Tuesday, December 13, 2011

CZECH REPUBLIC

CZECH REPUBLIC: TWO RACISTS TRY TO MURDER ROMANI FAMILY, VICTIMS CHARGED FOR DEFENDING THEMSELVES


FROM ROMEA.CZ

http://www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=detail&detail=2007_3010

PHOTO: CHRIS TOGNERI

http://travel.spectator.sme.sk/articles/60/project_svinia_getting_roma_involved

In August of this year, a pogrom was attempted on the Červeňák family in the town of Nýrsko na Klatovsku. Seven people have been charged in relation to the incident so far. Two aggressive ultra-right extremists chased the Romani family's children through the streets, burst into their apartment and attacked them with a baseball bat. The family, understandably, defended themselves. In addition to charging the skinheads, criminal justice authorities have now filed charges against some of the Romani family members over the incident.

"It is very strange that charges have also been filed against those who were merely defending themselves against this brutal, racist attack. We will be following every detail of the course of this trial," Zdeněk Ryšavý, executive director of the ROMEA association, told news server Romea.cz.

Police did not initiate prosecutions in the case until now, four months after the crime was committed, reportedly because it took them that long to obtain expert witness evaluations as to the seriousness of the injuries suffered by those involved in the skirmish. "We have charged two men with committing racially motivated violence against members of a particular group and another five with rioting," Antonín Šmíd, head of the criminal investigation police in Klatovy, told the daily Právo. Should they be found guilty, the racists face up to three years in prison. Their five Romani victims could receive up to two years.

The Červeňák family have lived in harmony with their neighbors for 30 years in Nýrsko, but in August the otherwise placid atmosphere on Tyršovo street was transformed into a bloody battlefield. The two racists attacked the Červeňák home armed with a baseball bat. After almost half an hour of brawling, the perpetrators fled after receiving a thrashing. However, they subsequently sent a message to the Romani family that they would avenge themselves and that everyone in the family would "croak". The Červeňáks, fearing for their lives, locked themselves in their home and haven't left it.

"We send a white girl to do our shopping. We are terrified. We don't know what might happen," Anna Červeňáková said in August. "It would never have occurred to me that they would choose to attack us. We have no disputes with anyone, we behave respectably, we get along with everyone here. We are not brawlers or criminals, we go to work normally like everyone else," the 60-year-old Romani woman added.

The attack happened at around 5 PM. "The children ran in from outside and said skinheads were chasing them. A few moments later the doorbell rang. My niece opened the window and a 100-kg hulk with a shaved head shook his baseball bat at her from the street. She quickly shut the window and then we heard banging on the door," Miroslav Červeňák recalls. He summoned all his courage and opened the door to find out what was going on.

"I was punched the minute I opened the door. Then they grabbed me and dragged me about 50 meters. I shouted for help. The only thing I can remember is lying on the ground unable to breathe. They had wrapped a sweatshirt around my throat and were pulling it tighter and tighter. I totally lost consciousness," the 29-year-old man recalls of those dramatic moments. His mother was the first to come to his aid.

"I grabbed the baseball bat out of the one skinhead's hand and struck the one who was strangling my son on the spine. It didn't help. Míra was completely white, his eyes were rolled back in his head and he wasn't moving. I was afraid they would kill him. I started to scream hysterically," Anna Červeňáková described the sequence of events.

The family's grandchildren woke up Anna's husband, who also joined the skirmish. "I jumped on the more aggressive brawler and twisted his leg with all my strength. That helped and he let our boy go. He shouted at us that we were 'black swine' and that they had come to kill us," Vojtěch Červeňák said. By then other members of the family were on the scene and the balance of forces began to shift. "As soon as I regained consciousness, I took the baseball bat from Mom and struck the assailant who had strangled me several times in the head," Miroslav Červeňák said.

Both assailants fled in the end, with the words "fuck 'em". The daily Právo reports that they got into an accident while leaving town. The driver was unable to control the vehicle and ran into a concrete barrier. It was later determined that he had almost two parts per mille alcohol in his blood.

Local daily Klatovský deník reported that the perpetrator who had been hit with the baseball bat on the upper part of his body ended up in the hands of physicians. "Police called us to the scene of the accident. A man born in 1988 was transported with head injuries to Klatovská Hospital for surgery," said Lenka Ptáčková, regional emergency medical services spokesperson.

"My son is home from the hospital. I am unable to explain what happened. I have never heard of my son having any problems with Romani people, he definitely is not a racist," said the mother of the injured man. She herself is engaged in a rather important position in the district.
František Kostlán, translated by Gwendolyn Albert ROMEA

Monday, December 12, 2011

THE BEAT GOES ON. TURIN ITALY

FROM TOLERANCE.CA

http://www.tolerance.ca/Article.aspx?ID=125570&L=en

Turin - We live in the age of digital technology and global communications, but we have not moved on from the medieval "witch hunt" mentality. A 16-year-old girl reported to the police in Turin that she had been raped on Wednesday evening.

BY ROBERTO MALINI


The young woman told the authorities that she was approached by two Roma men who forced her into a doorway near the Vallette district.

The girl told them that one of the two Roma men raped her. In the wake of this outrage, dozens of people in Turin organized a candlelight vigil in support of the girl, an event that quickly turned into a racist demonstration. The demonstrators' anger soon turned into ethnic hatred and they decided to take action. The racist crowd made its way to the Roma camp situated near Cascina Continassa, where they broke in with iron bars and set fire to the huts, cars and caravans. The demonstrators then deliberately hindered the fire fighters' attempts to extinguish the flames.

Last night, however, the young woman admitted she had been lying and she had not been raped at all. The authorities have not identified or brought charges against the racists who destroyed the Roma settlement.

December 11th, 2011
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Remember Turin is the home of "The Shroud". 
Morgan

Saturday, December 10, 2011

EUGENICS

Thousands Sterilized, a State Weighs Restitution

BY KIM SEVERSON

PHOTO ANDY MCMILLAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES.
The Eugenics Board of North Carolina sterilized Charles Holt when he was a teenager.
trailer floor. They are the stark facts of his state-ordered sterilization.

The reports begin when he was barely a teenager, fighting at school and masturbating openly. A social worker wrote that he and his parents were of “rather low mentality.” Mr. Holt was sent to a state home for people with mental and emotional problems. In 1968, when he was ready to get out and start life as an adult, the Eugenics Board of North Carolina ruled that he should first have a vasectomy.
A social worker convinced his mother it was for the best.

“We especially emphasized that it was a way of protecting Charles in case he were falsely accused of having fathered a child,” the social worker wrote to the board.

Now, along with scores of others selected for state sterilization — among them uneducated young girls who had been raped by older men, poor teenagers from large families, people with epilepsy and those deemed to be too “feeble-minded” to raise children — Mr. Holt is waiting to see what a state that had one of the country’s most aggressive eugenics programs will decide his fertility was worth.
Although North Carolina officially apologized in 2002 and legislators have pressed to compensate victims before, a task force appointed by Gov. Bev Perdue is again wrestling with the state’s obligation to the estimated 7,600 victims of its eugenics program.

The board operated from 1933 to 1977 as an experiment in genetic engineering once considered a legitimate way to keep welfare rolls small, stop poverty and improve the gene pool.

