Everything about Roma People totally explained
The
Roma (as a
noun, singular
Rom, plural
Roma; sometimes
Rrom,
Rroma,
Rromany people,
Romany people,
Romani people or
Romanies) belong to many ethnic groups that appear in literature and folklore, and are often referred to as
Gypsies or
Gipsies. The Roma have their origins in
India and are thus originally Hindu.
The Roma are still thought of as wandering
nomads in the popular imagination, despite the fact that today the vast majority live in permanent housing. This widely dispersed ethnic group lives across the world not only near
Southern and
Eastern Europe, but also in the
American continent and the
Middle East.
Population
Worldwide there's an estimated population of at least 15 million Roma. The official number of Roma people is disputed in many countries. Because many Roma often refuse to register their ethnic identity in official censuses for fear of discrimination, unofficial estimates are undertaken in efforts to reveal their true numbers. The largest population of Roma is found in the
Balkan peninsula; significant numbers also live in the
Americas, the former
Soviet Union,
Western Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa.
The Roma recognize divisions among themselves based in part on territorial, cultural and
dialectal differences. Some authorities recognize five main groups:
- Kalderash (also Kotlar(i) or Căldărari) are the most numerous, traditionally cauldron-making coppersmiths, from the Balkans, many of whom migrated to central Europe and North America;
- Gitanos or Ciganos (also Calé or Calones) mostly in the Iberian Peninsula, North Africa, and southern France; associated with entertainment;
- Sinti (also Sinta), known in German and Dutch as Zigeuner and in Italian as Zingari, mostly in Alsace and other regions of France and Germany (Other experts, and Sinti themselves, insist that Sinti are not a subgroup of Roma but rather a separate ethnic group which also had Indian origins and a history of nomadism);
- Romnichal (also Romanichal or Rom'nies) mainly in Britain and North America; and
- Erlides (also Yerlii or Arli) settled in southeastern Europe and Turkey.
Some groups, like the
Finnish Roma population (Kaalee) and the
Norwegian and Swedish Travellers, are hard to categorize. Each of these main divisions may be further divided into two or more subgroups distinguished by occupational specialization, territorial origin, or both. Some of these group names are
Bashaldé;
Churari;
Luri;
Ungaritza;
Lovari (
Lovara) from
Hungary;
Lyuli (Jughi, Multani, Luli, Mug(h)at) from
Central Asia;
Machvaya (Machavaya,
Machwaya, or
Macwaia) from
Serbia;
Romungro (
Modyar or
Modgar) from
Hungary and neighbouring
carpathian countries;
Xoraxai (
Horahane) from
Greece/
Turkey;
Boyash (Lingurari,
Ludar, Ludari, Rudari, or Zlătari) from
Romanian/
Moldovan
miners;
Ursari from Romanian/Moldovan
bear-trainers;
Argintari from
silversmiths;
Aurari from
goldsmiths;
Florari from
florists;, and
Lăutari from
singers.
Origins
The absence of a written history has meant that the origin and early history of the Roma people was long an enigma. As early as 200 years ago, cultural anthropologists hypothesised an Indian origin of the Roma based on linguistic evidence. Genetic information confirms this.
Although the
Nazis claimed that the Gypsies were not
Aryan, some members of the Gypsy Lore Society (established in 1888 in England) claimed that the Gypsies were the most ancient Aryans and "sought to protect them from mixing with non-Gypsy elements and from modernization...".
Linguistic evidence
Until the mid to late eighteenth century, theories of the origin of the Roma were mostly speculative. Then in 1782, Johann Christian Christoph Rüdiger published his research that pointed out the relationship between the
Romani language and
Hindustani. Subsequent work supported the hypothesis that Romani shared a common origin with the Indo-Aryan languages of Northern India, with Romani grouping most closely with
Sinhalese in a recent study.
The majority of historians accepted this as evidence of an Indian origin for the Roma, but some maintained that the Roma acquired the language through contact with Indian merchants.
