Gypsy News

News about the Rom/Roma/Gypsy along with environmental, wildlife and animal news and alerts.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Gypsy Summer

By Michael Johnson on 7.28.09 @ 6:08AM

BORDEAUX -- Anyone visiting Italy, France, Germany or Holland this summer is likely to be struck by increasing signs of abject poverty on the streets. Begging has expanded noticeably, often by elderly men and women or mothers carrying small babies. A woman holding her three-month-old daughter asked me for loose change outside a post office the other day on Bordeaux's most fashionable street.

At the Sunday outdoor market on Bordeaux's revitalized riverside, an accordionist plays mournful Slavic tunes as shoppers drop coins in a cup. I chatted with him the other day in a mix of French and Russian, both of which he spoke badly. He was surprisingly cheerful and seemed well fed. Now we call each other "kamarad."

With some exceptions, these dispossessed people are a long way from home. Eastern Europe's poor, mostly Roma, or gypsies, are coming west in large numbers looking for a better life or at least more charity.

Since the admission of Bulgaria and Romania into the European Union two years ago they rank as the largest ethnic minority in the Union, now numbering 12 million, more numerous than the population of Belgium or Greece.

After contributing modestly to the upkeep of the Roma for some months, I felt compelled to gain entry to this off-limits culture if only to test the veracity of scare stories circulating about them. Child prostitution and rampant thievery are common complaints from the local population. Their communal way of life, their wanderlust, their rejection of contraception and their poor language skills all contribute to the barriers that exclude them.

One well-traveled friend goes further, warning me that Roma are a "permanent criminal underclass that has taken its business on the road." The truth turns out to be more complicated.

To gain entry into their isolated quarters, I joined up with Dr. Christophe Adam of Médecins du Monde, a young physician who makes a pro bono visit to the gypsy squatters once or twice a week. On a recent visit, he was greeted as an old friend and I was just as warmly received once they came to trust me. They live in fear of racist attacks and official expulsion orders.

The doctor and I were encircled by a dozen or so men and women chattering excitedly in four languages. When they learned I was an American, one old man gave a thumbs-up sign and shouted, "Yes! Amerika!" A younger man, smiling broadly, introduced himself as "Bobby -- like 'Dallas.'"

These proud and handsome people are excluded from society where they came from -- Bosnia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia -- and more so in Western Europe. Except for members of a few charitable organizations, most West Europeans treat them as lepers.

If they identify a West Europe city that treats them tolerably well, as Bordeaux does, they write to fellow-villagers back home and tell them it is safe to come over. Thus extended families are often reunited although in deplorable conditions.

After a round of introductions at the squat, Dr. Adam and I were ushered into a large room, once a factory floor that now serves as home for about 15 people. Seven double beds were neatly arranged around the room as in a military barracks. Colorful fabrics were hung to cover the cement walls. The senior woman in the group strode toward me and introduced herself in Russian as Gladka.

I half expected her to offer me tea in a glass, Russian style, but that was beyond her. The room has no running water or toilet facilities. Electricity is pirated from a nearby utility pole.

I had a long talk in halting French with Léonard, a 19-year-old Bulgarian who said he makes enough money begging and washing windshields at street corners to buy his food, so he does not have to steal to survive. "I just want a normal life for my wife, and I don't want my daughter to become a beggar. I want to work," he said. Another man, camping in quarters next to the Bordeaux city dump, pulled at my sleeve and begged me to help him find odd jobs.

A high-level conference in Brussels last September suggested ways to bring some order to the treatment of Roma, chiefly by recommending that Roma children be accepted in the local school system.

But the law is uncompromising. The French occasionally round up the Roma and expel them for infraction of immigration laws. The Italian police sweep through the camps to count heads and collect DNA samples to match up family members.

Some manage to escape the spiral of exclusion and degradation. One such celebrated case is Cecilia Attias, the ex-wife of French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Cecilia is the daughter of Aron Ciganer (a corruption of "tsigane," or gypsy) who was half-Jewish and half-gypsy. Two European Parliamentarians are of Roma origin. But such success stories are rare.

