Category Archives: Sonst in Europa

The Dom: Syria’s Invisible Refugees

More than 70,000 people have been killed and hundreds of thousands left homeless by the civil war in Syria, spreading misery among all of the nation’s ethnic and religious groups. But one ethnic minority has undergone more than its share of suffering — both during the current fighting and for centuries preceding it — and few outside of Syria know much about it. The group is known as the Dom and it has been a presence in Syria since before the Ottoman Empire. Often mislabeled by the pejorative “gypsies,” the Dom get their name from their language, Domari, means “man.” They have joined the exodus of Christian, Muslim and other Syrians refugees into Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and beyond. But wherever they go, they generally face a less than warm welcome. As one source told VOA, „They are the most despised people in the Middle East.“

Who are the Dom?

Misunderstood and complicated, Dom have been present in the Middle East for at least a thousand years. Most information about them is gleaned from their language, Domari, an Indic variation. It is similar to Romani, the language of the European Roma, suggesting their common roots in India. Both Roma and Domari are peppered with words borrowed from other languages, reflecting their history of migration through Iran and elsewhere. Beyond that, little of their origin is known—or agreed upon by scholars. During the Ottoman period, Dom migrated freely throughout the Middle East as “commercial” nomads, providing services to communities wherever they settled. The fall of the Ottoman Empire following World War I led to the formation of nation states with proper borders, which greatly curtailed Dom movements. Locals in Syria, as elsewhere in the region, call the Dom Nawar — a word likely derived from “fire,” referring to their traditional work as blacksmiths. But over the years, the word “Nawar” has evolved into a pejorative, connoting someone who is uneducated and uncivilized. They also differentiate Dom by the region in which they live and the work they perform. In Aleppo and Idlib, the Dom are called Qurbat and work as blacksmiths or untrained dentists. The so-called Riyass live in Homs and Hama, where they sell handicrafts or entertain at parties. Dom women, dubbed Hajiyat, might dance in Damascus nightclubs, beg or tell fortunes.

The numbers

It is almost impossible to estimate Syria’s Dom population, as they often conceal their identity out of fear of being stigmatized. SIL International’s Ethnologue estimates 37,000 Syrian Dom speak Domari, alongside Arabic.But the Syrian newspaper, Kassioun, reported twice that number in 2010. Kemal Vural Tarlan is a photographer, documentarian, writer and activist who focuses, he says, on those who live on the sidelines of society, chiefly Dom and Roma. He also authors the Middle East Gypsies website. He says Dom are viewed as outsiders and intruders, therefore they are almost universally discriminated against. So they often hide their ethnic backgrounds through what they call the skill of “invisibility,” which helps them move into and out of communities. “The official Dom population could be much higher than estimated, because so many Dom describe themselves as Kurdish, Arab or Turkmen,” Tarlan said. Whatever the number, he says more Dom live in Syria than anywhere else in the Middle East.

Dom refugees in Turkey

Turkey has been home to “gypsies” since Byzantine times, and in 2005 the UNHCR estimated a Roma/Dom population of 500,000. Kemal Tarlan has spent much time in recent weeks near the border documenting the influx of Dom from Syria. He believes as many as 10,000 to 20,000 Dom have settled in southern Turkish towns such as Kilis, Gazientep and Şanlıurfa. “İnitially, some were able to register in proper refugee camps,” Tarlan said, “but now they cannot get into camps, because they are full.” Some Dom have gone to live with families in the cities. Those with no place to go live as nomads in tents. Tarlan says they receive little assistance from the government, so in order to survive, they beg or work in the fields. “But the majority are unemployed,” he said, and this has given rise to local tensions. Recently, after citizens of Şanlıurfa started to complain about a rise in petty theft, Turkish authorites dismantled and burned a makeshift tent city. The media referred to the campers as “Syrians.” But Tarlan says most were Dom.