Genetic evidence
Further evidence for the Indian origin of the Roma came in the late 1990s when it was discovered that Roma populations carried large frequencies of particular
Y chromosomes (inherited paternally) and
mitochondrial DNA (inherited maternally) that otherwise exist only in populations from
South Asia.
47.3% of Roma men carry Y chromosomes of
haplogroup H-M82 which is otherwise rare outside of the
Indian subcontinent. Mitochondrial
haplogroup M, most common in Indian subjects and rare outside Southern Asia, accounts for nearly 30% of Roma people. Moreover, a form of the inherited disorder
congenital myasthenia is carried by around 4% of the Roma population. This form of the disorder, caused by the 1267delG mutation, is otherwise only known in subjects of Indian ancestry The cause of the Roma
diaspora is unknown. However, the most probable conclusion is that the Roma were part of the military in
Northern India. When there were repeated raids by
Mahmud of Ghazni and these soldiers were defeated, they were moved west with their families into the
Byzantine Empire. This occurred between 1000 and 1050 CE. This departure date is assumed because, linguistically speaking, the Romany language is a New Indo-Aryan language (NIA)--it has only two
genders (masculine and feminine). Until around the year 1000, the Indo-Aryan languages, named
Middle Indo-Aryan (MIA), had three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter). By the turn of the 2nd millennium they changed into the NIA phase, losing the neuter gender. Most of the neuter nouns became masculine while a few feminine, like the neuter अग्नि (agni) in the Prakrit became the feminine आग (āg) in Hindi and
Jag in Romany. The parallels in grammatical gender evolution between Romany and other NIA languages is proposed to prove that the change occurred in the Indian subcontinent. It is therefore not considered possible that the Romas' ancestors left India prior to 1000 CE. They then stayed in the Byzantine Empire for several hundred years. However, the Muslim expansion, mainly made by the
Seljuk Turks, into the Byzantine Empire recommenced the movement of the Roma people.
The
Banjara people, numbering around 2,274,000 in
India, are Gypsies, who claim that they, too, are descended from the
Rajputs, and that many of their ancestors, left India through the
Himalayas and never returned. For this reason, the Banjara are considered related to the Romani people. Many historians believe that the Muslim conquerors of northern India took the Roma as
slaves and marched them home over the unforgiving terrain of Central Asia, taking great tolls on the population and thereby giving rise to such designations as the
Hindu Kush mountains of present-day
Pakistan and
Afghanistan. Mahmud of Ghazni reportedly took 500,000 prisoners during a
Turkish/
Persian invasion of
Sindh and
Punjab.
Others suggest the Roma were originally low-
caste Hindus recruited into an army of
mercenaries, granted
warrior caste status, and sent westward to resist
Islamic military expansion. In either case, upon arrival, they became a distinct community. Why the Roma didn't return to India, choosing instead to travel west into Europe, is an enigma, but may relate to military service under the Muslims.
Contemporary scholars have suggested that one of the first written references to the Roma, under the term
"Atsinganoi", (
Greek), dates from the Byzantine era during a time of
famine in the 9
th century. In 800 CE,
Saint Athanasia gave food to "foreigners called the Atsinganoi" near
Thrace. Later, in 803 CE,
Theophanes the Confessor wrote that Emperor
Nikephoros I had the help of the
"Atsinganoi" to put down a riot with their "knowledge of magic".
"Atsingani" was used to refer to itinerant fortune tellers,
ventriloquists and wizards who visited the Emperor
Constantine IX in the year 1054. The
hagiographical text,
The Life of St. George the Anchorite, mentions that the
"Atsingani" were called on by Constantine to help rid his forests of the wild animals which were killing his livestock. They are later described as sorcerers and evildoers and accused of trying to poison the Emperor's favorite hound.
In 1322 CE a
Franciscan monk named
Simon Simeonis described people resembling these "atsinganoi" living in
Crete and in 1350 CE
Ludolphus of Sudheim mentioned a similar people with a unique language whom he called
Mandapolos, a word which some theorize was possibly derived from the Greek word
mantes (meaning
prophet or
fortune teller).
