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Muslim Romani people

Muslim Romani people are people who are ethnically Roma and profess Islam. There are many different Roma groups and subgroups that predominantly practice Islam, as well as individual Romani people from other subethnic groups who have accepted Islam. Xoraxane Roma in Balkan Romani language, are non-Vlax Romani people, who adopted Sunni Islam of the Hanafi madhhab at the time of the Ottoman Empire.[1] Some of them are Derviş of Sufism belief, and the biggest Tariqa of Jerrahi is located at the largest Arlije and Gurbeti Muslim Roma settlement in Europe in Šuto Orizari, locally called Shutka in North Macedonia have their own Romani Imam[2] and the Muslim Roma in Šuto Orizari use the Quran in Balkan Romani language.[3] Many Romanlar in Turkey, are members of the Hindiler Tekkesi a Qadiriyya-Tariqa, founded in 1738 by the Indian Muslim Sheykh Seyfullah Efendi El Hindi in Selamsız.[4] Roma Muslims in Turkey and the Balkans are mostly cultural Muslims or nominal Muslims.[5][6]

Costume of a Romani woman (most likely Muslim Roma)
Muslim Roma in Bosnia (around 1900)

Muslim Roma hold religious male circumcision ceremonies (Bijav Suneti) with great pomp and festivities.[7] The boys are mostly circumcised at the age of five, because the number 5 (panč) is a sacred symbol among the Romani people. It is a custom among Muslim Roma that the foreskin must be buried.[8] They believe the foreskin will come back to men on the Day of Resurrection, based on a Hadith from Sahih al-Bukhari 6524: The Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam) said: "You will be raised on the Day of Judgement barefooted, naked, and uncircumicized (with foreskin)", burying the foreskin is also a tradition of South Asian Muslims.[9] During the ceremony, the child’s hand and feet are held by his Kirvo (godfather). A Kirvo pays the cost of the circumcision ceremony.[10] The Tradition of a Kirve who is similar to a Sandek, is also practised in Alevism and Yazidism in Turkey.[11] Islam among Roma is historically associated with life of Roma within the Ottoman Empire, because Muslim Roma were preferred in the Ottoman Empire and were settled in the Balkans and Rumelia, taken from the Anatolia Eyalet and the Egypt Eyalet. Although Muslim Roma paid a Jizya in the first centuries of the Ottoman Empire, an exception were the Muslim Roma in Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina, who were exempt from taxes by the order of Selim II. After the Edict of Gülhane all Muslim Roma became exempt from paying the Taxation in the Ottoman Empire and became fully accepted Muslims.[12] In 1874, the Ottoman Empire gave equal rights to other Muslims.[13] The Turkish historian Reşat Ekrem Koçu, explained that a Group of Lom people who lived in Istanbul convert closed to Islam in the 19th century.[14] Correspondingly, significant cultural minorities of Muslim Roma are found in Turkey, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, Montenegro, Kosovo, Republic of North Macedonia, Bulgaria, (by mid-1990s estimates, Muslim Roma in constituted about 40% of Roma in Bulgaria.[15]), (a very small group of Muslim Roma exists in the Dobruja and Wallachia region of Romania, comprising 1% of the country's Muslim Romani population[16]),[17] Croatia (45% of the country's Romani population, who came from Bosnia[18]), Southern Russia, Greece (a small part of Muslim Roma concentrated in Western Thrace), Northern Cyprus, Southern Serbia (geographical region) and Crimea (Crimean Roma). The majority of Muslim Roma in the former Yugoslavia speak Balkan Romani and South Slavic languages, while many speak only the language from the host country's like the Albanized Muslim Roma Groups from Albania, Kosovo, Montenegro and North Macedonia, speak only the Albanian language and be called Khorakhan Shiptari, they have fully adopted the Albanian culture,[19] other created an own identity like Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians, and some deny their Romani Background, especially in Kosovo and claimed to be Albanians or Turks.[20][21] Turkish language is used by the Turkish Roma, only a view speak Kurbetcha , Rumelian Romani or Sepečides Romani. Some Muslim Roma also used the word Gypsy for themselves because they did not perceive it as a derogatory term. Muslim Roma culture is based on the Islamic culture. Under Ottoman Rule, the Christian and Muslim Roma were separated, by the order of Suleiman the Magnificent. Muslim Roma were forbidden to marry Christian Roma and live together or to do business. Muslim Roma men served in the Military of the Ottoman Empire, especially in the Ottoman military band.[22] Significant differences between Muslim and Christian Roma emerged through the centuries. Orthodox Christian Vlax Romani see themself as the čáče Roma (true Roma) and do not consider Muslim Roma to be part of Romani society and call them Turks and explain they "slice the foreskins from their members". Muslim Roma, however, see Christian Roma as foreign and call them Dasikane (Servant, slaves). Also the phrase Amare Roma (Our Roma) and Cudza Roma (foreign Roma) is used vice versa. There is a huge cultural gap between the two religious groups.[23]