Thirty-one other states had eugenics programs. Virginia and California each sterilized more people than North Carolina. But no program was more aggressive.

Only North Carolina gave social workers the power to designate people for sterilization. They often relied on I.Q. tests like those done on Mr. Holt, whose scores reached 73. But for some victims who often spent more time picking cotton than in school, the I.Q. tests at the time were not necessarily accurate predictors of capability. For example, as an adult Mr. Holt held down three jobs at once, delivering newspapers, working at a grocery store and doing maintenance for a small city.

Wealthy businessmen, among them James Hanes, the hosiery magnate, and Dr. Clarence Gamble, heir to the Procter & Gamble fortune, drove the eugenics movement. They helped form the Human Betterment League of North Carolina in 1947, and found a sympathetic bureaucrat in Wallace Kuralt, the father of the television journalist Charles Kuralt.

A proponent of birth control in all forms, Mr. Kuralt used the program extensively when he was director of the Mecklenburg County welfare department from 1945 to 1972. That county had more sterilizations than any other in the state.

Over all, about 70 percent of the North Carolina operations took place after 1945, and many of them were on poor young women and racial minorities. Nonwhite minorities made up about 40 percent of those sterilized, and girls and women about 85 percent.

The program, while not specifically devised to target racial minorities, affected black Americans disproportionately because they were more often poor and uneducated and from large rural families.
“The state owes something to the victims,” said Governor Perdue, who campaigned on the issue.

But what? Her five-member task force has been meeting since May to try to determine what that might be. A final report is due in February.

This week, the task force set some priorities. Money was the most important thing to offer victims, followed by mental health services.

How much to pay is a vexing question, and what North Carolina does will be closely watched by officials in other states. In a period of severe budget cuts and layoffs, money for eugenics victims can be a hard sell to legislators.

States began practicing eugenics in earnest in the United States in the 1920s and ’30s, driven by a philosophy of social engineering once so popular that President Woodrow Wilson, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. of the Supreme Court and Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, were ardent supporters.

Before most of the programs were closed down, more than 60,000 people nationwide had been sterilized by state order.

The reasons were chilling, reports from state records and interviews with survivors and researchers show.

There was a 14-year-old girl deemed low-performing and “oversexed” who came from a home with poor housekeeping standards. A man who raped his daughter at 12 signed her sterilization consent when she was 16 and pregnant. A mother of five was deemed to have a low I.Q.

Victims began filing a handful of lawsuits in the 1970s, but outrage has been slow to build. In 2002, The Winston-Salem Journal ran a series of articles on eugenics, prompting official apologies and initial legislative efforts aimed at compensating victims.

But nothing came of it until Governor Perdue, a Democrat, took up the cause. She has vowed to put money in the 2012 budget. The House speaker, Thom Tillis, a Republican, said in October that he, too, would work on a bill to compensate victims.

But how much to include? Is $20,000 per victim, a figure suggested by some, enough?
“How can you quantify how much a baby is worth to people?” asked Charmaine Fuller Cooper, executive director of the North Carolina Justice for Sterilization Victims Foundation, which is financed by the state. “It’s not about quantifying the unborn child, it’s about the choices that were taken away.”

The issues go deeper than just a dollar amount. The task force has to decide whether money should go only to those living or to the estates of the dead, whether a tubal ligation is worth more than a vasectomy.

One variable is how many people will actually sign up to get the money. The state estimates that about 3,000 victims of state-mandated sterilizations may still be alive. Of those, 68 have been verified in state records. But not all sterilizations were done through the state board. Counties had programs, as did private doctors who were part of the eugenics movement. Those people will not qualify for state compensation, Ms. Fuller Cooper said.

Still, her office in Raleigh receives about 200 calls a month. People who suspect they were part of the state program must send her a notarized letter. Then, their names have to be found among eugenics board records stored in dozens of cardboard boxes in the basement of the state archives. People have died or moved or use different names. It is needle-in-a-haystack work.

Some critics of the effort say the state is not working hard enough. Victims and others argue that names in the archives could be matched to drivers’ records.

But the state cannot just send letters to people’s houses suggesting they might have been sterilized against their will, Ms. Fuller Cooper said. Medical records are private. Husbands or adopted children could find out a long-buried secret. Old wounds could be laid open again.

Even people who call her office sometimes hang up abruptly when a spouse approaches, wanting to keep their terrible secret unless money is on the table.

“Until folks know what the state’s going to do, people aren’t going to take the risk and come forward,” she said.

One woman who submitted her name fears it will become public. In a recent interview in her small home in Lexington, N.C., she said she would be embarrassed if her co-workers at a local hospital knew her story.

Now 62, she was adopted but sent to a state school at 7 because her parents thought she was mentally deficient. She remembers being told as a teenager that she was getting an appendectomy. When she was 27 and started having uterine trouble, a doctor requested her records and discovered that she had been sterilized in an operation that had been botched, her medical records show.

“I tell you what,” she said. “I about hit the floor.”

She went to her mother, who said she was going to tell her before she got married. Welfare would have ended if she had not consented, her mother said.

She did marry, and her husband, who has since died, accepted the fact that they could not have children. Still, she was forever changed.

“I see people with babies and I think how much I would have loved to have a young one,” she said. “It should have been my choice whether I wanted to have a baby or not. You just feel like you were held back, like you never had any say in your life.”

She figures what she went through is worth at least $50,000 or $100,000. “Maybe I could retire,” she said.

Mr. Holt still remembers that October day. He thought he was getting an examination so he could leave the state home. He said he did not know he was giving up his chance to be a parent.

“The doctor told me I couldn’t go home unless I had an operation done,” said Mr. Holt, who was 19 at the time. “When I woke up I tried to walk, and I said: ‘This ain’t right. I don’t even remember them shaving me down there.’ ”

He went on to marry and divorce. Now recovering from a stroke and surviving on disability payments, he lives with relatives in a tidy trailer park in the middle of the state.

He thinks maybe $30,000 would be enough. Others want more. Elaine Riddick, 57, who also lives in Atlanta, was sterilized in 1967. She was 14 and had gotten pregnant from a rape. Social workers persuaded her illiterate grandmother to sign the consent form with an X.

She has become the most vocal proponent of payment, suing the state for $1 million. Her case was appealed to the United States Supreme Court, which refused to hear it.

For Nial Ramirez, 65, who was sterilized at 18 after she gave birth to her daughter, no amount could make it right.

A social worker from the Washington County Department of Public Welfare suggested that she get sterilized. Mrs. Ramirez said she did not understand that the procedure was permanent and thought she had no choice.

“They told me that my brothers and sisters were going to be in the streets all because of you,” she said. “It’s either sign the paper or mama’s checks get cut off.”

In 1973, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union, she became the first person to file a lawsuit against the state eugenics board. It ended with a $7,000 settlement from the doctor, she said.
Now in a small apartment surrounded by the sound of the television and some of the 200 dolls she has collected through her lifetime, Ms. Ramirez remains angry. She does not want an apology, and she will not settle for the amounts being discussed.

