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Recalling the Roma on Days of Remembrance, 2017: Jesus Between the Conflict on Integration

She was misunderstood and used by both sides. She was put on trial. She became excluded from the group.  Papusza was her name, and it all started with her wanting to learn how to read and write. Her poetry, exposed to outsiders by a Polish poet, Jorzy Ficowski, risked her identity and acceptance from both her Roma community as well as European society. (Fonseca 8) After her poems were published in, “Problemy” by Ficowski, Gypsy envoys threatened her for doing the unforgettable­‑- collaborating with a gadjo, the outsiders. (Fonseca 8)  The story of Papusza told by Isabel Fonseca, in her book, Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey “, is an example of an individual caught in conflict between the European government an the Roma community.  The European government wanted a homogeneous society while the Roma resisted not only the idea of conformity for themselves but conformity to any outside governance that required assimilation to itself.  The story of Papusza, prompts me to ask three primary questions.  First, does this conflict facilitate a dis-functional co-dependent relationship between The Roma and European society?  Second, what is the cause of the Roma’s resistance to integration despite numerous attempts historically and currently by the EU to encourage, force, or manipulate Roma to integrate? And third, how can this conflict be dissolved peaceably.  I am interested in asking these questions because I want to clarify if the Roma’s resistance is a cue that signifies the hope of liberation, or if both Roma and EU cultures, are in actuality co-dependently dis-functional.

 Is integration key to resolving Roma and EU conflict? If the Roma’s resistance could act as a contributing factor to dis-function, rather than a cause for freedom, it could operationally strengthen, rather than dissolve, over time, this unproductive co-dependent relationship.  According to Isabel Fonseca, post-war Poland Socialist wanted a nationally and ethically homogenous state. (Fonseca 7) During this time, reformers believed that measures taken to achieve homogeneity would improve the difficult lives of the Gypsies and education was the only hope for their emancipation. From this perspective, the reformers held that settlement was the key to facilitate education to the Roma people.  (Fonseca 7-8) If education the key to integrating the Roma cultures into the European Union’s cultural identity is settlement the best way to facilitate education to the Roma?

In a past interview, by Euronews’ Audrey Tilve, Corinne Torrekens, an expert on ethnic minority integration from the Université Libre de Bruxelles, says that France’s Interior Minister recent comments raised a question again as to if the Roma people have the ability and the will to integrate into society and adopt conventional lifestyles and respect the rules. (EURONEWS) This current concern reflects a long history of European Society trying to affect the settlement and integration of Roma people.  For example, in 1952, The Great Halt occurred when travel of the Roma was finally stopped; however, this Act, was perceived then and now contemporarily by many to have imposed a new culture of dependency. (Fonseca 7) Around the 1960’s there was an opposite legislative trend in the West, one under this conviction that was enforcing nomadism. (Fonseca 8)  In England, however, settlement was the goal everywhere. By 1968, the Caravan Sites Act aimed to settle Gypsies (this Act is acknowledge by many historians as a form of population control know as designation) in which large areas of the country was declared off limits to the travellers. (Fonseca 8) The issue of integration still propels discourses as well as governmental action that centers on the ideology of homogeneity by means of integration, education and settlement.  For example, currently in some parts of the EU social housing is made available to the Roma to provide a permanent (or fixed) place to stay, yet national funding is limited. (EURONEWS)  To combat the problem of education in Slovakia and Romania of keeping Roma kids in school, mediators and social workers that provide individual support over long periods of time is the proposed solution to convince Roma families and their kids to stay in school and get plugged into the system. (EURONEWS)