Around 1360, an independent Romani
fiefdom (called the
Feudum Acinganorum) was established in
Corfu and became "a settled community and an important and established part of the economy."
By the
14th century, the Roma had reached the Balkans; by 1424 CE,
Germany; and by the
16th century,
Scotland and
Sweden. Some Roma
migrated from Persia through North Africa, reaching Europe via Spain in the
15th century. The two currents met in France. Roma began immigrating to the United States in colonial times, with small groups in
Virginia and
French Louisiana. Larger-scale immigration began in the 1860s, with groups of Romnichal from Britain. The largest number immigrated in the early 1900s, mainly from the Vlax group of Kalderash. Many Roma also settled in
Latin America.
When the Roma people arrived in Europe, curiosity was soon followed by hostility and
xenophobia. Roma were enslaved for five centuries in
Wallachia and
Moldavia until
abolition in 1864. Elsewhere in Europe, they were subject to
ethnic cleansing, abduction of their children, and
forced labor. During
World War II, the
Nazis murdered 200,000 to 800,000 Roma in an attempted
genocide known as the
Porajmos. They were marked for extermination and sentenced to forced labor and imprisonment in
concentration camps. They were often killed on sight, especially by the
Einsatzgruppen (essentially mobile killing units) on the Eastern Front.
In
Communist Eastern Europe, Roma experienced assimilation schemes and restrictions of cultural freedom. The Romany language and
Romani music were banned from public performance in
Bulgaria. In
Czechoslovakia, they were labeled a "socially degraded stratum," and Roma women were sterilized as part of a state policy to reduce their population. This policy was implemented with large financial incentives, threats of denying future social welfare payments, misinformation or after administering drugs (Silverman 1995;
Helsinki Watch 1991). An official inquiry from the Czech Republic, resulting in a report (December 2005), concluded that the Communist authorities had practised an assimilation policy towards Roma, which "included efforts by social services to control the birth rate in the Romani community" and that "the problem of sexual sterilisation carried out in the Czech Republic, either with improper motivation or illegally, exists", with new revealed cases up until 2004, in both the
Czech Republic and
Slovakia.
In the early 1990s, Germany deported tens of thousands of
illegal immigrants to Eastern Europe. Sixty percent of some 100,000 Romanian nationals deported under a 1992 treaty were Roma. In
Norway, many Roma were forcibly sterilized by the state until 1977.
Society and culture
The traditional Roma place a high value on the
extended family.
Virginity is essential in unmarried women. Both men and women often marry young; there has been controversy in several countries over the Roma practice of
child marriage. Roma law establishes that the man’s family must pay a
dowry to the bride's parents, but only traditional families still follow this rule.
Once married, the woman joins the husband's family where her main job is to tend to her husband's and her children's needs, and to take care of the in-laws as well. The power structure in the traditional Roma household has at its top the oldest man or grandfather, and men in general have more authority than women. As women get older, however, they gain respect and authority in the eyes of the community. Young wives begin gaining authority once they mother children.
Roma
social behaviour is strictly regulated by Hindu purity laws ("marime" or "marhime"), still respected by most Roma and among Sinti groups by the older generations. This regulation affects many aspects of life, and is applied to actions, people and things: parts of
the human body are considered impure: the
genital organs (because they produce emissions) as well as the rest of the lower body. Fingernails and toenails must be filed with an emery board, as cutting them with a clipper is a
taboo. Clothes for the lower body, as well as the clothes of
menstruating women, are washed separately. Items used for eating are also washed in a different place. Childbirth is considered impure, and must occur outside the dwelling place. The mother is considered impure for forty days after giving birth. Death is considered impure, and affects the whole family of the dead, who remain impure for a period of time. However, in contrast to the practice of
cremating the dead, Roma dead must be buried. Cremation and burial are both known from the time of the Rigveda, and both are widely practiced in Hinduism today (although the tendency for higher caste groups is to burn, for lower caste groups in South India to bury their dead). Some animals are also considered impure, for instance cats because they lick themselves and mix the impure outside with their pure inside .