“What would an apology do for me?” she said. “You don’t know what my kids were going to be. You don’t know what kids God was going to give me. Twenty thousand dollars ain’t gonna do it, honey.”
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Thanks tova for sending us this article.  We have lectured for years about eugenics in this country.  Not many people are aware that hitler and high ranking officials of the third reich THANKED the United States for leading the way in eugenics IMPLEMENTATION.
And the beat goes on.......
Morgan

Friday, December 9, 2011

NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT

FROM AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

PHOTO
Guantanamo Bay Barbed Wire. Monday, April 4, 2011 2:58 pm. by Brian O'Connor

http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org/siteapps/advocacy/ActionItem.aspx?c=6oJCLQPAJiJUG&b=6645049&aid=516971&msource=W1S12EASHR1&tr=y&auid=9986706

The passage of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) through the Senate last Thursday saw the culmination of a ten-year crusade by Senator Lindsay Graham (R-SC) to make the law of war apply on US soil.

In many ways Senator Graham is simply following the logic of the Global War on Terror frame to its inevitable conclusion: If we are at war with Al Qaeda all around the world then there is no good reason why US soil should be excluded.

Senator Graham’s avowed objective is to allow for the military detention of suspected Al Qaeda, Taliban or otherwise affiliated terrorists captured on US soil, but of course detention is not the only arrow in the military quiver.

Logic is a harsh taskmaster. If the war on terror is being fought on US soil the military would also now have the authority to do what it does best – engage the enemy with kinetic force. In other words, for those of you who don’t like euphemisms, to kill people.

As if on cue, CIA general counsel Stephen Preston and Pentagon general counsel Jeh Johnson popped up at a conference last week to confirm that US citizens do not have immunity when they are at war with the United States.

In summary, once the NDAA becomes law a US citizen on US soil can lawfully be killed by the US military if the military believes that citizen to be a terrorist affiliated with Al Qaeda or its allies.
The key word in that last sentence was “believes.” In the past ten years our intelligence hasn’t been that good. You may we recall we invaded Iraq because our intelligence indicated that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. He didn’t. No small mistake that.

Also consider Guantanamo. Of 770 or so detainees labeled ‘the worst of the worst’ by Vice President Dick Cheney more than 550 were ultimately released without charge after years of ill treatment. At the very apex of US operational capability, our intelligence was flawed 2/3s of the time.

The concept of collateral damage may become rather more real for Americans in the years ahead.
The threshold for what is considered terrorist activity by the US government – and thus can be engaged militarily – is also somewhat lower than you might imagine. The new Authorization for the Use of Military Force pegs that threshold at providing ‘substantial support’ to Al Qaeda and its allies.

In the past ten years the ‘substantial support’ test has encompassed buying rain gear, allowing a suspect to make a call on a personal cellphone and writing an opinion piece critical of the US government for the liberal British newspaper, The Guardian.

That is the standard coming to a neighborhood near you if the President doesn’t veto this bill.
Perhaps, you think I am exaggerating the threat that this Act poses?

The same day that the NDAA passed the Senate, Amnesty International called on the government of Tanzania to live up to its obligations under the Convention against Torture and detain former President George Bush for, by his own admission, ordering the torture of detainees in US custody.

Within hours Fox News had whipped up its commentariat into such a frenzy that one talking head, former Bush adviser Brad Blakeman, opined:
“It could be taken as a call for violence against the president… I think it’s a threat upon… the former president.”
Setting aside the fact that it takes a rather twisted mind to equate a call for the application of due process of law to a threat of violence, Blakeman’s comment comes within a whisker of accusing Amnesty International of providing material support to terrorists.

Overheated rhetoric may have relatively minor consequences on the debating floor, but those consequences could be rather more serious once the debating floor is considered to be part of the battlefield.

Now, I don’t seriously expect hellfire missiles to come crashing through the window of Amnesty’s DC office any time soon, but in the legal landscape this new bill creates there is quite simply no meaningful check preventing it.

If someone with their finger on the trigger decides to take the view that criticizing government is providing aid and comfort to the enemy, then the critic could become a target.

And on the battlefield there is no burden of proof or judicial review. If the military over-reaches, or worse still, makes a mistake – good luck trying to fix it.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

MUMIA ABU-JAMAL

MUMIA ABU-JAMAL CASE: PROSECUTOR DROPS DEATH PENALTY

BY ROBERT E. PIERRE

FROM THE WASHINGTON POST

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/therootdc/post/mumia-abu-jamal-case-prosecutor-drops-death-penalty/2011/12/07/gIQA50TncO_blog.html

Supporters of Mumia Abu-Jamal are rejoicing today that prosecutors have ended their 30-year effort to put the former journalist to death in the killing a white police officer.

“There’s never been any doubt in my mind that Mumia Abu-Jamal shot and killed Officer Faulkner. I believe that the appropriate sentence was handed down by a jury of his peers in 1982,” said Philadelphia District Attory Seeth Williams, the city's first black district attorney, according to the Associated Press.

“While Abu-Jamal will no longer be facing the death penalty, he will remain behind bars for the rest of his life, and that is where he belongs.”

The racially charged case has been a cause célèbre for decades and Abu-Jamal has received worldwide attention as the court challenges have gone through every level of the system. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear in the case in October.

Prosectuors apparently dropped the death penalty effort with the approval of Faulkner’s widow.
Here is an excerpt from a 2006 Washington Post story:
More importantly, Washington noted, every generation has its case that comes to define broader issues of race and justice -- such as the famed Scottsboro Boys, black men accused of a rape in Alabama in the 1930s -- and the Abu-Jamal case has become that case for the late 20th century.
In 1981, Philadelphia was not only near the peak of a generation of urban decay and population flight, but it was still feeling the aftershocks of the divisive 1970s and the mayoralty of Frank Rizzo, who was tough on crime but also dogged by allegations of police brutality.
Abu-Jamal, born Wesley Cook, was at the center of that maelstrom. As a youth, he had been active for a time with the Black Panthers. As a radio journalist, he had covered some of the major race-related stories of the 1970s, most notably the running battle between the city authorities and the radical group MOVE. Over time, Abu-Jamal grew close to the MOVE effort. He even sought to have the group’s founder, John Africa, defend him in his 1982 murder trial.
Most people who have followed the case believe that Abu-Jamal’s association with MOVE has cut both ways -- helping to publicize his case, especially after the notorious 1985 bombing that killed 11 MOVE members and burned a chunk of Philadelphia, but perhaps keeping him from winning new allies in Philadelphia, where many saw the radical group as a polarizing force
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I still believe that Mumia Abu-Jamal should be released from prison.  He has given enough of his life to the racist system which convicted him.

John Lennon was murdered in New York City 31 years ago today, shot TWICE IN THE BACK.
Morgan

AH SARKOZY. THE BEAT GOES ON....

FRANCE: EU PASSPORT-FREE TRAVEL SHOULD BE 'RECONSIDERED'
By Andrew Rettman

FROM EUOBSERVER

http://euobserver.com/22/114484

PHOTO EUROPE AND FRANCE ARE TOO 'OPEN' SARKOZY TOLD PROSPECTIVE LE PEN VOTERS. (Photo: consilium.europa.eu)
FROM www.consilium.europa.eu

BRUSSELS - In a major speech ahead of elections in five months' time, French leader Nicolas Sarkozy has indicated he wants to curtail EU passport-free travel.