Into Lebanon

With Beirut only about 65 miles away, many Dom from Damascus have fled into Lebanon. Catherine Mourtada is co-founder of Tahaddi (“Challenge”), a non-governmental assistance group that serves Beirut’s underprivileged, many of whom are Dom. “They are excluded from the normal school systems, either because they don’t meet admission requirements or because public schools are full. „So they come to our place,” Mourtada said. Mourtada has seen increasing numbers of Dom from Syria, looking to stay with their Lebanese relatives. “Already, they are very poor, and now they must welcome other very poor members of their family coming from Syria, so it is very hard for them.They are all living in dire conditions,” she said. “They can’t find any work except for recycling things from the garbage dump, like aluminum or iron or cardboard, just to be able to survive.” In some cases, Beirut Dom are forced turn their Syrian relatives away. “So they have to find a room somewhere to rent. They are lucky if they can get a bathroom or running water,” Mourtada said. Because there are no official refugee camps in Lebanon like those built in Jordan and Turkey, Mourtada says Dom have begun to settled in tent cities in the Bekaa Valley.

Into Jordan

In 1999, Amoun Sleem founded the Domari Society of Gypsies, a cultural and educational center in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Shu’fat. Herself a Dom, she says she has first-hand experience with discrimination, cultural marginalization and poverty that most Dom face as a result of illiteracy. “Whenever disaster strikes in the Middle East, no one gives a thought to how it will impact the Dom,” she said. Sleem says she has received word that many Dom refugees are living at or near the Zaatari camp in Mafraq, Jordan. She has been trying to get a permit to visit the camp, but has run into a lot of red tape.In the meantime, she is trying to encourage Jordanian Dom families to host the refugees. “It’s not very easy,” she said, “but if it could happen, it would be a very good thing.”

Source: Voa News
Date: 03.12.2018

Syria’s Gypsy refugees find sanctuary in an Istanbul ghetto – but for how long?

In Tarlabaşı, Istanbul’s oldest slum, a tiny community centre offers a crucial place of safety and support for the shunned Syrian Dom community. But as the city gentrifies, there are fears these refugees may become victims once again

On the north-western corner of Istanbul’s famous Taksim Square, a small gang of children dart through the traffic, tapping on car windows and trying to catch the attention of passers-by to sell bottles of water. These Syrian Gypsy children from a community known as the Dom are in many ways the forgotten faces of the Middle East crisis, which has left an estimated 26,000 refugee children homeless across Europe. The Dom speak a separate language which traces back to the Indian subcontinent; even in times of peace they have always existed on the fringes of society, and are used to facing almost universal discrimination.Before war broke out, there were up to 300,000 Dom living in Syria. Now many live on the streets of Istanbul’s ghettos, part of the approximately 366,000 Syrian refugees seeking a new life in the Turkish city. Many reside in Tarlabaşı, Istanbul’s oldest slum. It is just a few streets from the ornate splendour of İstiklal Caddesi, the nearby avenue of sultans that once saw Istanbul dubbed “the Paris of the East”. But life in Tarlabaşı is very different: it has become known as a haven for Istanbul’s minority communities of migrants, Gypsies, transsexuals, prostitutes, and the outcasts of society.

Even here, however, the Dom children are despised. Other Syrian refugees and local Turks refuse to associate with them. When asked why, Ilyas, a shopkeeper who asked for his full name to not be used when speaking about the Dom, simply comments: “It is a prejudice, yes. I can’t explain it though. I just don’t like their complexion.” But one organisation is trying to help. Based in a tiny flat of no more than 70 sq metres, Tarlabaşı Toplum Merkezi (TTM) is a non-profit community centre started a decade ago by Istanbul Bilgi University’s Centre for Migration Research, and initially funded by the European Union. Run by four full-time employees and a small army of volunteer teachers, lawyers and even musicians, it provides educational support, psychological and legal counselling for nearly 5,000 children and 3,000 adults in Tarlabaşı. It exists as a place of safety and comfort; a way out from the deprivation and crime which pervades this sector of Istanbul.

For hundreds of years, Tarlabaşı’s narrow, winding streets were a peaceful home to non-Muslim diplomats and later Greek merchants who served the business district around İstiklal Caddesi. But as religious tensions rose through the mid-20th century, the Turkish government launched organised pogroms targeting non-Muslims in the city – the most notorious of which was the Turkish Kristallnacht of September 1955. In the ensuing violence, homes and shops were looted and destroyed. Over the following decades, those abandoned buildings were gradually filled by Gypsies known locally as “Roman”, and by refugees fleeing the Turkish-Kurdish civil war in the late 1980s. The construction of a six-lane boulevard which segregated the neighbourhood from Istanbul’s wealthy tourist district sealed Tarlabaşı’s fate. “Violence, drug issues and prostitution is definitely more visible here than anywhere else in the city,” says Ebru Ergün, a psychologist who has worked at the centre for the past five years. “The boulevard is one of the causes of that. It intensified the stigma surrounding this area and made it into a slum.”