Their plight is neatly summed up by Dr. Adam: "The Roma problem is symbolic of our inability to live with people whose culture and habits are outside our norms."

Michael Johnson spent 17 years at McGraw-Hill, including six years as a news executive in New York. He now writes from Bordeaux in France.

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Friday, June 22, 2007

Gypsy Jazz Festivals Recall Grappelli, Reinhardt: Mike Zwerin

By Mike Zweri

June 20 (Bloomberg) -- The musette is the musical expression of the beret, the baguette, and the yellow corn-paper Gauloise cigarette. It is, says Didier Lockwood, ``as French as the Tour de France.''

Lockwood, a violinist, composer, and educator, is officially described as ``godfather'' to the Festival Jazz Musette des Puces that takes place in the Paris flea market in the suburb of Saint- Ouen on June 23 and 24.

Musette is bouncy, merry music, perfect for dancing and partying. It is now a kind of folk music, fixed in the time of its heyday, the first half of the 20th century.

Elements of the tango, the waltz, the mazurka, and flamenco were incorporated into the gypsy culture to give birth to the musette. The accordion was king, followed by guitars, clarinets, violins and bass fiddles as the style segued into what was called Gypsy Swing. Similar to the tango, it excluded drums. It is useful to remember that Chet Baker once said: ``It's got to be a pretty good drummer to be better than no drummer at all.''

When Jean `Django' Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli and the Quintet of the Hot Club of France combined the musette with jazz in the 1930s, it became the only major jazz style not born in the U.S.

Gypsy Swing generates its magical percussionless groove (the accordion was dropped) by several guitars playing the ``pompe,'' an insistent strumming of four beats to the bar.

Adding Charisma

The quintet was still a quartet when Reinhardt complained to his co-leader, the violinist Grappelli, that it wasn't fair that he had only one guitar playing the pompe behind his solos, and Grappelli had two. So they added a third guitar, and that clinched the group's charisma.

Grappelli took Lockwood under his wing when he heard him play at the age of 21, when he was with the jazz-rock fusion group Magma. Lockwood has since played and recorded with Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Elvin Jones, Claude Nougaro, Michel Petrucciani, and Frank Zappa.

His Centre des Musiques Didier Lockwood, south of Paris near Melun, teaches improvisation to an international assortment of students. He has been made a Chevalier de la Legion d'Honneur.

Lockwood compares the musette to Irish traditional music, sounds that will not disappear, but ``which needs to be exposed to a wider and younger public.''

David Reinhardt, Ninine Garcia, Stochello Rosenberg, Christian Escoude and Marcel Azzola among others will perform afternoons and evenings in the brasseries, bistros, bars and streets of the market, surrounding Saint-Ouen and the neighboring 18th arrondisssement.

The festival's costs are covered by councils, tourist boards, cultural organizations and private sponsors, making the music free of charge. Lockwood calls it a ``fete populaire.''

Double Outlaw

Reinhardt was, like Artie Shaw, one of those jazzmen who was good and genuinely popular at the same time. His popularity topped out during the German occupation of France (Grappelli spent the war in London), when posters for his concerts were on the walls of Paris next to Maurice Chevalier posters.

Reinhardt ate in the best Italian restaurants, stayed at the best hotels, and won and lost fortunes playing billiards. Being a gypsy and a jazz musician in wartime Paris, he was a double outlaw at a time when jazz was a metaphor for freedom.

The 28th annual Django Reinhardt Festival in Samois-sur- Seine, an enchanting river port west of Paris, will take place from June 28 through July 1, a week after the market festival. Reinhardt had settled down in a house in Samois when he died aged 43 on May 16, 1953, while fishing in a rowboat on the river.

Many gypsies continue to claim to be his cousins. Most of them play guitars, and they like to gather their caravans in Samois for the festival.

Featured musicians include Mike Reinhardt, Tchavolo and Dorado Schmitt, Alma Sinti, Wawau Adler, and Florin Niculescu.

(Mike Zwerin is a critic for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.)

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