Speaking about the euro crisis in Toulon, on France's Mediterranean coast on Thursday (1 December), he depicted "Europe" as being too "open to the winds" of cheap Chinese imports, cheap labour from former Communist member states and immigrants in general.

"Europe, which has to apply internally the principle of free movement but which does not control its external frontiers - that can't go on. Schengen must be reconsidered," he said, referring to the passport-free Schengen Area, which covers 22 EU countries as well as Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.

The line - submerged in Sarkozy's grander considerations on how to save the euro - follows on from his earlier attacks on free travel.

France in April blocked Tunisian migrants coming on trains from Italy. Last September, it also began sending Roma back to Bulgaria and Romania in a programme which is still active.

Sarkozy's interior minister, Claude Gueant, also on Thursday kept up the theme.

It is easier for immigrants to integrate if there are fewer of them ... It is obvious that we need to better manage the flow of immigrants. For immigration to work, we need to be welcoming fewer immigrants each year," he told Europe 1 radio.

Sarkozy is catching up with Socialist candidate Francois Hollande in polls ahead of the presidential election in April. But his hopes of victory could rest on poaching voters from the far-right Marine Le Pen, who commands 16 to 20 percent support.

The anti-Schengen trend is bigger than France, as mainstream parties across the bloc adopt the language of an increasingly popular far-right - Denmark and the Netherlands earlier this year also introduced new border security measures.

It could spell bad news for former Communist EU countries, which prize Schengen as a cornerstone of EU integration, and especially for Bulgaria and Romania, which face a Dutch veto on Schengen entry. It is also a bad sign for would-be EU members, such as Turkey and Ukraine, which are fighting for EU visa-free travel in lieu of speedy accession.

Commenting on Russia's bid for EU visa-free entry, EU foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton in Brussels on Thursday caught the mood saying it will not succeed any time soon.

She noted that even if Brussels and Moscow at a December summit agree on "common steps" on how to drop visas, it will be "a long time before proper negotiations can start."

http://euobserver.com/22/114484

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

BARVALIPE : BUILDING ROMA PRIDE

http://www.soros.org/initiatives/roma/multimedia/barvalipe-20111206

http://youtu.be/fsUaGPoRrao

BARVALIPE
In summer 2011, the Open Society Foundations launched Barvalipe, the first-ever Roma Pride Summer Camp. For ten days in Budapest, 28 young Roma came together to learn about their culture, history, and achievements, in the hopes of encouraging a sense of civic duty and social responsibility.

Participants studied the basics of Romani language and history, took part in debates, heard from prominent Roma, and learned about the history of Roma during the Holocaust through a one-day study trip to Auschwitz where some 20,000 Roma died at the hands of the Nazis.

This video in the link features images and excerpts from interviews with camp participants: http://www.soros.org/initiatives/roma/multimedia/barvalipe-20111206

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All these students attended on scholarships from Open Society.
Morgan

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

INTERVIEW WITH VALERIU NICOLAE

CHANGE MUST START FROM WITHIN

INTERVIEW WITH VALERIU NICOLAE

ROMA INTERGRATION: EU RHETORIC AND INSTITUTIONAL REALITY


PHOTO: INTERNET CENTER AGAINST RACISM IN EUROPE

By the end of 2011, European member states are expected to have demonstrated their fulfilment of the requirements of the EU Framework Programme for the integration of Roma. But what are the chances of the programme succeeding if structural anti-Roma racism exists within European institutions themselves? Valeriu Nicolae is founder and president of the Policy Centre for Roma and Minorities in Bucharest, an NGO that works directly with young Roma. At a conference in Berlin in November, he talked about the discrepancy between European rhetoric and institutional reality.

Simon Garnett: The EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, adopted in April 2011, calls on member states to introduce targeted measures to compensate for the disadvantages faced by Roma. What is your criticism of the way these strategies are currently operating?

Valeriu Nicolae: They aren't strategies so much as wishful thinking. A strategy needs to have a budget, a time frame and an evaluation monitoring mechanism, and more importantly it needs to have a mechanism to implement it. You don't have any mechanism of implementation at the level of the European Union. Then there is the absence of expertise. According to the numbers released by the DG Human Resources and Security, there are 339 people in senior management and 1163 in middle management of the European Commission. None of them are Roma or have informal or formal expertise on Roma issues. Since 1984 the Commission has been underlining in its papers that serious measures need to be taken to address Roma exclusion. But until 2009 not a single recognised Roma expert was employed by the European Commission to deal with Roma issues.

Today, according to the Commission, there are two Roma people working within the Commission's premises in Brussels. One of them is employed on temporary basis and is very young, inexperienced and unknown to almost everybody involved in Roma issues. The Hungarian government provides the other one – a much more experienced person who works, however, in a fairly junior position with no executive power. There are no more than two other people in the entire Commission working on Roma issues that could be considered to have even moderate expertise. No Roma expert or Roma is among the 270 plus appointed experts in the cabinets of the Commissioners. Nor does the European Parliament employ in its permanent or temporary staff any Roma.

The European Commission estimates the number of Roma in Europe to be between eight and twelve million. Malta has a population of 417,608, according to the last census. It is the smallest country in the European Union and one of the last to join the EU. There are 152 Maltese employed by the European Commission and Maltese are well represented at high and mid-levels.

The Fundamental Rights Agency – the watchdog organization of the European Union – receives annually over 20 million euros. Over half of this budget goes on staff expenditure. In recent years it has released a number of studies on Roma (on racism, discrimination, women's issues, violence) and a significant amount of resources has been directed towards Roma-related activities. Its director has been very clear about both the need for positive measures to help a better representation of Roma. The FRA employs around 80 people. It has an executive board of 7 and a scientific committee of 11. Not one of them is Roma. Among the 62 people in the ceremonial management board of the FRA, there is one Roma, appointed by the Slovak government.

These institutions call for others – be they national governments, local administrations or businesses – to demonstrate strategies that involve Roma in decision-making. Yet they themselves have no plans to attract Roma human resources or experts on Roma issues. At the national level it is the same: you have lots of people who, while not incompetent, have no practical experience with the Roma and who design the wrong kind of strategies without having an idea about what it's all about.

SG: The Commission has declared that "now is the time to change good intentions into more concrete actions" when it comes to policies for integrating the Roma. How has the rhetoric diverged from the reality in the past?

VN: Around 400 million euros has been spent by the European Union on Roma issues over the last ten years. In the last six years there have been seven resolutions of the European Parliament focused on Roma – all underlining discrimination, abuse and exclusion of Roma. There have been two major European Roma Summits since 2008. The European Commission has organized a number of national Roma conferences in the last three years. These were by far the largest conferences on Roma issues and millions of euros were spent on their organization. At all these events, high and mid-level European officials strongly restated the need for Roma participation. This makes the Roma the most discussed ethnic group at the level of the European Union.

However most, if not all the intergovernmental institutions vocal about the need to do something about Roma exclusion would have serious problems proving that structural racism does not exist within them. Change must start from within these institutions that preach Roma inclusion. Otherwise the beautiful rhetoric about how discriminated, neglected, excluded and loved Roma are will sound like nothing more than hypocrisy.