Many of the children of Tarlabaşı fail to complete primary school before ending up as beggars or labourers, relying on state-run social services that provide little more than free lunches and sacks of coal. The Dom children, though, don’t even make it as far as school. “They live in awful conditions,” says Ceren Suntekin, a social worker at the centre. “They mostly beg or sell things near the tourist districts, and the police are quite violent towards them as they don’t suit the image that Istanbul is trying to create. The Roman mostly collect garbage on the street, sell flowers, or play music at clubs. They struggle to break out of this life because when they go to school, teachers discriminate against them and they don’t have the environment to study in when they come back home.” The TTM centre provides Turkish lessons to children and adults alike, so Tarlabaşı’s many Syrian and Kurdish residents can find jobs, earn a living, or even continue in education. Hasan Kizillar, 19, grew up in the local Roman community but learnt to play the violin, piano and other instruments in the centre’s orchestra. Now he works as a volunteer himself, teaching music to children, while preparing to study finance at Istanbul University. “He came from a very poor family,” Ergün says. “But like many Roman children, he was highly talented. We’re also slowly making progress with persuading families to allow girls to be educated, and running classes on literacy and gender equality.”

Most importantly of all, the centre is a place where those in trouble can seek help. Domestic abuse cases are commonplace in Tarlabaşı, and Ergün describes the centre’s recent attempts to aid a family of migrants where the mother and her two daughters had been beaten and sexually abused by the father for many years. “They were coming to us regularly,” she says. “We tried for a long time to persuade the mother to go to a shelter, and eventually she did. We found her a lawyer and now her husband is arrested and the children are safe. We’ve helped the woman find a job as her husband hadn’t allowed her to work; now she’s no longer dependent, we hope it will be a better life for them.” But this support network may not exist for much longer. Tarlabaşı is undergoing considerable change. Over the past few years, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has outlined an infrastructure agenda worth in the region of $100bn, and Tarlabaşı has been earmarked for urban transformation. Billboards depicting future visions of the neighbourhood – chic young couples strolling past modern apartments, retail outlets and hotels – are strewn outside the many ongoing building projects. Many of the dilapidated 19th-century buildings that have served as homes for Istanbul’s poorest, meanwhile, are rapidly being demolished. When forced out, the inhabitants often receive a fraction of the market price.

Issam Saade, a 51-year-old Kurdish waiter who has lived in Tarlabaşı since the mid-90s, explains that after years of fighting to stay, he was evicted last autumn following a court order. “There is more money coming into Tarlabaşı but not for the people who live here now,” Saade says. Two years ago, Istanbul’s rapidly escalating rents almost saw the TTM centre close down, but with the help of donations from the US, UK, Sweden and Holland, its work has been able to continue – for the moment. “Because of the gentrification process taking place here to attract tourists, the state wants the refugees and migrants who live in Tarlabaşı to move away,” Ergün says. “Many of them have nowhere to go, but the state doesn’t care about that. “They will have to move to wherever they can afford, and when they go, we will have to go too. We hope we can follow them to a new location and continue to help. Our centre is one of the few places where it’s safe for children from these communities to play, and where women can discuss their problems. There’s nowhere else providing that.” And what about the very poorest of all, the Dom children who beg on the streets of Taksim Square, where will they go? “We don’t really know. And I don’t think they know either.”

Source: The Guardian
Date: 03.12.2018

Studie zu Bildungswegen: „Sinti und Roma sind keine homogene Gruppe“

Im Alltag treffen Sinti und Roma häufig auf Vorurteile und Klischees. Auch im Bildungssystem sind sie vielfach Diskriminierungen ausgesetzt und haben schwierigere Startbedingungen. Wie schaffen einige es trotzdem, erfolgreich ihren Weg zu gehen? Der Soziologe Albert Scherr hat Sinti und Roma zu ihren Erfahrungen befragt. Im Interview erläutert er die wichtigsten Ergebnisse.