Religion
Roma have usually adopted the dominant religion of the host country while often preserving aspects of their particular belief systems and indigenous religion and worship. Most Eastern European Roma are
Catholic,
Orthodox Christian or
Muslim. Those in western Europe and the United States are mostly
Roman Catholic or
Protestant. In Turkey, Egypt, and the southern Balkans, the Roma are split into Christian and Muslim populations.
Evangelical Romany churches exist today in every country where Roma are settled. The movement is particularly strong in France and Spain; there are more than one thousand Roma churches (known as "Filadelfia") in Spain, with almost one hundred in
Madrid alone. In Germany, the most numerous group is that of Polish Roma, having their main church in
Mannheim. Other important and numerous Romany assemblies exist in
Los Angeles,
California;
Houston,
Texas;
Buenos Aires,
Argentina; and
Mexico City. Some groups in Romania and
Chile have joined the
Seventh-day Adventist Church.
In the Balkans, the Roma of the
Republic of Macedonia,
Kosovo and
Albania have been particularly active in Islamic mystical brotherhoods (
Sufism). Muslim Roma immigrants to western Europe and America have brought these traditions with them.
Music
Roma music plays an important role in Eastern European countries such as Croatia, Serbia,
Montenegro, the Republic of Macedonia, Albania, Hungary,
Russia, and Romania, and the style and performance practices of Roma musicians have influenced European
classical composers such as
Franz Liszt and
Johannes Brahms. The
lăutari who perform at traditional Romanian weddings are virtually all Roma. Probably the most internationally prominent contemporary performers in the
lăutar tradition are
Taraful Haiducilor. Bulgaria's popular "wedding music," too, is almost exclusively performed by Roma musicians such as
Ivo Papasov, a virtuoso clarinetist closely associated with this genre. Many famous
classical musicians, such as the Hungarian
pianist Georges Cziffra, are Roma, as are many prominent performers of
manele.
Zdob şi Zdub, one of the most prominent
rock bands in
Moldova, although not Roma themselves, draw heavily on Roma music, as do
Spitalul de Urgenţă in Romania,
Goran Bregović in Serbia,
Darko Rundek in Croatia,
Beirut and
Gogol Bordello in the United States.
Another tradition of Roma music is the genre of the Gypsy
brass band, with such notable practitioners as
Boban Marković of Serbia, and the brass
lăutari groups
Fanfare Ciocărlia and
Fanfare din Cozmesti of Romania.
The distinctive sound of Roma music has also strongly influenced
bolero,
jazz, and
flamenco (especially
cante jondo) in Europe. European-style
Gypsy jazz is still widely practised among the original creators (the Roma People); one who acknowledged this artistic debt was guitarist
Django Reinhardt. Contemporary artists in this tradition known internationally include
Stochelo Rosenberg,
Biréli Lagrène,
Jimmy Rosenberg, and
Tchavolo Schmitt.
The Roma of Turkey have achieved musical acclaim from national and local audiences. Local performers usually perform for special holidays. Their music is usually performed on instruments such as the
darbuka and
gırnata. A number of nationwide best seller performers are said to be of Roma origin.
Language
Most Roma speak one of several dialects of
Romany, an
Indo-Aryan language. They also will often speak the languages of the countries they live in. Typically, they also incorporate
loanwords and
calques into Romani from the languages of those countries, especially words for terms that the Romani language doesn't have. The
Gitanos of Spain and the
Romnichal of the UK, have lost their knowledge of pure Romani, and respectively speak the
patois languages
Caló and
Angloromany.
There are independent groups currently working toward
standardizing the language, including groups in Romania, Serbia, Montenegro, the USA, and Sweden. Romany isn't currently spoken in India.
Etymology
Most Roma refer to themselves as
rom or
rrom, depending on the dialect. The word means "husband",
romni/
rromni meaning "wife", while the unmarried are named
čhavo ("boy") or
čhej ("girl"). There are no historical proofs to clarify the etymology of these words.