And the rhetoric is beautiful: if you listen to Commissioner Viviane Redding she is amazing – she talks about how Roma need to be included, how they are discriminated against, and so on and so forth. But she should tell that to her own organization, where Roma are completely excluded. You hear the same thing from the director of the European Fundamental Rights Agency: Roma need to be included. Tell that to yourself! Then maybe something might happen at the FRA too.

So that's the problem. At the moment what the EU institutions do is they act like NGOs. But I don't expect the European Union and governments to be NGOs, I expect them to come up with plans: how are they going to do it, not what they dream about it. What you dream is not my problem. You are put there and paid from public money to do things, and if you are not capable of doing it then step down.

SG: You yourself worked in Brussels as an advisor but turned to social work in Bucharest in Roma ghettos. What made you shift the focus of your activities?

VN: I got bored with the rhetoric of Roma NGOs. Everybody else needs to do something. And I thought, OK, politicians are always complaining, lets see what I can do. Because, obviously, I can't expect others to do something if I'm not doing it myself. I decided to give up working in Brussels and to do something that everyone told me was impossible: you can't work in the ghetto, there's too much drugs, prostitution, violence and so on. Rubbish! You can work in the ghetto and you can have real success. We have proved that. And we didn't start with European money, we started with our own resources. Nobody wanted to fund us, everybody though we were crazy. And after we proved that it worked with our money we took funding conditioned on people coming and seeing what we do. Because I don't need funding so I can say, hey, look what we did. This is the really terrible rhetoric of the European Commission: oh we have done so much for the Roma, we gave them 400 million in the last ten years. No: the European Commission doesn't have money of its own. That's public money.

This continues to be a problem: on one side you have the European institutions and the governments who don't assume responsibilities in doing much, and on the other side you have an entire Roma civil society that is very unsuccessful in proving that they have an impact at the grassroots. This needs to be changed. There are a number of good examples of organizations that do that, but there aren't enough of them. The majority of organizations at the moment are more interested in acting as diplomatic missions to the European Union on behalf of the Roma. I mean the system of dignitaries and privileges.

SG: Are you suggesting that a number of Roma leaders are more focused on their political careers than changing the situation on the ground?

VN: The majority, not a number! The existing Roma leadership seems to be focused only on that. I know very few examples of Roma leaders who are actually doing something. I mean something concrete besides talking and working hard being the leader.

The political parties should attract Roma. You should go into politics because of political ideas and not for your genes. That's not happening. The political parties are doing abysmally in trying to get Roma involved and and promoting Roma leaders. On the other side, the existing Roma leadership prefers to be an ethnic leadership since that means no competition. It's the easiest access to resources possible. "Look, I'm a Roma and it's my right to be in politics" – it shouldn't be like that.

SG: The European Commission states that affirmative action towards Roma does not contradict the principle of equal treatment. Are you in favour?

VN: Yes. The European Commission should have a very clear plan on recruiting minorities. There should be strong competition for the jobs, but you should have a number of places allocated to Roma, to Muslims, to whoever is in as terrible a position as we are at the moment. There are examples of member states working along these lines. But it is very hard for the European Commission to tell a member state it needs to introduce affirmative action for Roma when there are far fewer Roma in the Commission than in any of the member states' governments with a significant Roma population. This is the case for Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Spain. How can the Commission tell Romania to recruit more Roma when in fact Roma are a lot better represented in the Romanian government than in the Commission itself?

SG: At the time of the scandal surrounding the deportation of Roma from France, you commented that Sarkozy was more or less ordering the Romanian government to take back these people. Are we seeing a recurrence of colonial superiority within the EU in Roma issues?

VN: Obviously. Can you imagine having a commissioner responsible for, lets say Muslims, who comes from the country known for being the most dramatically opposed to Muslims in Europe? Luxembourg is the country that is clearly the most restrictive towards Roma in Europe, while the commissioner responsible for Roma, Viviane Redding, is a Luxembourgish. She was a member of the parliament between 1979 and '89, at a time when Luxembourg had some really appalling policies on Roma. How can you have somebody responsible at this level when, as far as I know, she has never set foot in a Roma community? It is not a criticism of her personally; it's a criticism of the system. You don't appoint somebody to a position just because she's influential, you appoint someone on the basis of expertise. She is commissioner on justice and citizenship, areas where I have no doubt she has expertise, but it's obvious that when it comes to Roma she has no expertise whatsoever, nor is there anyone anywhere close to her who does.

SG: Can one talk about the rise of racism towards Roma without mentioning the economic upheavals in eastern Europe since 1989?

VN: Of course they are linked. There is absolutely no doubt that whenever economic pressure increases, xenophobia increases too. This is historically proven. In the case of Roma we see that clearly. Plus there is the migration phenomenon. Whenever the conditions get worse Roma tend to migrate. They have nothing to lose. If you're living outdoors it doesn't matter whether it's in France or Romania. And in France if you beg you'll make more money than by doing the same thing in Romania. Back at the beginning of the 1990s we had several generations of Roma with very good education, because the communist system obliged Roma to go to school. I am a product of that generation. Then, at the beginning of the 1990s, because Romania was so poor, there began a heavy emigration of Roma, principally to Germany. All these children were taken from school and moved with their families: they travelled around and never got an education. You now have a generation of parents with a very low level of education. That's a generation lost.

Between 2000 and 2003 the Roma started coming back, meaning that their children stayed in Romania. So from 2002 and 2003 onwards the situation improved constantly. But since 2008 we again have migration and there's a danger that we will lose another generation. If you're enrolled in a school for half a year then you move – it doesn't work. You have no education whatsoever. The only employment you can get is at the very, very lowest level. So you have an option: do I turn to crime, where I can be very successful, by breaking in and making piles of money and perhaps avoiding being caught? Or, do I struggle all my life, working at this very low level, because I don't have the education to do anything else? There is a good number who will choose the illegal alternative. That's the danger: that we lose another generation because we were completely incapable of doing anything for the last twenty years. We just talked, always looking elsewhere for solutions, always expecting others to do things we could have done ourselves. And I'm referring here to the European Commission, the European Parliament, the UN, the Council of Europe, the World Bank as well as us the Roma activists.

SG: Of course crime creates a vicious cycle. If you've got a small community consisting of Roma and non-Roma, in rural areas with a huge degree of poverty, it's a self-perpetuating phenomenon...

VN: Yes it is. You have a huge problem there that isn't addressed. The idiocy of all this is that it isn't only the policies of the European Union that are wrong, but also the attitude of the majority of NGOs. The main problem is this: anti-Gypsyism grows because of the way criminality issues connected with the Roma are portrayed. It doesn't grow because you don't have access to healthcare. That's the issue. So let's talk about criminality. We need to solve anti-Gypsyism and we need to solve the problems that lead to anti-Gypsyism. You can't solve one while completely ignoring the other. The disease is the stupidity of political correctness, because at the moment the European Union invests all its money in access to healthcare, access to education, access to housing, and ignores the fact that you need to have responsible families who know that you need to have access to healthcare, that you need to get employment, that education is very important.