Für ihre Studie haben Ihre Mitarbeiterin Lena Sachs und Sie 25 junge Sinti und Roma interviewt, die studieren oder Akademiker sind. Mit welchem Ziel?

Wir wollten erfolgreiche Sinti und Roma sichtbarer machen und mehr über ihre Bildungskarrieren wissen. Denn gesellschaftlich sind solche Fälle nahezu „unsichtbar“. Stattdessen wird häufig behauptet, dass Sinti und Roma nur wenig gebildet sind, meist von Sozialleistungen leben und manche keinen festen Wohnsitz haben. Unsere Studie zeigt aber: Zwar verlassen manche früh die Schule oder erreichen keine höheren Bildungsabschlüsse, auch weil sie in Schulen Diskriminierungen erfahren. Andere finden jedoch Wege mit Benachteiligungen und Diskriminierung umzugehen und schaffen es bis an die Hochschulen. Continue reading Studie zu Bildungswegen: „Sinti und Roma sind keine homogene Gruppe“

‚A place to call our own‘: Europe’s first Roma cultural centre opens in Berlin

Groundbreaking institute to showcase and promote artistic and cultural contribution of Europe’s 12 million Roma people

As a boy facing bullying and discrimination for his Roma identity in his native Albania, Sead Kazanxhiu said he had harboured a simple dream: “To be considered equal to those around me. It was the same dream as our forefathers,” he said. “To not have to hide our identity in order to survive.”

The 30-year-old visual artist, who trained as a painter at the University of Arts in Tirana, is at the forefront of a groundbreaking institute launched in Berlin on Thursday to showcase and promote the largely invisible artistic and cultural existence of Europe’s estimated 12 million Roma people.

“We’ve been living in Europe for 600 years,” Kazanxhiu said, speaking in Romanes. “Now for the first time we have a place we can call our own and the chance to present the image of who we are, rather than others doing it for us.” Continue reading ‚A place to call our own‘: Europe’s first Roma cultural centre opens in Berlin

Roma: „Sicherheit“ gibt es auf dem Balkan nicht

Am Sonnabend protestierten Roma auch auf dem Kiez gegen Abschiebungen. In den Herkunftsländern erwarten sie Elendsquartiere.

500 Menschen haben am Sonnabend für einen Abschiebestopp und ein Bleiberecht für alle Roma demonstriert. Dazu aufgerufen hatte die Gruppe „Romano Jekipe Ano Hamburg“ (Vereinigte Roma Hamburg) zusammen mit „Recht auf Stadt – never mind the papers!“ und dem bundesweiten Netzwerk „alle bleiben!“. Schon in der vergangenen Woche hatten täglich bis zu 100 Menschen vor der Ausländerbehörde protestiert.

Peggy Parnass: Diskriminierung von Roma hat Tradition

Zu Beginn der Demo sprach Peggy Parnass, Kolumnistin und Autorin, deren Eltern im KZ Treblinka ermordet wurden. Sie erinnerte an das gemeinsame Schicksal mit vielen Roma: „Unsere Eltern und Großeltern starben in KZs“, sagte sie. „Wir werden zur Zeit nicht mehr abgeschlachtet, das ist schon ein Fortschritt. Jetzt werden unsere Freunde beiseite gedrängt und diskriminiert. Das hat Tradition. Aber das darf nicht so bleiben.“

Es könne nicht sein, dass sich Hamburg einerseits als weltoffene Stadt rühme und andererseits zulasse, „dass Roma in ein unerträgliches Leben abgeschoben werden“, sagte sie im Gespräch mit dem St. Pauli Blog. “Sie wollen sich eine Existenz aufbauen und arbeiten. Aber sie werden nur geduldet und bekommen keine Arbeitserlaubnis. Dann wirft man ihnen wieder vor: Die wollen ja nicht arbeiten. Das ist ein Teufelskreis.” Continue reading Roma: „Sicherheit“ gibt es auf dem Balkan nicht

