Gypsy News

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

Friday, December 19, 2008

German memorial for Gypsy victims of Nazis

Fri Dec 19, 10:41 am ET

(AP) BERLIN – Germany has started building a memorial to about 500,000 Gypsies persecuted by the Nazis.

Construction on the square well in Berlin's central Tiergarten park follows 16 years of debate among leading groups representing Germany's Gypsies, or Sinti and Roma. It is due to be completed in 2009.

Romani Rose, leader of Germany's Central Council for Sinti and Roma, spoke at Friday's groundbreaking ceremony. Rose praised the government for "recognizing its historical responsibility for those Gypsies who were persecuted under the Nazis."

Some 220,000 to 500,000 Gypsies were killed during the Holocaust. Berlin also has memorials to Jews and gay victims killed by the Nazis.

Labels: , , , , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Gypsy musicians serenade Berliners throughout the year - Feature

Berlin - Fifty years ago, organ-grinders were commonplace in Berlin, churning out the music of a past age. Today, gypsy musicians provide the entertainment in the German capital's public spaces. The organ-grinders' music seemed to hug the city's walls, alleyways and side-streets, and Berliners, ever appreciative and a touch sentimental, would open windows to toss a few coins wrapped in scraps of paper to the pavements below.

No longer. Leierkastenmaenner, as they are known in Germany, are rarely to be seen these days pushing their barrel organs from street corner to street corner, whatever the weather.

At the height of the hurdy-gurdy era in 1920s Berlin, there were three barrel organ manufacturers in Berlin. But by the late 1960s the only firm still surviving was that run by Giovanni Gacigapupo, the son of Italian parents.

At one point he had 50 employees. But when he died, the firm died with him - the demand for barrel organs had dried up and his few remaining workers found themselves reduced to repairing broken down church organs to keep themselves busy in the troubled communist era in east Berlin.

Nowadays, only two or three organ grinders are to be found in Berlin, playing in front of big city stores like the KaDeWe or, at annually held Leierkasten music festivals.

Their role in Berlin has largely been taken over by gypsy musicians from Romania and parts of former Yugoslavia. Equipped with their accordions and brass instruments they entertain Berliners and tourists alike with a distinctly Balkan-flavoured brand of music.

You see them on Berlin's overhead (S-Bahn) suburban and underground (U-Bahn) trains, smiling and playing a mix of numbers for a little spare change between station stops.

Constantly on the move, they arrive to play at kerb-side restaurants and cafes along the Kurfuerstendamm and Unten den Linden boulevards and at other haunts around the Savigny Platz and on the Alexanderplatz.

For the most part, Berlin authorities tolerate their activities.

Several gypsy groups, whose members received music school training earlier in eastern Europe or elsewhere in Germany, have now settled in Berlin, forming bands that feature regularly at city swing and jazz venues

Ask Berlin officials how many gypsies - or Roma - there are living in Berlin, and they tend to shrug their shoulders, hinting that some among them may be here illegally without papers.

Of the several hundred officially registered, a disproportionate number are musicians.

One of the best-known Gypsy Balkan brass bands in Berlin is "Fanfare Kalashnikov" who first began performing on the "Kudamm" boulevard and around the Alexanderplatz, according to Robert Rigney, a local writer.

Clemens Gruen, a young German anthropologist-cum-DJ and Latin music afficionado, who, in earlier years worked with the famous Buena Vista Social Club, was swift to recognise their talents, becoming their manager.

Nowadays they play to packed audiences at venues throughout Europe. As for their "Fanfare Kalashnikov" band name, tuba player Sergiu simply explains: "We play just like a Kalashnikov: very fast and very precise!"

Another prominent "Roma" singer in Berlin is Anicka Fecova, who arrived from eastern Slovakia via Prague in the 1980s.

"I have been my whole life a professional singer, although I can't read notes and can't play a musical instrument," she told the "ExBerliner" - a Berlin-based monthly English language magazine recently.

Fecova, often hailed as the "mother of Berlin Roma Music," has never had much trouble finding work in the West, playing with her band at the city's Junction Bar, Jazz Train and House of World Cultures.