Settlings edit

After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the Muslim Roma have found themselves under double discrimination in regions where Islam was a minority religion, experiencing both Antiziganism and anti-Muslim sentiment.[24]

At the Greek War of Independence, Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) and Balkan Wars (1912–1913), Muslim Roma flee together with other different Muslim Groups to Istanbul and East Thrace, as Muhacir.[25]

At the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey, Muslim Turkish Roma from Greece have also been resettled in Turkey. In Turkish, they are called Mübadil Romanlar.[26][27][28][29][30]

In 1950–1951 Muslim Turkish Roma from Bulgaria came to Turkey and settled in Çanakkale and surroundings.[31]

From 1953 -1968, Muslim Turkish Roma and Turks from Yugoslavia emigrated to Turkey,[32][33]

Because of the relative ease of migration in modern times, Muslim Roma may be found in other parts of the world as well. Turkish Roma from Turkey and also other Muslim Roma from ex-Yugoslavia, came to West Europe as Gastarbeiter, but seen by the Host population as Turks or Yugoslavs.[34] Muslim Roma from Bosnia and Kosovo went at the time of the Yugoslav Wars to Italy, and live especially in Florence.[35] Xoraxane (Muslim Roma) from former Yugoslavia went to USA, settled mostly in New York,[36][37] and South America.[37] Since 2007, Turkish Roma from Bulgaria went as workers to West Europe[38]

Faith and status edit

Most Muslim Roma are Sunni, but they are not exclusively Sunni. For example, there are some Shia Roma communities in Serbia.[39] Turkish Roma are mostly Sunni.[40] Under Ottoman rule, Roma Muslim had a lower social status than non-Roma Muslims, but above that of non-Muslims.[41] However, other Muslim Roma are well-integrated with and accepted by their Muslim non-Roma brothers.

Types of Muslim Roma edit

 
A Romani translation of the Qur'an

Xoraxane edit

Xoraxane (also spelled as Khorakhane, Xoraxane, Kharokane, Xoraxai, etc. - meaning Lovers of the Koran) is an antiquated religionym, confessionym, and umbrella term for Muslim Roma in the Balkans[42] or alternatively all Muslim Roma in Southern Europe and West Asia similar to how the term Turks was used for non-Turkish Muslims. They are many groups of Xoraxane Roma, named after their old traditional professional activities, also divived in sedentary and nomadic groups.[43] Not all Roma adherents of Islam are considered Xoraxane.

Arlije edit

The sedentary Arlije are the main group of the Romani people in North Macedonia. They are one of the many subgroups considered Xoraxane.

Crimean Roma edit

The Crimean Roma (also called Çingene) are a community of Tatarized Roma who traditionally practice Islam. They are often considered to be both a subgroup of the Roma and a subgroup of the Crimean Tatar people due to assimilation, although the term oraxane is rarely, if ever, used for them anymore

Zargari edit

The Zargari are a Roma subgroup settled in Zargar, Iran and neighboring villages who observe Shia Islam and speak in a Balkan Romani dialect. Their exact origins are debated among scholars.

New Muslims edit

British Romani businessman Alfie Best Jr. converted to Islam in 2023.[44] As Islam is not an ethnoreligion, it accepts converts regardless of their ethnic background, which includes Roma from non-Muslim backgrounds.

Dress edit

Muslim Roma women wear beautiful silk Dimije also known as Turkish salvar, at weddings, circumcision ceremonies, and other festivals. Even on weekdays, quite a few older women, but also some younger women, wear the şalvar.