PRESSEMITTEILUNG “Unfassbare Geschichtsvergessenheit”- Anlässlich des Gedenkens an den Holocaust kritisiert Amaro Foro e.V. die geplanten Sonderlager für Balkanflüchtlinge und die „sicheren Herkunftsstaaten“

Die von Horst Seehofer vorgeschlagenen Sonderlager für Balkanflüchtlinge – viele von ihnen Roma – kritisiert Amaro Foro e.V. auf das Schärfste. „Anlässlich des 2. August wird in Deutschland von Sinti und Roma des Genozids im Nationalsozialismus gedacht. In der Nacht zum 2. August wurden in Auschwitz fast 3000 Menschen im sogenannten Zigeunerlager ermordet. Es ist unfassbar, dass heute ein Ministerpräsident in Deutschland tatsächlich Sonderlager für eine bestimmte Gruppe von Flüchtlingen vorschlagen kann, ohne sofort zurücktreten zu müssen“, so Merdjan Jakupov, Vorsitzender von Amaro Foro e.V. und selbst Rom aus Mazedonien.

Bereits im letzten Jahr wurden Mazedonien, Serbien und Bosnien-Herzegowina zu „sicheren Herkunftsstaaten“ erklärt, sodass Asylbewerber von dort inzwischen nach einem Schnellverfahren wieder abgeschoben werden können. Aktuell wird diskutiert, Albanien und das Kosovo ebenfalls zu sicheren Herkunftsstaaten zu erklären. „Bisheriger moralischer Tiefpunkt der Debatte ist jedoch der Vorschlag von Horst Seehofer, Flüchtlinge aus den Westbalkanländern in gesonderten Lagern unterzubringen, um sie möglichst schnell wieder abschieben zu können. Da in der öffentlichen Wahrnehmung vor allem Roma aus diesen Ländern in Deutschland Asyl beantragen, schlägt Seehofer de facto Sonderlager für eine bestimmte ethnische Gruppe vor“, kritisiert Pressesprecherin Andrea Wierich. „Ebenfalls indiskutabel ist der Vorschlag vom Chef des Bundesamts für Migration und Flüchtlinge Manfred Schmidt, Flüchtlingen aus den Westbalkanländern das Taschengeld zu streichen.“

Die Einstufung als sichere Herkunftsstaaten beruht auf einer sehr einseitigen Auslegung des Begriffs der politischen Verfolgung. Nicht nur ein von Pro Asyl in Auftrag gegebenes Rechtsgutachten, sondern auch die Richtlinien des Europäischen Rates legen fest, dass eine politische Verfolgung nicht zwingend von staatlichen Akteuren ausgehen muss – entgegen der aktuellen Auslegung der Bundesregierung. Die Richtlinien des Europäischen Rates legen fest, dass Flüchtlinge dann nicht abgeschoben werden dürfen, wenn ihnen ein „ernsthafter Schaden“ droht, der auch von nichtstaatlichen Akteuren ausgehen kann, etwa Menschenrechtsverletzungen oder Übergriffe durch die Justiz (vgl. Art. 2, 6 und 8 der Richtlinie). Die Bundesregierung erkennt jedoch nur schwerwiegende staatliche Repressionen als politische Verfolgung an.

„Das ist auch der Grund für die extrem niedrigen Anerkennungsquoten von Asylanträgen aus den Westbalkanländern. Deutschland ist hier als Hardliner einzustufen – die Anerkennungsquote für Asylanträge aus Mazedonien etwa liegt in Deutschland bei 0,6 Prozent, in Frankreich jedoch bei 16,9 und in der Schweiz gar bei 22,2 Prozent“, erklärt Wierich. „Auch die Einstufung von Westbalkanstaaten als sichere Herkunftsländer ist deshalb eigentlich nicht mit europäischem Recht vereinbar.“

