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Previous Next IdentityLepselter concluded from her analysis of mid-20th-century gypsilorism that the Gypsies are both "the 'heart' of Europe and radically 'other' to it" (31). The debate this anomaly naturally provokes has centered around the "real" identity of the Romani people, both in terms of genetic descent and in terms of our status as "Europeans." The most succinct statement describing this two-sided identity is found in a recent Project on Ethnic Relations report:
The Indian OriginAlthough the Indian origin of the Romani people is beyond dispute, not only on the basis of linguistic but also of cultural and serological evidence, this remains largely the concern of the academic. While early Romani populations on their arrival in Europe were able to say that they had come from India, this fact has become lost in time, and is still generally not known to the vast majority of Roma, many of whom have internalized instead the notion of an origin in Egypt. And those who learn about the Indian connection and put it to the test by comparing their Romani with the Hindi, Sindhi or Punjabi of the ubiquitous Indian convenience-store managers in the United States find this interesting, but little else. From Hungary, Michael Stewart reported the same response:
A recent observation by a Vlax Rrom is more explicit:
For very particular reasons, I have been among the most vocal in insisting that Rroma are a composite people who originated in Asia. I take the position of the sociolinguist, who sees language as the vehicle of culture, and we speak a language and maintain a culture whose core of direct retention is directly traceable to India. I believe that the acknowledgment of this position is essential, because the alternative is to create a fictitious history and to have, again, our identity in the hands of non-Romani policy-makers and scholars. They are defensible scientifically because they are supported by current academic research, and they are defensible practically because Madame Indira Gandhi openly acknowledged Rroma as an Indian population outside of India and it was the Indian government which was instrumental in helping our people achieve representation in the United Nations, and in creating our First World Romani Congress, and which is now supporting our claims for return of the gold and other possessions taken from Romani Holocaust victims and currently on deposit in Swiss banks. Without the backing of such a national government, the Romani voice would have been carried away by the wind, and these things would probably not even have happened. Those who minimize the Indian connection are not linguists or historians, although they frequently feel entirely qualified to make linguistic and historiographical pronouncements (35). Sandland (36) says that "notwithstanding the best attempts of the so-called Gypsyologists or gypsy lorists, however, the Indian connection has only been posited linguistically and it remains, to say the least, vague" ignoring the serological and cultural evidence, and basing his position solely on a second-hand acquaintance with the Traveller population in Britain. While such scholars dismiss the arguments, they offer no evidence to support their dismissal. The most elementary cultural/linguistic evidence, such as the fact that the Romani word for "cross" (trushul) originally meant "Shiva's trident," is left unaddressed. It is hard to reconcile facts such as these with the "indigenous origin" argument that Romani language and culture were passed like a relay-runners baton from population to population along trade routes, rather than being brought with one migrating people. Previous Next |
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