Dance and music edit

Belly dance and Romano Hora (dance), Roman Havaları 8/9 tact, Zurna, Davul, Clarinet are performed. In the Ottoman Empire, especially young handsome Romani Guys were taken as Köçek-Dancers while young Romani female-dancers were named Çengi.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Xoraxane Roma".
  2. ^ "Society: Macedonia's Romani Imam". Transitions Online (6/08). 2010.
  3. ^ "Quran Collection: The Noble Quran in Romani Language – (Juzz Amma) -... | Romani language, Noble quran, Romani".
  4. ^ YÖK Açık Bilim[dead link]
  5. ^ Becky, Taylor (2014). Another Darkness, Another Dawn: A History of Gypsies, Roma and Travellers. Reaktion Books. p. 31. ISBN 9781780232973.
  6. ^ Barutcu, Atilla (January 2015). ""Ucundan Azıcık"la Atılan Sağlam Temel: Türkiye'de Sünnet Ritüeli ve Erkeklik İlişkisi". Masculinities: A Journal of Identity and Culture.
  7. ^ "ROMANINET- A MULTIMEDIA ROMANI COURSE FOR PROMOTING LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY AND IMPROVING SOCIAL DIALOGUE : REPORT ON ROMA PEOPLE" (PDF). Romaninet.com. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  8. ^ Alexander Novik (December 2020). "The Rite of Male Circumcision among the Muslim Population in the Western Balkans". Folklore. 80: 151–168. doi:10.7592/FEJF2020.80.novik.
  9. ^ "School holidays in Malaysia, time for circumcision". Reuters. 23 November 2009.
  10. ^ "Historic tradition of circumcision". Daily Sabah. 28 July 2017.
  11. ^ "KIRVELIK TRADITION IN DIFFERENT RELIGIOUS GROUPS: A RESEARCH ON THE TRANSFORMATION OF RITUAL KINSHIP".
  12. ^ Marushiakova, Elena. "Roma Muslims in the Balkans".
  13. ^ Kenrick, Donald (2007). Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies (Romanies). Scarecrow Press. p. 281. ISBN 978-0-8108-5468-0.
  14. ^ "THE GYPSIES OF ISTANBUL | History of Istanbul".
  15. ^ Gerd Nonneman, Tim Niblock, Bogdan Szajkowski (Eds.) (1996) "Muslim Communities in the New Europe", ISBN 0-86372-192-3
  16. ^ Ana Oprişan, George Grigore, "The Muslim Gypsies in Romania" 5 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine, in International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World (ISIM) Newsletter 8, September 2001, p.32; retrieved 2 June 2007
  17. ^ Rotaru, Julieta (1 January 2021). "CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT THE 'TURKISH GYPSIES' AS CRYPTO-MUSLIMS IN WALLACHIA". History and Culture of Roma. Festschrift in Honour of Prof. Dr. Vesselin Popov. ISBN/GTIN 978-3-96939-071-9. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ "The identity of a Gypsy community".
  20. ^ Trubeta, Sevasti (2005). "Balkan Egyptians and Gypsy/Roma Discourse". Nationalities Papers. 33: 71–95. doi:10.1080/00905990500053788. S2CID 155028453 – via ResearchGate.
  21. ^ Govers, C.; Vermeulen, H. (30 April 2016). The Politics of Ethnic Consciousness. Palgrave Macmillan UK. ISBN 9781349646739.
  22. ^ "Ottoman Empire : Historical Sources about the "Gypsies" in the Empire". Rm.coe.int. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  23. ^ "ROMA GROUPS | Център за междуетнически диалог и толерантност АМАЛИПЕ". Amalipe.bg. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  24. ^ Peter G. Danchin, Elizabeth A. Cole (Eds.) (2002) "Protecting the Human Rights of Religious Minorities in Eastern Europe", ISBN 0-231-12475-9