„In den Westbalkanstaaten sind Roma sowohl vom Arbeitsmarkt als auch vom Bildungs- und Gesundheitssystem ausgeschlossen. Sie leben in undokumentierten, offiziell nicht existierenden Slums und sind gewalttätigen Übergriffen sowohl durch rechte Gruppierungen als auch immer wieder durch die Polizei ausgesetzt“, so Jakupov. „Sie haben keinen Zugang zu Sozialleistungen; elementare Bürgerrechte scheinen für sie nicht zu gelten. Hinzu kommt, dass Mazedonien – vom Westen bisher weitgehend ignoriert – dabei ist, sich zu einer Diktatur zu entwickeln. Präsident Nikolai Gruevski schürt Spannungen zwischen ethnischen Gruppen, um seine Macht zu festigen, die Medien sind gleichgeschaltet und es gibt politische Gefangene – etwa Oppositionelle und kritische Journalisten. Weitgehend unbekannt ist bisher auch, dass bei der Polizeiaktion im Mai, bei der es 22 Tote gab, die Opfer vor allem Roma waren.“

„In Serbien ist die Situation von Roma ähnlich. Dort können rassistische Mobs ungestraft zu Hate Crime gegen Roma aufrufen, gewalttätige Übergriffe sind keine Seltenheit“, erklärt Violeta Balog, serbische Romni und Gründungsmitglied von Amaro Foro e.V. „Es ist unfassbar, dass dennoch Roma aus den Westbalkanstaaten in Deutschland nicht als schutzbedürftig anerkannt, sondern als Wirtschaftsflüchtlinge diskreditiert werden. In einem Land, in dem es bereits einmal Sonderlager für Roma gab, ist eine solche Geschichtsvergessenheit unfassbar.“

Quelle: Amaro Foro
Stand: 03.08.2015

A Roma Education

What comes to mind when you hear the word “gypsy?” Do you picture the beautiful, kind-hearted Esmeralda from Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame or women begging on the streets of Europe, whom travelers are told to avoid?

“Gypsy” is a racial slur used to describe the Romani people, an ethnic group dispersed throughout Central and Eastern Europe, which falsely attributes their origin to Egypt. The word “gypsy” also carries the negative connotations that Roma are cheaters and thieves—the people responsible when you have been scammed or “gypped.” This kind of wide generalization and stereotype has historically bound the Roma to racism and exclusion from mainstream society.

The years between 2005 and 2015 were deemed “The Decade of Roma Inclusion” by 12 European countries—Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Spain— which pledged to close the gap between the Roma and the rest of society. In an interview with the HPR, Robert Kushen, Director of the Decade Secretariat, the main facilitation body of the Decade, stated that by implementing the Decade, “the EU has, in a very public and political way, acknowledged that this is an issue that demands a concerted political response.” It is now timely to analyze whether this ten-year initiative has had an impact on the lives of the long-marginalized Romani people. Continue reading A Roma Education

Romani transgender woman murdered in Istanbul home

A transgender Romani woman has been found by police, killed at her home in the neighborhood of Kurtuluş on the European side of Istanbul, news website Bianet reported on Oct. 10. The circumstances of the murder are unclear, with police officials saying they are unable to establish whether there had been a robbery at the address. Relatives of the woman, known as “Gypsie Gül,” told Bianet that most murders of transgender people who earn their living through prostitution are usually committed by their clients. However, they also added that Gül did not bring her clients to her home but usually went to hotels.
Gül’s body was found by a friend who was concerned after not receiving news from her for two days. Kurtuluş, in the central Şişli district of Istanbul, is one of the most tolerant neighborhoods in the city, where many transgender people have chosen to settle and live. Many transgender people in Turkey live under constant threat of hate attacks and most of the murders targeting the LGBT community are left unsolved. A young transgender woman, Çağla Joker, was murdered last April following an attack by two young men.

Source: Hürriyet Daily News
Date: 10.10.2014

Vienna names square after Romani celebrity

Earlier this month a square in the Viennese quarter of Neubau was named after one of its celebrated, recently deceased residents, Ceija Stojka. A Romani woman, Ms Stojka survived three concentration camps, lived a travelling lifestyle for years after the war, and made her living as a carpet seller.

At the end of the 1980s she published her autobiography, called We Live in Seclusion – Memories of a Romni, which was published in Czech translation 20 years later by the Romano daniben association in collaboration with the Argo publishing house. In time she became a famous author and painter and was eventually granted an honorary professorship by a government minister.

As part of the „ordination“ of the square, a celebration was held in front of the chruch where Ms Stojka had regularly attended mass. Her relatives read from her books and played Romani songs, while the children in attendance were able to make masks if they felt like it. Continue reading Vienna names square after Romani celebrity