Like many Roma in Berlin, she finds Berlin's multicultural environment liberating. She stresses back home in the now Czech Republic she never experienced any racism and was always seen as a gypsy.

In Berlin it's different. "Here I'm often mistaken for an Arab or Turk," she says a trifle whimsically.

Life hasn't always been smooth for gypsies in Berlin. In 2005 the city authorities began organising the deportation of about 50,000 refugees, mostly Roma, back to Kosovo after a period of asylum in Germany, in some cases after a decade or more.

Human Rights groups claimed Berlin's action reflected "deeply held prejudices in Germany's immigration system" and was insensitive given the large number of Roma killed in the Nazi era.

City officials reject such talk, saying the Kosovan refugees had known from the outset in the 1990s their stay in Berlin was of limited duration.

Copyright, respective author or news agency

Labels: , , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Friday, December 21, 2007

Germany Recognizes Gypsy Holocaust

Berlin, Dec 20 (Prensa Latina) The Upper House of the German Parliament (Bundesrat) Thursday agreed to demand the government build a monument to recall the extermination of the central European gypsies by the Nazi Germany.

The belated apology to the half million gypsies deported and killed in Nazi extermination camps was agreed on the occasion of the 65 anniversary of the signing of Auschwitz decree by the chief of the SS Heinrich Himmler, on December 16, 1942.

When he was leader of the Schutzstaffel, which was a major Nazi military organization exclusively under Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, Himmler ordered the killing of millions of people for the simple reason of being different.

It was then that 11 million people, half of them Jewish, as well as Polish, homosexuals, Jehovah witnesses and Gypsies in Germany and other occupied countries, were systematically and methodically killed.

Labels: , , , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Monday, December 11, 2006

Germany pledges racism crackdown

Sports Illustrated
SI.com
Posted: Monday December 11, 2006 11:42AM; Updated: Monday December 11, 2006 11:42AM

HEIDELBERG, Germany (AP) -- German soccer president Theo Zwanziger promised Holocaust survivors a crackdown on the surge of racism in the country's stadiums.

Zwanziger said Monday that a new task force will use the Internet to track incidents, with offending clubs facing the threat of fines, point penalties and playing in empty stadiums if they can't control their fans.

"With a new tracking system we want to know every weekend where there were problems with fans at the 80,000 matches, and which clubs have to be held responsible for the unbearable and sometimes open racism," Zwanziger said.

Zwanziger met with the Central Council of Sinti and Roma in Heidelberg -- which included Holocaust survivors -- after racist chanting was heard recently at nearby stadiums in Ulm, Kaiserslautern and Karlsruhe.

Since hosting the World Cup in June, Germany has been alarmed series of violent incidents, from the professional level down to youth and amateur matches played each weekend.

(MORE)

Labels: , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Saturday, December 2, 2006

Largest archive of Holocaust records to open

USA TODAY
By Arthur Max, The Associated Press

BAD AROLSEN, Germany — The 21-year-old Russian sat before a clerk of the U.S. Army Judge Advocate's office, describing the furnaces at Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp where he had been a prisoner until a few weeks previously.

"I saw with my own eyes how thousands of Jews were gassed daily and thrown by the hundreds into pits where Jews were burning," he said.

"I saw how little children were killed with sticks and thrown into the fire," he continued. Blood flowed in gutters, and "Jews were thrown in and died there"; more were taken off trucks and cast alive into the flames.

Today the Holocaust is known in dense and painful detail. Yet the young Russian's words leap off the faded, onionskin page with a rawness that transports the reader back to April 1945, when World War II was still raging and the world still knew little about gas chambers, genocide and the Final Solution.

The two pages of testimony, in a file randomly plucked off a shelf, are among millions of documents held by the International Tracing Service, or ITS, an arm of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

This vast archive — 16 miles of files in six nondescript buildings in a German spa town — contains the fullest records of Nazi persecutions in existence. But because of concerns about the victims' privacy, the ITS has kept the files closed to the public for half a century, doling out information in minimal amounts to survivors or their descendants on a strict need-to-know basis.

This policy, which has generated much ill-feeling among Holocaust survivors and researchers, is about to change.

(MORE)

Labels: , ,

AddThis Social Bookmark Button