We don't insist at all on citizenship and responsibilities. As a Roma, if I am living in Romania I have a responsibility as a Romanian citizen. That responsibility is the same as that of all other Romanians. And as a Romanian citizen I have a responsibility both to respect the law and also to make sure that I am not a racist and do not condone racism. We don't talk about the responsibilities of European citizenship, we just talk about the benefits. You can complain as a Roma that you are discriminated against the whole time, and expect to receive compensation for your dead relatives in the Holocaust, but at the same time find very easy ways to do other things, to be economically viable, to abuse your children to beg, live on the edge of criminality. This is an important issue and we don't talk about what the issues are in reality. We're always beating around the bush.

SG: What do you tell people when they confront you with these life-altering decisions? Do I live legally or do I commit crime, do I migrate, do I stay where I am?

VN: I would take the children to a prison in a prison vehicle and show them what it's like. You can choose this, or you can choose the other alternative, where you can be very successful. There are lots of opportunities for Roma who are well educated, and you can live a life that is absolutely normal and can be very rewarding. I show them what the alternatives are. It's their choice. I say to them: we are responsible, we treat you with lots of respect, you need to show us the same amount of respect and responsibility. Otherwise we don't work together. Up to now we've had, out of 187 children, just two dropouts. If you show them what it's all about they understand. I tell you, some of my children are a lot harder working and competitive than other children because they see that this is their solution. I have children who tell me the police came and broke down their door and looked for drugs, as if it was just another daily occurrence. They make jokes about the policemen, we fought with them, they say. It's so normal in their lives. Prison is also normal. All of this is life. But most of those in charge of designing policies for social inclusion are unaware of it.
Published 2011-12-05

This interview took place in Berlin on 11.11.2011, during the symposium "Was heisst denn hier Zigeuner? Bild und Selbstbild von Europas grosster Minderheit", organized by the Allianz Kulturstiftung within the series "Reden über Europa 2011".

Valeriu Nicolae's book, We are the Roma! One Thousand Years of Discrimination is published by Seagull Books in 2012.
 

Monday, December 5, 2011

BULGARIA

FROM DEUTSCHE WELLE


Right-wing extremist violence on the rise in Bulgaria

Since the 1990s, nationalism has become a major part of politics and society in Bulgaria. Racist violence, too, is becoming more and more a part of everyday life. The state, however, is doing little to counteract this.


Soccer hooligans beat up Roma youth after a game. An Afghan refugee is assaulted just because he has dark skin. Following a protest march of the openly xenophobic party Ataka against a mosque in Sofia, violence breaks out between members of the party and practicing Muslims. Members of another right-wing party together with hooligans attack a Jehovah's Witnesses prayer house and beat up the people inside.

These are just individual incidents of extremist violence that have occurred in the past year in Bulgaria, an alarming escalation of violence against ethnic and religious minorities that was pointed out by the Bulgarian section of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in their latest report.

No new phenomenon
Racist- and xenophobic-tinted nationalism, however, is nothing new for Bulgaria. After the fall of the Iron Curtain it spread throughout the former communist state in the 1990s, said Krassimir Kanev, president of the Helsinki Committee.

He said that already at the beginning of the decade, extremist groups like neo-Nazi skinheads were becoming apparent. "The state, however, has yet to react to this kind of violence in an adequate way. With regard to this form of toleration there has already been a ruling issued by the European Court of Human Rights against Bulgaria," Kanev told Deutsche Welle.

That ruling in 2007 concerned the Bulgarian authorities' handling of the murder of a Roma. The court found that the investigation was conducted in a sloppy manner and that the racist background of the crime wasn't taken into proper consideration. The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) points out the fact that such racist crimes are often officially described as simply "hooliganism" or even "normal" assault.

Anchored in politics
Even in politics, Kanev said nationalism has been a major force since the democratic turn in Bulgaria. "When the constitutional committee gathered in 1991, there were protests outside the building by members of the Bulgarian National Radicals Party who chanted against the parliamentary representation of Bulgaria's Turkish minority," he said. This racist party was never able to materialize, but that's only because the country's major parties already propagated nationalist sentiments.
Pressure from the EU
Only after the European Union began to exert some pressure did Bulgaria's major parties "clean" their ranks of nationalist elements, said Kanev. The Bulgarian socialists and the conservatives wanted to be accepted in the European parliament, and they were forced to make changes to their respective platforms in order to be accepted.

"This gave room to the more extreme nationalist movements. In 2005 Ataka was founded, a party that is far more extremist than Jörg Haider's Alliance for the Future of Austria," Kanev stressed. The party's leader mobilized voters during campaigns with slogans such as "Convicted Gypsies belong in work camps!" or "Bulgaria for Bulgarians!"

Two months after being founded, Ataka made it into the Bulgarian parliament as the country's fourth most popular party. Ever since, the group has routinely used racist slogans directed against ethnic, religious and sexual minorities to gain the interest of potential voters.

Even in Brussels, an EU parliamentarian from Ataka dared to verbally assault one of his Roma colleagues. The party was expressly criticized in the latest ECRI report, with the Commission calling for "appropriate behavior."

No threat yet
The established liberal and democratic parties, however, are too weak to counteract the nationalist trend in Bulgarian politics, said Daniel Smilov, program director at the NGO Centre for Liberal Strategies.

"At the moment the entire political class can't resist nationalist ideas," said Smilov, adding, however, that the movement currently poses no threat to the state. But this is no reason to bask in false security, Smilov warned.

"Many believe that just because Bulgaria is in the EU and has reached a certain sense of stability that the system is strong enough to withstand deviations," he said, adding that this may not be the case.

There is little reason to expect resistance to such extremism from the population, but despite this, there have been protests against right-wing violence and xenophobia in Bulgaria. This is a sign that a democratic culture is growing in the country, according to sociologist Svetla Encheva of the Center for the Study of Democracy.

Simmering resentment
In the past months an apparent change has been witnessed in the way politicians approach the subject of extremism. Following the death of a 19-year-old Bulgarian who was run over by a Roma driver, Bulgaria was overtaken by a wave of anti-Roma protests. Most of these took place in a peaceful manner, apart from a few individual exceptions. Above all, young demonstrators marched through the streets chanting racist slogans.

In response, Boris Velchev, Bulgaria's chief prosecutor, announced that cases of "racially motivated agitation must be treated with priority." At the beginning of October a 27-year-old man was sentenced to 10 months of probation because he called for the "slaughtering of Gypsies" on Facebook.

Human rights activist Krassimir Kanev welcomed that ruling, adding, however, that the Helsinki Committee would keep a close eye on whether the Bulgarian prosecution would remain consistent when it came to cracking down on extremist violence. It's precisely this that's been lacking in the past years.

Author: Blagorodna Grigorova / glb
Editor: Andreas Illmer



ATTACK ON ROMA AND SINTI CENTER

FROM ROMA VIRTUAL NETWORK
Germany: The Roma and Sinti Centrum of EUROM and Romane Romnja in Cologne was attacked
Ladies and Gentlemen,

The NGO EUROM and the NGO Romane Romnja have a common educational and cultural center in Cologne, Germany.

This center was attacked in the night from 27.11-28.11.2011.
Unknown persons have written unconstitutional symbols on the walls of educational and cultural center.
The police has documented the attack.The police have taken up this attack as a criminal complaint.

We call on to give these attackers and their spirit no place in our town and nowhere else!

