Saturday, 8 February 2014

A flag without a country - living beneath the radar

In the 15th Century the first Roma migrants began to leave Sanskrit in Northern India.  There are now approximately 12 million dispersed across the EU , and a population of about 4,000 in Rotherham.  In 1971 the Roma people adopted a flag – blue for the sky, green for the earth and a wagon wheel to symbolize the travelling culture which was outlawed in Eastern Europe in 1948.  I learned these facts at the Roma awareness session organized by Rotherfed . The session was delivered by Michal and Radek from the Roma community, supported by Azizzum and Emma from the RotherhamEthnic Minority Alliance .

We watched a video that depicted the living conditions in Lunik IX – a huge concrete settlement in the east of Slovakia – built by the communists to house the Roma and other marginals.  
No water, electricity, rubbish disposal.  No services, doctors, dentists or schools.  Education provision for Roma is through ‘special ‘schools where there are no professional teachers and the expectations of the Roma students are low.
Compared to these conditions a rundown terraced house in Rotherham’s Eastwood is “heaven”.

Not all Roma are the same.  Those from east Slovakia have the experience of living in the ghetto.  The Czech Republic had a policy of integration of Roma, assuming that this would bring about a change of culture in that community. While communist regimes had discriminated against the Roma in Czech and Slovakia, the arrival of democracy brought a worsening of conditions.  At least with the communists there was a commitment to full employment; the ascendancy of a market economy with private employers brought discrimination and Roma were excluded due to their lack of education and skills.  The Roma also suffered under the holocaust – at the start of WW2 the Roma population in Czech was one million.  By the end of the war there were 642 Roma left in the Czech Republic.

Michal came to the UK as a refugee from the Czech Republic thirteen years ago..  Migration has since increased when the Czech Republic joined the EU in 2004 mostly motivated by discrimination, lack of education and few prospects due to ethnicity.  Michal came to make a better life – he and his sister had attended college and were the only Roma students in a body of 900.  He experienced both subtle and blatant racism.  We listened in shocked silence as he told us how he was beaten up by 2 neo nazi skinheads when he was 15.  Travelling across town to get to college he took the risk of travelling on the subway.  His journey ended with a 14 day stay in hospital.  When he went to the police station to follow up on the attack he was asked to identify his assailants from a book of mug shots that only depicted Roma.

The impact of these difficult circumstances has led Roma people to build barriers around themselves and to draw together as a closed community.  It feels safer to stay below the radar, avoid eye contact, speak Slovak, rather than Roma, in public.  The Roma experience is based around always trying to be accepted in another country as they have no country of their own.  They have learned that they have to become someone else in order to be accepted in any country.  Their ethnicity  becomes a hiding game.   “We want to stay beneath the radar – to be ignored.”  Involvement with officials and others is associated with conflict and stress. This quest for invisibility is played out around the spoken language – it is not safe to speak Roma on the streets of Prague;  when registering for school most Roma families will self identify as Czech or Slovak; children will be taught to speak Slovak as the first step to getting out of the ghetto.

Roma culture is renowned for dance and skillful musicianship – “every other Roma is a musician”.  The culture is also very family oriented.  Some of the headlines around street gatherings, litter etc are a reflection of ghetto culture, not Roma culture.  Other issues such as neighbours’ irritation with living next door to large families are not culture clashes but different ways of life.

In spite of the difficulties encountered, coming to the UK offers a sense of freedom and opportunity previously denied.  We were shown harrowing footage of the mobilisation of the ultra right wing against the Roma, to get them kicked out.  “Send us back to….Where?  Gypsistan?”  This has become more embedded and acceptable in society so now you can never be sure where the kick will come from.

“We came to escape these issues – not to become millionaires”  The way forward is through education.  “We could be fine through our kids – give us ten years”

The Roma “want to feel freedom – not rules”.  It is crucial that services listen and respond flexibly to the expressed needs.  It was pointed out that the skills required to work with the Roma are those that are developed in working with any deprived community – listening, flexibility ‘ persistence, taking small steps at a time.  In Rotherham drop in advice sessions have been organized. A Roma Forum has been established where services such as the Police are invited to come and listen to members of the community and to learn from them.

People made good use of the session to ask a range of questions around housing, education, ways of life etc.  As Steve Ruffle from Rotherfed pointed out – talking to each other is the best way to get to know each other and get the facts.  The media is particularly unhelpful in the current climate.

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