The word
Rom (plural
Roma) is a
noun,
Romany is an
adjective, while
Romanes is an
adverb (meaning, roughly, "in the Romany way"). The language is called the
Romany language or
Romanes. In the Romany language, the adjective is created by attaching
suffixes to the root that express gender and number: "Roman
i" (f. sing.), "Roman
o (m. sing.) and "Roman
e" (m. & f. pl.). Usually in
English only the feminine singular form is used, but they may also appear in the other forms. "Roman
es" is created by attaching the suffix
-es, usually employed for adverbs. The use of the word
Romanes in English as a noun is incorrect.
The English term
Gypsy (or
Gipsy) originates from the Greek word
Αιγύπτοι (
Aigyptoi), modern
Greek γύφτοι (
gyphtoi), in the erroneous belief that the Roma originated in
Egypt, and were exiled as punishment for allegedly harboring the
infant Jesus. If used, this
exonym should also be written with capital letter, to show that it's about an
ethnic group. As described in
Victor Hugo's novel
The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the medieval French referred to the Roma as "egyptiens". This
ethnonym isn't used by the Roma to describe themselves, and is often considered pejorative (as is the term "gyp", meaning "to cheat", a reference to the suspicion the Roma engendered). However, the use of "Gypsy" in
English is now so pervasive that many Roma organizations use the word
Gypsy in their own names. In
North America, the word "Gypsy" is commonly used as a reference to lifestyle or fashion, and not to the Roma ethnicity. The Spanish term
gitano and the French term
gitan may have the same origin.
In much of
continental Europe, Roma are known by names similar to the
Hungarian cigány, German and Dutch
zigeuner, Italian
zingari and Russian
цыганы (
tsygany). Early
Byzantium literature suggests that names now referring to Gypsies such as
tzigane,
zincali,
cigány, etc., are derived from the
Greek ατσίγγανοι (
atsinganoi, Latin
adsincani), applied to Roma during
Byzantine times, or from the Greek term
αθίγγανοι (
athinganoi) meaning literally 'untouchables', in reference to a 9th-century heretical sect that had been accused of practising magic and fortune-telling. In
modern Greek, aside from the singular term
Rom (
Ρομ), the terms
gyphtoi (
Greek:
γύφτοι) and
tsinganoi (
Greek:
τσιγγάνοι) are interchangeable and both are used when referring to the Roma.
Because many Roma living in France had come via
Bohemia, they were also referred to as
Bohémiens. This would later be adapted to describe the impoverished artistic lifestyle of
Bohemianism.
Outside Europe, Roma are referred to by more varied names, such as
Kowli (کولی) in Iran; Lambani, Labana Lambadi, Rabari or Banjara in India; Ghajar (غجر) or Nawar (نور') in
Arabic; and
tzo'anim צוענים in
Hebrew (after an ancient city in Egypt and the biblical verb
צען ṣā‛an, roaming).
There is no etymological connection between the name
Roma (ethnicity) and the city of
Rome,
ancient Rome,
Romania, the
Romanian people or the
Romanian language.
Persecutions
Historical persecution
The first and one of the most enduring persecutions against the Roma people was the enslaving of the Roma who arrived on the territory of the historical Romanian states of
Wallachia and
Moldavia, which lasted from the 14th century until the second half of the 19th century. Legislation decreed that all the Roma living in these states, as well as any others who would immigrate there, were slaves.
The arrival of some branches of the Roma people in
Western Europe in the 15th century was precipitated by the
Ottoman conquest of the
Balkans. Although the Roma themselves were
refugees from the conflicts in southeastern Europe, they were mistaken by the local population in the West, because of their foreign appearance, as part of the
Ottoman invasion (the German Reichstags at Landau and Freiburg in 1496-1498 declared the Roma as spies of the Turks). In Western Europe, this resulted in a violent history of persecution and attempts of ethnic cleansing until the modern era. As time passed, other accusations were added against local Roma (accusations specific to this area, against non-assimilated minorities), like that of bringing the plague, usually sharing their burden together with the local Jews.