We politely asked for solidarity and for feedback

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Roma_Francais/attachments/folder/1639685203/item/1637410110/view

NGO EUROM
Aladin Sejdic and Jure Leko and Snijezana Moskopp

ROMANE ROMNJA

Indira Lösbrock and Gordana Herold.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

INADAPTABLES ? YOY

Czech Republic: Romani personalities condemn the term "inadaptables"

FROM ROMEA.CZ

http://www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=detail&detail=2007_2995

PHOTO:
Irena Eliášová (Foto: Jana Šustová) „Já píši prakticky odmala.
romove.radio.cz

Romani personalities contacted by news server Romea.cz do not like the fact that the Czech media use the expression "inadaptables" to refer to socially excluded people. The main reason is that the media and public officials actually use the expression to refer to members of the Romani minority, often in such a way as to conceal their xenophobic relationship towards the members of this minority.

A discussion of the concept of "inadaptables" was recently launched by Anna Šabatová and Petr Uhl, human rights defenders who were dissidents during communism. They have complained to the Czech Council of Radio and Television Broadcasting (Rada pro rozhlasové a televizní vysílání - RRTV) about Czech television stations using the expression. RRTV has claimed that the use of this term does not "explicitly" break the law, but did pass the complaint on to the Czech Television board of directors and to the Association of Television Organizations (Asociace televizních organizací - ATO) with a request for their perspective on the issue.

Michal Heldenburg, head of Czech Television's legal department, wrote a response to the complaint that has now become a scandal. Milan Uhde, chair of the board of directors of the public television broadcaster, has issued a public statement calling Heldenburg's letter "monstrous". In the letter, Heldenburg makes several generalizations and construes democratic society as a kind of majority rule that takes no account of minorities. With respect to the word "inadaptables", he wrote the following:

"Essentially, anyone who does not obey the laws of the land, who does not behave according to the generally recognized rules, can be labeled that way; it can be any minority incapable of or unwilling to assimilate into the majority society. There is nothing racist about it. Human society functions in such a way that minorities assimilate into the majority. Anyone who doesn't understand this is an inadaptable, irrespective of ethnic origin or skin color."

The head of the Czech Television legal department then proceeded to make irrelevant arguments using a peculiar "legal" vocabulary, writing: "Gypsies work at Czech Television. One of them is even a news anchor. Isn't that a concrete example of breaking down such stereotypes?"

(For our previous reporting on this issue, see http://www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=detail&detail=2007_2990).

Karel Holomek, chair of the Romani Association of Moravia (Společenství Romů na Moravě), who is a member of the Executive Committee of the recently-established Statewide Romani Association of the Czech Republic (Celostátní asociace Romů ČR), commented on the scandal as follows: "I unequivocally stand by the opinion expressed by Anna Šabatová and Petr Uhl. For my part, I would only add that this term conceals an unacceptable generalization. Both I and many other people who are upright citizens have been labeled with this term. The expression automatically makes the listener think of Romani people. That is what is horrible! Naturally, the head of the legal department of Czech Television is incapable of sensing this, which is why he is so ignorantly confident that he is right. The expression 'adaptable' could be used as well and it would be far more correct, because that term describes someone who adjusts to conditions - but the very expression itself involves a stigma!"

Romani author Irena Eliášová commented as follows: "There are many things, expressions, that I don't like. The term 'inadaptables', in my view, is the same as saying 'bad' or 'not normal', it refers to someone who does not know how to assimilate. When we Romani people are thus labeled (and that happens constantly), it is offensive! Whenever some Romani individuals commit criminal activity, it is then associated with all of us - but when discussing Romani people who live normally, are other terms used? Are those people labeled in the media by any expression other than 'inadaptables'? No other term is used, this is a term that refers to all Romani people without distinction. I have many other questions on this issue: Does the media label as 'inadaptable' those in government who are directly enriching themselves through suspicious methods while others are living on the edge of poverty? What about a pedophile who takes the life of a child, or a son who murders his own parents? Even those people can simultaneously be considered 'patriots', Czechs who claim the Romani people are 'inadaptables'. I could give many such examples. In the media, of course, such persons are not labeled 'inadaptable' because they are Czech, not Romani. Generally speaking and simply put: Get your own house in order..."

Čeněk Růžička, chair of the Committee for the Redress of the Romani Holocaust (Výbor pro odškodnění romského holocaustu), who is also a member of the preparatory committee for a new Romani political party, said: "I support the complaint made by Anna Šabatová and Petr Uhl. Michal Heldenburg's statement offended me as a Romani person. Some of the editors at Czech Television know very well that the majority society links the expression 'inadaptables' with Romani people. It is a devious way of condoning the xenophobic view of Romani people. The excuse that a Romani person works at Czech Television does not withstand scrutiny. It is more than obvious that at the time that Romani person was hired there, it was because Czech Television was politically tasked with doing so. If only more Romani people were employed here."
František Kostlán, translated by Gwendolyn Albert
ROMEA

Thursday, December 1, 2011

ROMANI STUDENTS


UK: Romani high school students were misdiagnosed in Czech Republic

FROM ROMEA.CZ

http://www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=detail&detail=2007_2987#.TtZoCa6qYhg.email

The British organization Equality, with the support of the Roma Education Fund, has produced a unique study of migrant Romani children in British schools.

The study followed Romani children in the UK who had previously been assigned by the Czech or Slovak school systems to "special schools". After moving to the UK, those same children, thanks to support services, are now completing mainstream educations, including at high schools.

The analysis, entitled "School attainment of Roma pupils: From segregation to integration", was published last week. The research primarily demonstrates that in the UK, the different approach taken towards these children, the effort made on the part of educators and support staff, and the non-discriminating environment that prevails there is capable of producing a result of which most Czech schools still only dream.

Key conclusions of the analysis:

1) 85 % of all of the Romani children "researched" had been assigned to either segregated schools or "special education" in the Czech Republic or Slovakia.

2) The average attainment of the Romani pupils (aged 9-15) in math, the natural sciences and reading skills were only slightly below the average of their peers at British mainstream schools.

3) Only a small percentage of the entire cohort of Romani pupils (2 - 4 %) were diagnosed in the UK as having special educational needs based either in learning difficulties or some other disadvantage which inhibited their educational achievement or their access to education in comparison to their peers. They were provided with the corresponding support at mainstream schools in Britain.

4) None of the children were diagnosed with special educational needs that mainstream schools in the UK could not handle.

5) The vast majority of the Romani pupils interviewed said that in the Czech or Slovak schools they had experienced racially motivated bullying or some form of verbal assault from their non-Romani classmates, as well as discrimination and unequal treatment from their teachers. In some cases, the Romani pupils charged their former teachers with having inflicted corporal punishment on them.

6) In seven out of the nine British localities where the research was conducted, the Romani pupils claimed to have never encountered any manifestations of racism in the British schools. They said the teachers were helpful, nice, and always willing to give them individual time.

7) The vast majority of Romani students who participated in the interviews claimed to prefer school in Britain because it offered them equal opportunities and because discrimination and racism did not exist there.