  25. ^ "Expulsion and Emigration of the Muslims from the Balkans". Ieg-ego.eu.
  26. ^ Zeynep BİLGEHAN (11 March 2019). "Mübadil Romanların az bilinen hikâyesi". Hurriyet.com.tr.
  27. ^ "Unutulan Mübadil Romanlar: 'Toprağın kovduğu insanlar'". Kronos34.news. 7 February 2021.
  28. ^ "GEÇMİŞİN AYNASINDA LOZAN ÇİNGENELERİ: GÖÇ, HATIRA VE DENEYİMLER" (PDF). Sdergi.hacettepe.edu.tr. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  29. ^ "Sepečides Romani-Project : History" (PDF). Rombase.uni-graz.at. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  30. ^ Yilgür, Egemen (December 2015). "Ethnicity, class and politicisation: Immigrant Roma tobacco workers in Turkey". Romani Studies. 25 (2): 167–196. doi:10.3828/rs.2015.7. S2CID 146293564.
  31. ^ Mithat ATABAY. "Çingene Sorunu ve 1950–1951 Yıllarında Bulgaristan'dan Çanakkale'ye Göçler" (PDF). Acarindex.com. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  32. ^ Nikolina Rajkovic. "The Post-Second World War Immigration of the Yugoslav Muslims to Turkey (1953–1968)" (PDF). Etd.ceu.edu. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  33. ^ Pezo, Edvin (2018). "Emigration and Policy in Yugoslavia: Dynamics and Constraints within the Process of Muslim Emigration to Turkey during the 1950s". European History Quarterly. 48 (2): 283–313. doi:10.1177/0265691418757391. S2CID 149846476.
  34. ^ "Arlije [Rombase]".
  35. ^ Speziale, Fabrizio (December 2005). "Adapting Mystic Identity to Italian Mainstream Islam: The Case of a Muslim Rom Community in Florence". Balkanologie. Revue d'Études Pluridisciplinaires. 9 (1–2). doi:10.4000/balkanologie.589.
  36. ^ Weyrauch, Walter O. (12 September 2001). Gypsy Law: Romani Legal Traditions and Culture. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520924277.
  37. ^ a b "Xoraxane Roma". www.romarchive.eu.
  38. ^ Kyuchukov, Hristo (27 December 2019). "Turkish, Bulgarian and German Language Mixing Among Bulgarian Muslim Roma in Germany". East European Journal of Psycholinguistics. 6 (2): 50–57. doi:10.29038/eejpl.2019.6.2.kyu. S2CID 241338430 – via ResearchGate.
  39. ^ Wachsmuth, Melody (17 October 2022). Roma Pentecostals Narrating Identity, Trauma, and Renewal in Croatia and Serbia. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-51897-1.
  40. ^ Abbas, Tahir (5 December 2016). Contemporary Turkey in Conflict: Ethnicity, Islam and Politics. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-1-4744-1801-0.
  41. ^ Evstatiev, Simeon; Eickelman, Dale F. (25 April 2022). Islam, Christianity, and Secularism in Bulgaria and Eastern Europe: The Last Half Century. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-51156-9.
  42. ^ "Xoraxane Roma". www.romarchive.eu. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  43. ^ "Roma – Sub Ethnic Groups". Rombase.uni-graz.at.
  44. ^ "British billionaire Alfie Best Jr accepts Islam". 20 March 2023. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023.
  45. ^ Besiroglu, Sehvar. "Music, Identity, Gender: Çengi̇s, Köçeks, Çöçeks".