Later in the
19th century, Roma immigration was forbidden on a racial basis in areas outside Europe, mostly in the English speaking world (in 1885 the United States outlawed the entry of the Roma) and also in some
Latin American states (in 1880
Argentina adopted a similar policy).. In Central Europe, the extermination in the
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was so thorough that the
Bohemian Romany language became totally extinct.
Assimilation
In the
Habsburg Monarchy under
Maria Theresia (1740-1780), a series of decrees tried to force the Roma to
sedentarize, removed rights to horse and wagon ownership (1754), renamed them as "New Citizens" and forced Roma boys into military service if they'd no trade (1761), forced them to register with the local authorities (1767), and prohibited marriage between Roma (1773). Her successor
Josef II prohibited the wearing of traditional Roma clothing and the use of the Romany language, punishable by flogging.
Other examples of forced assimilation include
Norway, where a law was passed in 1896 permitting the state to remove children from their parents and place them in state institutions. This resulted in some 1,500 Roma children being taken from their parents in the 20th century.
Contemporary issues
Central and Eastern Europe
The practice of placing Roma students in segregated schools or classes remains widespread in countries across Central and Eastern Europe. In
Hungary,
Bulgaria and
Romania, many Roma children have been channeled into all-Roma schools that offer inferior quality education and are sometimes in poor physical condition, or into segregated all-Roma or predominantly Roma classes within mixed schools. In Hungary and Bulgaria, many Roma children are sent to classes for pupils with learning disabilities, regardless of whether such classes are appropriate for the children in question or not. In Bulgaria, they're also sent to so-called "delinquent schools", where a variety of human rights abuses take place.
Roma in European population centers are often accused of crimes such as
pickpocketing. This is a regular justification for anti-Roma persecution. In 1899, the
Nachrichtendienst in Bezug auf die Zigeuner ("Intelligence Service Regarding the Gypsies") was set up in
Munich under the direction of Alfred Dillmann, cataloguing data on all Roma individuals throughout the German lands. It didn't officially close down until 1970. The results were published in 1905 in Dillmann’s
Zigeuner-Buch, that was used in the next years as justification for the
Porajmos. It described the Roma people as a "plague" and a "menace", but presented as
Gypsy crime almost exclusively trespassing and the theft of food. A UN study found that Roma in Eastern European countries such as
Bulgaria are arrested for robbery at a much higher rate than other groups.
Amnesty International and Roma groups such as the
Union Romani blame widespread police and government racism and persecution.
United Kingdom
In the
UK, "travellers" (referring to
Irish Travellers and
New Age Travellers as well as Roma) became a 2005
general election issue, with the leader of the
Conservative Party promising to review the
Human Rights Act 1998. This law, which absorbs the
European Convention on Human Rights into UK
primary legislation, is seen by some to permit the granting of retrospective
planning permission. Severe population pressures and the paucity of
greenfield sites have led to
travellers purchasing land, and setting up residential settlements very quickly, thus subverting the planning restrictions.
Travellers argued in response that thousands of retrospective planning permissions are granted in Britain in cases involving non-Roma applicants each year and that statistics showed that 90% of planning applications by Roma and travellers were initially refused by
local councils, compared with a national average of 20% for other applicants, disproving claims of preferential treatment favouring Roma.
They also argued that the root of the problem was that many traditional stopping-places had been barricaded off and that legislation passed by the previous Conservative government had effectively criminalised their community, for example by removing local authorities’ responsibility to provide sites, thus leaving the travellers with no option but to purchase unregistered new sites themselves.
Denmark
In
Denmark there was much controversy when the city of
Helsingør decided to put all Roma students in special classes in its
public schools. The classes were later abandoned after it was determined that they were discriminatory, and the Roma were put back in regular classes.
United States
Law enforcement agencies in the United States hold regular conferences on the Roma and similar nomadic groups. It is common to refer to the operators of certain types of travelling
con artists and
fortune-telling businesses as "Gypsies," although many are
Irish Travellers or not members of any particular nomadic ethnic group.