8) All of the parents participating in the research evaluated as positive the general atmosphere at the schools in the UK and their children's experiences of being welcomed at the schools and treated equally. In the UK, the parents noticed a lack of anti-Romani racism on the part of both non-Romani classmates and teachers compared to what they had encountered in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. All of the parents also said the education and employment of their children had been one of the strongest motivations for their decision to move to Britain. Many parents believe it will take another generation for the educational attitudes and practices to change in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, while many even believe those countries will never change. All of the parents interviewed believe the chances for their children to succeed in life in Britain are much greater than in either the Czech Republic or Slovakia.
 
A .pdf of the entire study can be downloaded from Equality's web page at: http://www.equality.uk.com/Education.html

František Kostlán, translated by Gwendolyn Albert

THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE

The following link provides access to a fact sheet on the Romani put together by the Council of Europe.

Check it out.

http://www.coe.int/AboutCoe/media/interface/publications/roms_en.pdf

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

DuBois shows in December.

Wanted to tell you about two wonderful events coming up in Seattle.

Marchette DuBois will be performing at both of these events.
She is not only a wonderful musician but also one of the founders of Untempered Productions, which amazingly pulled together the Esma Concert in weeks. 
(The concert was cancelled unfortunately, no fault of the producers.)

If you're in the area i encourage you to check these performances out.
MORGAN
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Hi folks,
I'm sending out one of those rare updates to let you know about two shows in December which I am very excited about.

1.  Hell's Bellows! at the Chapel with James Hoskins.

Thursday Dec. 8th  8-11 PM

5-15 sliding scale, no one turned away.

Hell's Bellows Plays original music for accordion quartet, and features Scott Adams, Amy Denio, Marchette DuBois, and Eli Kaufman.

James Hoskins from Boulder CO is an incomparable 21st century cellist with a deep and wild musical sensibility.

We will play individually and together.

2. Nights for folklife fundraiser at Columbia City Theater

Dec. 9th 9 pm -2 am

Featuring your favorite Balkan Misfit bands:

Alchymeia - Nu Klezmer Army - Orkestar Zirkonium - Bucharest Drinking Team.

I hope to see you in December!

Happy Winter.
Marchette

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT THE UNTEMPERED PRODUCTIONS WEBSITE
http://untemperedproductions.com

THEY ARE WORKING WITH LOLODIKLO ON THE KALI SARAH CELEBRATION PLANNED FOR JUNE 2012.

SAND CREEK MASSACRE

PHOTO :
Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Area Colorado

The Sand Creek Massacre took place on November 29, 1864. That morning 650 Colorado volunteers attacked a village of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians. Dawn was broken by the clanging of muskets, artillery, and the booming voice of John Chivington - the Fighting Parson's final harangue to his troops

On 29 Nov. 1864, a Colorado Militia, composed of 650 volunteers and led by John Chivington, attacked a sleeping village of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians.

At least 160 peaceful Cheyenne, mostly women, children and old men, were murdered in what has become known as the Sand Creek Massacre.

John Chivington was greeted as a hero in Denver.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
http://www.lastoftheindependents.com/sandcreek.htm

http://rugfish.blogspot.com/2009/03/american-history-indian-massacre-at.html

RECONSIDERING ROMA

Reconsidering Roma in a shifting Europe

FROM DW-WORLD.DE




DEUTSCHE WELLE

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,15561792,00.html

BY LOUISE OSBORNE

A new Berlin exhibition featuring the work of Roma and Sinti artists aims to raise awareness about a segregated people, who continue to face discrimination. "Reconsidering Roma" runs until December 11.


A new exhibition at Berlin's Kunstquartier Bethanien hopes to raise awareness about Europe's 12 million strong Roma and Sinti population - who despite widespread perceptions about what it is to be a "gypsy" remain a segregated and unrecognized people.

The show "Reconsidering Roma - Aspects of Roma and Sinti Life in Contemporary Art" - features diverse work such as Delaine Le Bas' "Witch Hunt" and Daniel Baker's "Mirrored Books."
Many of the artists have a Roma or Sinti background and some have experienced discrimination first hand.

Viennese painter Karl Stojka and his sister Ceija Stojka are also on show at the exhibition with pieces which they hope will continue to chip away at what they say is a pervading silence about the crimes committed against Roma and Sinti during Nazi Germany.

Curators Lith Bahlmann and Matthias Reichelt say little is known about the Roma and Sinti on the international art scene and they want to change that.

"The effect of the Holocaust on the Roma community is not so well-known and [we've brought all this artwork together in one place because] we feel it's very important to make the issue more visible," said Bahlmann.

Haunting dolls of the Holocaust

It is an aspect of German history that has taken at least 60 years to gain a place on the national stage - let alone in the art world.

During this year's Holocaust Memorial Day (January 27), Zoni Weisz became the first ever representative for Roma and Sinti communities to address the German parliament.

As a seven year old, Weisz escaped while being taken to the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. In the Bundestag, he talked about the genocide of Roma and Sinti during the Holocaust.

But he also talked about the discrimination they face today.

The cultural segregation and discrimination felt by Roma and Sinti is reflected in the work on show in Berlin. It is hoped the work will reach beyond art and go on to influence the political and historical debate.

Featured artists Karl Stojka and his sister Ceija Stojka were themselves victims of the Nazis.

Karl first began breaking the silence he felt surrounded Nazi atrocities against Roma and Sinti through his painting in the 1980s. Ceija also deals with her experiences at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Ravensbrück and Bergen-Belsen in her drawings and paintings.

Le Bas - whose "Witch Hunt" series shows haunting, but vibrant dolls dressed in brightly colored clothing, and wearing masks to distort their faces - agrees that the experiences of Roma and Sinti during the Holocaust are not well known.

"The works here are very important because they will force people to recognize what happened," Le Bas told Deutsche Welle. "I was interested in the witch hunts and did lots of research. There was this idea of people, who were seen as different, being used as scapegoats and the pieces evolved from that."

No place is home

In post-war Europe, discrimination against Roma and Sinti continues.

Le Bas is the eldest of five children and was the only one of her siblings to go to secondary school in Britain. She says her family was often subject to discrimination and their home was once targeted by vandals, who spray-painted it.

"My mother was particularly upset," said Le Bas. "Stereotypes are so ingrained. But I work in the visual arts because I hope it's a way to get people to see Roma and Sinti in a different light."

Like Le Bas, Daniel Baker is a Roma artist based in Britain.

"There is definitely still persecution happening in Europe, particularly in Italy and France," Baker told Deutsche Welle. "The treatment of Roma by some governments goes relatively unchallenged. They don't seem to be able to see that what happened in 1939 is happening still."

Baker says this is partly because there is no real place of origin for Roma and Sinti.

"I think it's a very threatening position," he said. "Nation states seem to think Roma and Sinti have no legitimacy and they are treated as if they don't fit in and don't belong. It is an excuse."

Baker's work features reversed writing painted on glass, with silver or gold leave gilded onto the surface to create a mirrored background.

He says he uses the idea of reflection to challenge perceptions about Roma - to turn perceptions around.

"Lots of my work uses natural reflection because the mirrors symbolize the gypsy experience," said Baker. "It is a real but also imagined space."

The exhibition runs until December 11.

Author: Louise Osborne, Berlin
Editor: Zulfikar Abbany

PHOTO: MY FAMILY BY KARL STOJKA
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