Further reading edit

  • Roma Muslims in the Balkans by Elena Marushiakova and Vesselin Popov

muslim, romani, people, people, ethnically, roma, profess, islam, there, many, different, roma, groups, subgroups, that, predominantly, practice, islam, well, individual, romani, people, from, other, subethnic, groups, have, accepted, islam, xoraxane, roma, ba. Muslim Romani people are people who are ethnically Roma and profess Islam There are many different Roma groups and subgroups that predominantly practice Islam as well as individual Romani people from other subethnic groups who have accepted Islam Xoraxane Roma in Balkan Romani language are non Vlax Romani people who adopted Sunni Islam of the Hanafi madhhab at the time of the Ottoman Empire 1 Some of them are Dervis of Sufism belief and the biggest Tariqa of Jerrahi is located at the largest Arlije and Gurbeti Muslim Roma settlement in Europe in Suto Orizari locally called Shutka in North Macedonia have their own Romani Imam 2 and the Muslim Roma in Suto Orizari use the Quran in Balkan Romani language 3 Many Romanlar in Turkey are members of the Hindiler Tekkesi a Qadiriyya Tariqa founded in 1738 by the Indian Muslim Sheykh Seyfullah Efendi El Hindi in Selamsiz 4 Roma Muslims in Turkey and the Balkans are mostly cultural Muslims or nominal Muslims 5 6 Costume of a Romani woman most likely Muslim Roma Muslim Roma in Bosnia around 1900 Muslim Roma hold religious male circumcision ceremonies Bijav Suneti with great pomp and festivities 7 The boys are mostly circumcised at the age of five because the number 5 panc is a sacred symbol among the Romani people It is a custom among Muslim Roma that the foreskin must be buried 8 They believe the foreskin will come back to men on the Day of Resurrection based on a Hadith from Sahih al Bukhari 6524 The Prophet Sallallahu Alaihi wa Sallam said You will be raised on the Day of Judgement barefooted naked and uncircumicized with foreskin burying the foreskin is also a tradition of South Asian Muslims 9 During the ceremony the child s hand and feet are held by his Kirvo godfather A Kirvo pays the cost of the circumcision ceremony 10 The Tradition of a Kirve who is similar to a Sandek is also practised in Alevism and Yazidism in Turkey 11 Islam among Roma is historically associated with life of Roma within the Ottoman Empire because Muslim Roma were preferred in the Ottoman Empire and were settled in the Balkans and Rumelia taken from the Anatolia Eyalet and the Egypt Eyalet Although Muslim Roma paid a Jizya in the first centuries of the Ottoman Empire an exception were the Muslim Roma in Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina who were exempt from taxes by the order of Selim II After the Edict of Gulhane all Muslim Roma became exempt from paying the Taxation in the Ottoman Empire and became fully accepted Muslims 12 In 1874 the Ottoman Empire gave equal rights to other Muslims 13 The Turkish historian Resat Ekrem Kocu explained that a Group of Lom people who lived in Istanbul convert closed to Islam in the 19th century 14 Correspondingly significant cultural minorities of Muslim Roma are found in Turkey Bosnia and Herzegovina Albania Montenegro Kosovo Republic of North Macedonia Bulgaria by mid 1990s estimates Muslim Roma in constituted about 40 of Roma in Bulgaria 15 a very small group of Muslim Roma exists in the Dobruja and Wallachia region of Romania comprising 1 of the country s Muslim Romani population 16 17 Croatia 45 of the country s Romani population who came from Bosnia 18 Southern Russia Greece a small part of Muslim Roma concentrated in Western Thrace Northern Cyprus Southern Serbia geographical region and Crimea Crimean Roma The majority of Muslim Roma in the former Yugoslavia speak Balkan Romani and South Slavic languages while many speak only the language from the host country s like the Albanized Muslim Roma Groups from Albania Kosovo Montenegro and North Macedonia speak only the Albanian language and be called Khorakhan Shiptari they have fully adopted the Albanian culture 19 other created an own identity like Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians and some deny their Romani Background especially in Kosovo and claimed to be Albanians or Turks 20 21 Turkish language is used by the Turkish Roma only a view speak Kurbetcha Rumelian Romani or Sepecides Romani Some Muslim Roma also used the word Gypsy for themselves because they did not perceive it as a derogatory term Muslim Roma culture is based on the Islamic culture Under Ottoman Rule the Christian and Muslim Roma were separated by the order of Suleiman the Magnificent Muslim Roma were forbidden to marry Christian Roma and live together or to do business Muslim Roma men served in the Military of the Ottoman Empire especially in the Ottoman military band 22 Significant differences between Muslim and Christian Roma emerged through the centuries Orthodox Christian Vlax Romani see themself as the cace Roma true