Roma people by geographic area
Central and Eastern Europe
A significant proportion of the world's Roma live in
Central and
Eastern Europe, often in
squatter communities with very high
unemployment, while only some are fully integrated in the society. However, in some cases—notably the Kalderash clan in Romania, who work as traditional
coppersmiths—they have prospered. Some Roma families choose to immigrate to Western Europe now that many of the former Communist countries like the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria have entered the European Union and free travel is permitted. During the 1970s and 1980s many Roma from former Jugoslavia migrated to Western European countries, especially to Austria, Germany and Sweden.
The current and historical situation of Roma in the region differs from country to country.
Hungary
The number of Roma people in Hungary is disputed. In the 2001 census only 190,000 people called themselves Roma, but sociological estimates give much higher numbers (about 5%-10% of the total population). Since World War II, the number of Roma has increased rapidly, multiplying sevenfold in the last century. Today every fifth or sixth newborn is Roma. Estimates based on current demographic trends project that in 2050, 15-20% of the population (1.2 million people) will be Roma.
Turkey
Roma in Turkey are known as
Chingene,
Chingen or
Chingan (Mostly),
Chingit (West Black Sea region),
Dom (East Anatolia),
Posha (East Anatolia),
Abdal (Kahramanmaraş),
Roman (Izmir) . Estimates of the population vary from 300.000 to 5 million, dispersed all across the country.
Blacksmithing and other handicrafts are the Roma's specialities.
Spain
Roma in Spain are generally known as
Gitanos and tend to speak
Caló which is basically
Andalusian Spanish with a large number of Romany
loan words. Estimates of the Spanish Gitano population range between 600,000 and 800,000 with the Spanish government estimating between 650,000 and 700,000. Semi-nomadic
Quinqui consider themselves apart from the Gitanos.
Portugal
The Roma in
Portugal are known as
Ciganos, and their presence goes back to the second half of the 15th century. Early on, due to their socio-cultural difference and nomadic style of live, the Ciganos were the object of fierce discrimination and persecution.
The number of
Ciganos in Portugal is difficult to estimate, since there are no official statistics about race or ethnic categories. According to data from
Council of Europe's
European Commission against Racism and Intolerance there are about 50,000 to 60,000 spread all over the country.
The majority of the
Ciganos don't have today a nomad style of life, rather concentrating themselves in the most important urban centers. This population is characterised by very low levels of educational qualification, social exclusion and residential and housing difficulties (mainly living in degraded ghettos). The
Ciganos are the ethnic group that the
Portuguese most reject and discriminate against, and are also targets for discriminatory practices from the State administration, namely at a local level, finding persistent difficulties in the access to job placement, housing and social services, as well as in the relation to police forces.
France
Roma in France are generally known as
Gitans,
Tsiganes,
Romanichels (slightly pejorative),
Bohémiens, or
Gens du voyage ("travellers").
Finland
Roma in Finland are known as
mustalaiset and
romanit. Currently, there are approximately 10,000 Roma living in Finland, mostly in the
Helsinki Metropolitan Area. In Finland, the Roma people usually wear their traditional dress in everyday life.
The United Kingdom
Roma in
England are generally known as
Romnichals or Romany Gypsies, while their
Welsh equivalent are known as
Kale. They have been known in the UK since at least the early 16th century and may number up to 120,000. There is also a sizable population of East European Roma who immigrated into the UK in the late 1990s/early 2000s, and also after EU expansion in 2004.
There are records of Roma people in
Scotland in the early 16th century, the first recorded reference to "the Egyptians" would appear to be in 1492, in the reign of
James IV, when an entry in the Book of the Lord High Treasurer records a payment "to Peter Ker of four shillings, to go to the king at Hunthall, to get letters subscribed to the 'King of Rowmais'". Two days after, a payment of twenty pounds was made at the king's command to the messenger of the 'King of Rowmais'.