Can the integration of Roma into EU society change the Roma’s historical negative demographic status?  In the past, a popular consensus of the Roma was that the source of livelihood of the Gypsies was preying on the rest of society. (Fonseca 15) Fonseca relays that two common stereotypes the Roma are labeled with are that they are liars and thieves. Fonseca records one in her book, which says, “Gypsies lie, they lie a lot. People long to tell what they imagine you want to hear. They want to amuse you. They want to amuse themselves. Gypsies are Scapegoats. Gypsies brought the plague”. (Fonseca 15) Another example of the result of a negative stereotype of the Roma began in the 14th century France in which they were blamed by Collin De Plancy for the plague. In consequence, they fled into the forest and remained there 50 years. (Fonseca 271) From these examples, European Government reflects an attitude of ambivalence towards the Gypsies. A picture is painted of the EU’s active coercion of the Roma to conform and reflect their standards of socially accepted practice, while at the same time, their blaming and name calling provoked resistance from the Roma and affected their reactive behavior to run away. From this consensus it appears that the EU creates dis respectful opportunities for the Roma to resistance and furthers blame them for their resistance producing dis-functional relations.  This cycle, appears to be reoccurring, in which this type of  “reactive” resistance chosen by the Roma seems to re-produce dis-functional relations rather than freedom by either respectful independence or inter-relational integration with the EU. 

What if the Roma do not want to be integrated? One characteristic of the Roma is that they are travelers. (EURONEWS)  In addition, not much can be known about their culture, because they intentionally do not want it to be known. Their story is one of being forced, coerced, or tricked in different ways to integrate, and settle. The Gypsies were the only group apart from the Jews who where slated for extermination and between 1942 and 1944, 36,000 gypsies lost their lives in which punishment or death was inflicted because of their racial difference. (Fonseca 243) a whole 21,000 Gypsies were murdered at Auschwitz alone. (Fonseca 241) Under the name of social deviants, the Roma were included in laws that were designed primarily for the institutionalized handicapped and the Roma were the first victims of mass killing. (Fonseca 255) The Roma were considered “those first judged to lives unworthy of life” along with the chronically ill, the mentally ill, and physically handicapped. (Fonseca 261-262) In 1940 they were ordered to death by gas. One story Fonseca relays, is the time Josef Mengele, a Nazi doctor, took all the children in the camps he was overseeing, who that trusted him as a “doctor, and drove them himself to the death chamber so he could be sure to collect all their body parts to study and analyze. (Fonseca 267)  This story of betrayal is so gruesome and morally corrupt, it is just one of the reasons that many say cause the difficulty of resolution in the Roma culture. Another problem presented in understanding the Roma’s resistance to integration and assimilation is the issue of their absence in literature of the Holocaust (Fonseca 255) And yet another impasse and contributing factor, is the concept in Roma culture of not having a history as an act of resistance. For example, among Roma, forgetting does not imply complacency it is rather an act of defiance. (Fonseca 275) This concept is hard to grasp from a Western American perspective. Here, many agree, that if you cannot remember, and do not have a record, how can you present evidence or proof to defend yourself?  And, how can a cultural identity grow without a recorded history? Is it possible that the trauma experienced by the Roma during the Holocaust reinforces and perpetuates a co-dependent dis-functional relationship between the Roma and the European society?

 Although this question may never be empirically answered, Both the EU and Roma people could choose to move forward from this dark past.  Integration, however, of the Roma is still a persistent and pervasive desire in the EU.  For example, according to recent reports, the EU wants to support integration and is currently funding 50 billion Euros for social inclusion projects. (EURONEWS) What is lacking and who is not participating?  According Corinne Torrekens’ interview, she says that resources and local authorities are on the front lines but at the National and Federal level, support is lacking. (EURONEWS) For example,  in Belgium, there is a lack of provision to help the Roma who have decided to “settle”, but they are living in precarious and unsafe housing without sufficient resources. (EURONEWS)