Roma and do not consider Muslim Roma to be part of Romani society and call them Turks and explain they slice the foreskins from their members Muslim Roma however see Christian Roma as foreign and call them Dasikane Servant slaves Also the phrase Amare Roma Our Roma and Cudza Roma foreign Roma is used vice versa There is a huge cultural gap between the two religious groups 23 Contents 1 Settlings 2 Faith and status 3 Types of Muslim Roma 3 1 Xoraxane 3 1 1 Arlije 3 1 2 Crimean Roma 3 1 3 Zargari 3 2 New Muslims 4 Dress 5 Dance and music 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingSettlings editAfter the collapse of the Ottoman Empire the Muslim Roma have found themselves under double discrimination in regions where Islam was a minority religion experiencing both Antiziganism and anti Muslim sentiment 24 At the Greek War of Independence Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 and Balkan Wars 1912 1913 Muslim Roma flee together with other different Muslim Groups to Istanbul and East Thrace as Muhacir 25 At the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey Muslim Turkish Roma from Greece have also been resettled in Turkey In Turkish they are called Mubadil Romanlar 26 27 28 29 30 In 1950 1951 Muslim Turkish Roma from Bulgaria came to Turkey and settled in Canakkale and surroundings 31 From 1953 1968 Muslim Turkish Roma and Turks from Yugoslavia emigrated to Turkey 32 33 Because of the relative ease of migration in modern times Muslim Roma may be found in other parts of the world as well Turkish Roma from Turkey and also other Muslim Roma from ex Yugoslavia came to West Europe as Gastarbeiter but seen by the Host population as Turks or Yugoslavs 34 Muslim Roma from Bosnia and Kosovo went at the time of the Yugoslav Wars to Italy and live especially in Florence 35 Xoraxane Muslim Roma from former Yugoslavia went to USA settled mostly in New York 36 37 and South America 37 Since 2007 Turkish Roma from Bulgaria went as workers to West Europe 38 Faith and status editMost Muslim Roma are Sunni but they are not exclusively Sunni For example there are some Shia Roma communities in Serbia 39 Turkish Roma are mostly Sunni 40 Under Ottoman rule Roma Muslim had a lower social status than non Roma Muslims but above that of non Muslims 41 However other Muslim Roma are well integrated with and accepted by their Muslim non Roma brothers Types of Muslim Roma edit nbsp A Romani translation of the Qur anXoraxane edit Xoraxane also spelled as Khorakhane Xoraxane Kharokane Xoraxai etc meaning Lovers of the Koran is an antiquated religionym confessionym and umbrella term for Muslim Roma in the Balkans 42 or alternatively all Muslim Roma in Southern Europe and West Asia similar to how the term Turks was used for non Turkish Muslims They are many groups of Xoraxane Roma named after their old traditional professional activities also divived in sedentary and nomadic groups 43 Not all Roma adherents of Islam are considered Xoraxane Arlije edit The sedentary Arlije are the main group of the Romani people in North Macedonia They are one of the many subgroups considered Xoraxane Crimean Roma edit The Crimean Roma also called Cingene are a community of Tatarized Roma who traditionally practice Islam They are often considered to be both a subgroup of the Roma and a subgroup of the Crimean Tatar people due to assimilation although the term oraxane is rarely if ever used for them anymore Zargari edit The Zargari are a Roma subgroup settled in Zargar Iran and neighboring villages who observe Shia Islam and speak in a Balkan Romani dialect Their exact origins are debated among scholars New Muslims edit British Romani businessman Alfie Best Jr converted to Islam in 2023 44 As Islam is not an ethnoreligion it accepts converts regardless of their ethnic background which includes Roma from non Muslim backgrounds Dress editMuslim Roma women wear beautiful silk Dimije also known as Turkish salvar at weddings circumcision ceremonies and other festivals Even on weekdays quite a few older women but also some younger women wear the salvar Dance and music editBelly dance and Romano Hora dance Roman Havalari 8 9 tact Zurna Davul Clarinet are performed In the Ottoman Empire especially young handsome Romani Guys were taken as Kocek Dancers while young Romani female dancers were named Cengi 45 See also editArlije Gurbeti Sepecides Romani Zargari tribe Kakava Turkish RomaniReferences edit Xoraxane Roma Society Macedonia s Romani Imam Transitions Online 6 08 2010 Quran Collection The Noble Quran in Romani Language Juzz Amma Romani language Noble quran Romani YOK Acik Bilim dead link Becky Taylor 2014 Another Darkness Another Dawn A History of Gypsies Roma and Travellers Reaktion Books p 31 ISBN 9781780232973 Barutcu Atilla January 2015 Ucundan Azicik la Atilan Saglam Temel Turkiye de Sunnet Ritueli ve Erkeklik Iliskisi Masculinities A Journal of Identity and Culture ROMANINET A MULTIMEDIA ROMANI COURSE FOR