It is difficult to be clear about the numbers of Roma today in Scotland, according to the
Scottish Traveller Education Programme, there are probably about 20,000 Scottish Gypsies/Travellers.. Although it's unknown how many of this number are Roma and it's recognised that Gypsies and Travellers in Scotland are not one homogenous group, but consist of several groups each with different histories and cultures, and could consist of many unrelated ethnic groups.
From this, the term "gypsy" in the United Kingdom has come to mean, in common culture, anyone who travels with no fixed abode (regardless of ethnic group). This use of the term is synonymous with "pikey", which is seen by many as a derogatory term. In some parts of the UK they're commonly called "tinkers" from their work as tinsmiths.
North America
The first Roma group arriving in the
North America was the
Romnichels, at the beginning of the 19th century. In the second half of the century, the immigration of Roma groups from
Eastern Europe began, especially from
Romania, the ancestors of the majority of the contemporary local Roma population. Among them were
Romany-speaking groups like the
Kalderash,
Machvaya,
Lovari,
Churari, and even linguistically
Romanianized groups, like the
Boyash (Ludari). They arrived after their liberation from slavery in 1840-1850, directly from Romania, or after living some years in neighbouring states (the
Russian Empire,
Austria-Hungary, and
Serbia). The
Bashalde arrived from what is now Slovakia around this same time. This immigration decreased drastically during the
Communist regime in Eastern Europe, in the second half of the 20th century, but resumed in the 1990s, after the fall of Communism. Roma organizations currently estimate that there are about one million Roma in the
USA and 80,000 in
Canada. Initially, the presence of Roma in Brazil was explained by the
Portuguese Inquisition persecuting the
Ciganos of
Portugal by exiling them overseas. Now there are at least 60,000 Roma there, although the exact number can't be known. Most of them are Kalderash, Macwaia, Rudari, Horahane, and Lovara.
There is a sizeable population of Roma people in Chile. They are widely and easily recognized and they continue to hold on to their traditions and language and many continue to live semi-nomadic lifestyles traveling from city to city and living in small tented communities. A domestically produced television series (a soap opera) called Romane was based around the Roma people, it went into depth showing their lifestyles, ideas and even featured the Chilean born actors speaking in the Romany language with subtitles in Spanish occasionally.
The Middle East
A community related closely to the Roma and living in Israel and the Palestinian territories and in neighboring countries are known as Dom people. Before 1948, there was an Arabic-speaking Dom community in Jaffa, whose members were noted for their involvement in street theatre and circus performances. They are the subject of the play "The Gypsies of Jaffa" (Hebrew: הצוענים של יפו), by the late Nissim Aloni, considered among Israel's foremost playwrights, and the play came to be considered a classic of the Israeli theatre (see
(External Link
)). Like most other Jaffa Arabs, much of this community was uprooted in the face of the Israeli advance in April 1948, and its descendants are assumed to be presently living in the Gaza Strip; it's unknown to what degree they still preserve a separate Domari identity. Another Dom community is known to exist in East Jerusalem. In October 1999, the nonprofit organisation "Domari: The Society of Gypsies in Jerusalem" was established by Amoun Sleem to advocate on this community's behalf. (External Link
), (External Link
) In neighboring Egypt, the Roma population is estimated at 1,080,000 individuals, 234,000 of whom are counted as Dom.
Some Eastern European Roma are known to have arrived in Israel in the late 1940s and early 1950s, being from Bulgaria or having intermarried with Jews in the post-WWII Displaced Persons camps or, in some cases, having pretended to be Jews when Zionist representatives arrived in those camps. The exact numbers of these Roma living in Israel are unknown, since such individuals tended to assimilate into the Israeli Jewish environment. According to several recent accounts in the Israeli press, some families preserve traditional Romany lullabies and a small number of Romany expressions and curse words, and pass them on to generations born in Israel who, for the most part, are Jews and speak Hebrew. The Roma community in Israel has grown since the 1990s, as some Roma immigrated there from the former Soviet Union.
In Iraq, the Qawliya people are a small Roma minority group who trace their history back to Spain.
Fictional representations of Roma
Further Information
Get more info on 'Roma People'.
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