As issues of education, integration and settlement are employed in discourses and government policy in the historical past and current affairs, there are still a myriad of new questions that arise.  Such as, is it possible to preserve Roma’s cultural identity during a process of integration?  But, first, to return back the two primary questions posed, can the Roma’s resistance act to reinforce rather than dissolve a dis-functional and co-dependent relations to the EU and what is the cause of the Roma’s resistance to integration; We can consider two possible answers. The first answer is yes. Yes, “reactive”, rather than, “independent “ resistance can facilitate, rather than, dissolve co-dependent dis-fictional relations. And, second, several seeming causes for the Roma to “re-actively” resist integration could be related to their past trauma as a people targeted by the Nazis during the Holocaust. It could be their lack of recorded historical records that could help them establish a clear stand and direction as a people. And, it could be that the EU’s position of ambivalence towards the Roma people that frustrate rather than help them in their efforts to assist the Roma to integrate. Based on these current insights, Will representatives of the EU continue to display ambivalence in their efforts towards integration for the Roma? Such ambivalence like the one raised by Corinne Torrekens when she emphasized from the comments made by France’s Interior Minister, as to if the Roma had the ability to integrate. By asking if the Roma have the ability, it only recalls the historical trauma in which the Nazis’ also questioned the Roma’s ability, and in doing so, deemed them dis-able. Resulting in the Nazis sentencing them as unworthy of life.  Discourses like these seem to only confuse efforts of help to the Roma. Also, will representatives of the EU’s stop their ambivalent position by pushing their view on how the Roma should be integrated, but not providing the necessary funding needed for such a cause? The Roma don’t need to “re-actively” keep resisting these impossible demands to these measures, but rather independently resist what they cannot change and work on what they can.  For now, we can consider from these examples, the potential damage caused by taking a position of ambivalence and also the unsuccessful position of being reactive rather than taking independent responsibility.  In theory this may seem too simplistic and inadequate to base a plan of action on. But, in truth, we can know that by faith, if any nation or people position themselves under God, and believe in His Son, Jesus, He alone promises freedom to those caught up in chains of oppression and dis-function. (Bible) (Psalms 33:8, 10-12)

God calls us show love, not ambivalence toward neighbor, as well, take responsibility for our own actions rather than react to our circumstances. On this, Days of Remembrance, 2017, United States President, Donald J. Trump, in his recent proclamation, asks the American people to honor the Victims of the Holocaust, April 23 through April 30, 2017. (Trump)  In Trump’s statement he acknowledges both the European Roma and Jewry as victims to be honored saying,

The Holocaust was the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and attempted annihilation of European Jewry by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. By the end of World War II, six million Jews had been brutally slaughtered. The Nazis also targeted other groups for persecution and murder, including Roma (Gypsies), persons with mental and physical disabilities, Soviet prisoners of war, Jehovah's Witnesses, Slavs and other peoples of Europe, gays, and political opponents. (Trump)

As I write this, my contemplation is that the only hope adequate enough to resolve embedded traumas and issues on both personal and national levels is the only plan of action that has been historically proven most successful. Jesus. Jesus is our hope and only way into God presence and blessing. His promise of freedom from death, pain, fear, and oppression is true for all people and nations that accept and continue in His truth. (Bible) (John 8:51)

Original publication: February 18, 2014. Updated on April 25, 2017. 

Vanessa M. is one of the founders at

BeLoved Christian Journal and Community, and

contributes weekly articles for our online publication.

Vanessa is also a big supporter for the arts. She is currently

the Media Manager for the news and events organization,

Art Performative, and affiliate art index, Space for Art.

To learn more about Vanessa or to request her services,

email her at vanessajm84@gmail.com

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Works Cited

Bible, The. "Psalms 33:8,10-12." Vers. King James. 2013. Bible Gateway. 25 April 2017 <https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalms+33%3A8-12&version=NKJV>.

EURONEWS. Helping Roma Families to Integrate. 2014 <http://www.euronews.com/2013/10/02/helping-roma-families-to-integrate>.

Fonseca, Isabel. Bury Me Standing The Gypsies and Their Journey. New York: Vintage Books / Random House Inc., 1995.

Trump, Donald J. "DAYS OF REMEMBRANCE OF VICTIMS OF THE HOLOCAUST, 2017." April 2017. Facebook. April 2017 <https://www.facebook.com/DonaldTrump/posts/10159027593260725>.

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