PROMOTING LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY AND IMPROVING SOCIAL DIALOGUE REPORT ON ROMA PEOPLE PDF Romaninet com Retrieved 11 January 2022 Alexander Novik December 2020 The Rite of Male Circumcision among the Muslim Population in the Western Balkans Folklore 80 151 168 doi 10 7592 FEJF2020 80 novik School holidays in Malaysia time for circumcision Reuters 23 November 2009 Historic tradition of circumcision Daily Sabah 28 July 2017 KIRVELIK TRADITION IN DIFFERENT RELIGIOUS GROUPS A RESEARCH ON THE TRANSFORMATION OF RITUAL KINSHIP Marushiakova Elena Roma Muslims in the Balkans Kenrick Donald 2007 Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies Romanies Scarecrow Press p 281 ISBN 978 0 8108 5468 0 THE GYPSIES OF ISTANBUL History of Istanbul Gerd Nonneman Tim Niblock Bogdan Szajkowski Eds 1996 Muslim Communities in the New Europe ISBN 0 86372 192 3 Ana Oprisan George Grigore The Muslim Gypsies in Romania Archived 5 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine in International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World ISIM Newsletter 8 September 2001 p 32 retrieved 2 June 2007 Rotaru Julieta 1 January 2021 CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT THE TURKISH GYPSIES AS CRYPTO MUSLIMS IN WALLACHIA History and Culture of Roma Festschrift in Honour of Prof Dr Vesselin Popov ISBN GTIN 978 3 96939 071 9 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 July 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The identity of a Gypsy community Trubeta Sevasti 2005 Balkan Egyptians and Gypsy Roma Discourse Nationalities Papers 33 71 95 doi 10 1080 00905990500053788 S2CID 155028453 via ResearchGate Govers C Vermeulen H 30 April 2016 The Politics of Ethnic Consciousness Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 9781349646739 Ottoman Empire Historical Sources about the Gypsies in the Empire Rm coe int Retrieved 11 January 2022 ROMA GROUPS Centr za mezhduetnicheski dialog i tolerantnost AMALIPE Amalipe bg Retrieved 11 January 2022 Peter G Danchin Elizabeth A Cole Eds 2002 Protecting the Human Rights of Religious Minorities in Eastern Europe ISBN 0 231 12475 9 Expulsion and Emigration of the Muslims from the Balkans Ieg ego eu Zeynep BILGEHAN 11 March 2019 Mubadil Romanlarin az bilinen hikayesi Hurriyet com tr Unutulan Mubadil Romanlar Topragin kovdugu insanlar Kronos34 news 7 February 2021 GECMISIN AYNASINDA LOZAN CINGENELERI GOC HATIRA VE DENEYIMLER PDF Sdergi hacettepe edu tr Retrieved 11 January 2022 Sepecides Romani Project History PDF Rombase uni graz at Retrieved 11 January 2022 Yilgur Egemen December 2015 Ethnicity class and politicisation Immigrant Roma tobacco workers in Turkey Romani Studies 25 2 167 196 doi 10 3828 rs 2015 7 S2CID 146293564 Mithat ATABAY Cingene Sorunu ve 1950 1951 Yillarinda Bulgaristan dan Canakkale ye Gocler PDF Acarindex com Retrieved 26 July 2022 Nikolina Rajkovic The Post Second World War Immigration of the Yugoslav Muslims to Turkey 1953 1968 PDF Etd ceu edu Retrieved 26 July 2022 Pezo Edvin 2018 Emigration and Policy in Yugoslavia Dynamics and Constraints within the Process of Muslim Emigration to Turkey during the 1950s European History Quarterly 48 2 283 313 doi 10 1177 0265691418757391 S2CID 149846476 Arlije Rombase Speziale Fabrizio December 2005 Adapting Mystic Identity to Italian Mainstream Islam The Case of a Muslim Rom Community in Florence Balkanologie Revue d Etudes Pluridisciplinaires 9 1 2 doi 10 4000 balkanologie 589 Weyrauch Walter O 12 September 2001 Gypsy Law Romani Legal Traditions and Culture University of California Press ISBN 9780520924277 a b Xoraxane Roma www romarchive eu Kyuchukov Hristo 27 December 2019 Turkish Bulgarian and German Language Mixing Among Bulgarian Muslim Roma in Germany East European Journal of Psycholinguistics 6 2 50 57 doi 10 29038 eejpl 2019 6 2 kyu S2CID 241338430 via ResearchGate Wachsmuth Melody 17 October 2022 Roma Pentecostals Narrating Identity Trauma and Renewal in Croatia and Serbia BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 51897 1 Abbas Tahir 5 December 2016 Contemporary Turkey in Conflict Ethnicity Islam and Politics Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 1 4744 1801 0 Evstatiev Simeon Eickelman Dale F 25 April 2022 Islam Christianity and Secularism in Bulgaria and Eastern Europe The Last Half Century BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 51156 9 Xoraxane Roma www romarchive eu Retrieved 30 August 2023 Roma Sub Ethnic Groups Rombase uni graz at British billionaire Alfie Best Jr accepts Islam 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Besiroglu Sehvar Music Identity Gender Cengi s Koceks Coceks Further reading editRoma Muslims in the Balkans by Elena Marushiakova and Vesselin Popov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muslim Romani people amp oldid 1209486542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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