peace and Security held for Roma in the Balkans. Czech Republic: January—More than 100 prominent persons sign protest to government over locating of pig farm on concentration camp site. France: Loi Besson encourages the provision of council-run caravan sites. Greece: February— Local authority sets fire to five Roma houses in Aspropyrgos to construct Olympic sports facilities. Macedonia: September —Government admits 500 Roma refugees from Kosovo held for a week at the border. Romania: December—International Conference on Public Policies and Romany Women held in Bucharest. Turkey: November—Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Istanbul Conference welcomes the development of the Romany civil rights movement. 

2000 Romania: January—Doctors of the World colloquium on Gypsies in Europe held in Bucharest. Czech Republic: July—Fifth World Romany Congress held in Prague. Finland: Publication of St. Luke’s Gospel in Romani. Germany: May—Conference on “Die unerwünschte Deutschen” (“The Unwanted Germans”) held in Stuttgart. Poland: International Romani Union and Romany National Congress sign joint declaration in Warsaw. Vatican: March—Pope John Paul II asks forgiveness for the mistreatment of Gypsies by Catholics. United Kingdom: September—A thousand police block access to the traditional Horsmonden Fair. 

2001 Germany: November—Romany writers meet in Cologne and agree to set up an international association. India: April—International Romani Union leaders visit the Romano Kher (Nehru House) in Chandigarh. Italy: November—Two hundred members of the National xxxiv • CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY 07_164_1Front.qxd 6/7/07 5:11 AM Page xxxiv Alliance march to protest new Roma housing in Rome. Macedonia: January—Magazine Roma Times begins publication. Poland: August—Permanent Romany Holocaust exhibition opened at Auschwitz. Russia: July—Thirty skinheads attack a Gypsy camp in Volgograd, killing two adults. Serbia: July—Anti-Roma graffiti appear in Panchevo and Surdulica. South Africa: Roma attend the World Conference against Racism, held in Durban. 

2002 Croatia: September—One hundred Croat parents prevent Roma children from entering a newly integrated school in the village of Drzimurec-Strelec. Finland: Drabibosko liin, the first ABC reader for Gypsies in Finland, published. July: International Romani Writers Association founded in Helsinki. France: October—Delegation representing a dozen Gypsy organizations meets minister of the interior to discuss slow process of caravan site provision. Hungary: June—A Rom—Laszlo Teleki—appointed as the state secretary for Roma affairs. Ireland: March—Housing Act criminalizes trespass by caravans. July—Traveller Movement pickets the Dail (Parliament) opposing the new Housing Act. Poland: May—Romany National Congress organizes an alternative International Romany Congress in Lodz. United Kingdom: November—Exhibition held of Gypsy children’s photos at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. 

2003 Croatia: October—Ms. Mukic, deputy ombudsman, criticized for condemning segregation in schools. Hungary: June—World Bank sponsors international conference on Roma in eastern Europe in Budapest. Ireland: Internal Security Bill proposes fines of 3,750 euros for Travelers who trespass. Switzerland: August—British Gypsies protest against UK policy at a UN conference in Geneva. United Kingdom: Fifteen-year old Irish Traveler Johnny Delaney killed in a racist attack in Liverpool. 5 November—Villagers in Sussex burn caravan and effigies of Gypsies. 

2004 France: 16 December—Council of Europe and the European Roma and Travellers Forum sign a partnership agreement in Strasbourg. Greece: More Gypsy settlements are cleared away near the Olympic Games venues in Athens. Spain: November—Gypsy organizations hire Saatchi and Saatchi to mount a campaign to change public attitudes toward Gypsies. United States: 8 November—Sen. Hillary Clinton presents the keynote address at the conference Plight of the Roma, held at Columbia University. CHRONOLOGY OF GYPSY HISTORY • 

 2005 Austria: 4 February—President Heinz Fischer attends a memorial ceremony for the four Roma killed in 1995. Bulgaria: 31 August—Authorities destroy 25 Roma houses in the Hristo Botev district of Sofia. Europe: 28 April—European Parliament adopts a resolution on Roma rights. 17 May—European Court of Human Rights opens the case against discrimination in the city of Ostrava, Slovakia. Finland: September—International Romany Music Festival held in Porvoo. German: 12 September—International Antiziganismus Conference held in Hamburg. Norway: 27 April— Gypsies take part in demonstration outside the Parliament in Oslo stressing need for education. Russia: January—Four hundred Roma leave the town of Iskitim after a pogrom. Slovakia: 17 March— United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination rules that Slovakia’s housing policies violate international law. Spain: 13 September—The flamenco musical Los Tarantos (based on Romeo and Juliet) opens in Madrid. United Kingdom: May— Sylvia Dunn stands for Parliament from Folkestone against Conservative Party leader Michael Howard. 25 July—Government announces £8 million fund for new and refurbished caravan sites. October—A Scottish parliamentary committee criticizes the government for not improving the quality of life of Gypsy and Traveler families.

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