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Romani Holocaust

The Romani Holocaust or the Romani genocide[4] was the planned effort by Nazi Germany and its World War II allies and collaborators to commit ethnic cleansing and eventually genocide against European Roma and Sinti peoples during the Holocaust era.[5]

Romani Holocaust
Part of World War II
European Roma and Sinti in Asperg, Nazi Germany, are rounded up for deportation by Nazi German authorities on 22 May 1940
LocationNazi Germany and its occupied territories
Date1935–1945
TargetEuropean Roma and Sinti
Attack type
Genocide, ethnic cleansing, mass murder
DeathsAt least 150,000. Other estimates give figures such as 500,000[1] 800,000[2] or even as high as 1.5 million.[3]: 383–396 
PerpetratorsNazi Germany and its allies
MotiveAntiziganism, Germanisation, Pan-Germanism, Racism

Under Adolf Hitler, a supplementary decree to the Nuremberg Laws was issued on 26 November 1935, classifying the Romani people (or Roma) as "enemies of the race-based state", thereby placing them in the same category as the Jews. Thus, the fate of the Roma in Europe paralleled that of the Jews in the Holocaust.[1]

Historians estimate that between 250,000 and 500,000 Romani and Sinti were killed by Nazi Germans and their collaborators—25% to over 50% of the estimate of slightly fewer than 1 million Roma in Europe at the time.[1] Later research cited by Ian Hancock estimated the death toll to be at about 1.5 million out of an estimated 2 million European Roma.[3]

In 1982, West Germany formally recognized that Nazi Germany had committed genocide against the Romani people.[6][7] In 2011, Poland officially adopted 2 August as a day of commemoration of the Romani genocide.[8]

Within the Nazi German state, first persecution, then extermination, was aimed primarily at sedentary "Gypsy mongrels". In December 1942, Heinrich Himmler ordered the deportation of all Roma from the Greater Germanic Reich, and most were sent to the specially established Gypsy concentration camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Other Roma were deported there from the Nazi-occupied Western European territories. Approximately 21,000 of the 23,000 European Roma and Sinti sent there did not survive. In areas outside the reach of systematic registration, e.g., in the German-occupied areas of Eastern and Southeastern Europe, the Roma who were most threatened were those who, in the German judgment, were "vagabonds", though some were actually refugees or displaced persons. Here, they were killed mainly in massacres perpetrated by the German military and police formations as well as by the Schutzstaffel (SS) task forces, and in armed resistance against the Nazi German occupation of Europe.[1]

Alternate terms edit

The term porajmos (also porrajmos or pharrajimos—literally, "devouring" or "destruction" in some dialects of the Romani language)[9] was introduced by Ian Hancock in the early 1990s.[10] Hancock chose to use the term, coined by a Kalderash Rom, from a number of suggestions which were given during an "informal conversation in 1993".[11]

The term is mostly used by activists and as a result, its usage is unknown to most Roma, including relatives of victims and survivors.[10] Some Russian and Balkan Romani activists protest against the use of the word porajmos.[11] In various dialects, porajmos is synonymous with poravipe which means "violation" and "rape", a term which some Roma consider offensive. János Bársony and Ágnes Daróczi, pioneering organisers of the Romani civil rights movement in Hungary, prefer to use the term Pharrajimos, a Romani word which means "cutting up", "fragmentation", "destruction". They argue against the use of the term porrajmos, saying that it is marhime (unclean, untouchable): "[p]orrajmos is unpronounceable in the Roma community, and thus, it is incapable of conveying the sufferings of the Roma".[12]

Balkan Romani activists prefer to use the term samudaripen ("mass killing"),[13] first introduced by linguist Marcel Courthiade in the 1970s in Yugoslavia in the context of Auschwitz and Jasenovac. It is a neologism of sa (Romani for 'all') and mudaripen (murder). It can be translated as 'murder of all' or 'mass murder'. The International Romani Union now uses this term.[14] Ian Hancock dismisses this word, arguing that it does not conform to Romani language morphology.[11] Some Ruska Roma activists offer to use the term Kali Traš ("Black Fear").[15] Another alternative that has been used is Berša Bibahtale ("The Unhappy Years").[11] Lastly, adapted borrowings such as Holokosto, Holokausto, etc. are also used in the Romani language on some occasions.[citation needed]

Linguistically, the term porajmos is composed of the verb root porrav- and the abstract-forming nominal ending -imos. This ending is of the Vlax Romani dialect, whereas other varieties generally use -ibe(n) or -ipe(n).[16] For the verb itself, the most commonly given meaning is "to open/stretch wide" or "to rip open", whereas the meaning "to open up the mouth, devour" occurs in fewer dialects.[17]

History edit

Anti-Romani discrimination before 1933 edit

Emergence of scientific racism edit

In the late 19th century, the emergence of scientific racism and Social Darwinism, linking social differences with racial differences, provided the German public with pseudoscientific justifications for prejudices against Jews and Roma. During this period, "the concept of race was systematically employed in order to explain social phenomena." Proponents of this approach attempted to validate the belief that races were not variations of a single species of man because they had distinctly different biological origins. Proponents of this approach established a purportedly scientifically-based racial hierarchy, which they believed defined certain minority groups as the other on the basis of biology.[18]

In addition to being a period in which racial pseudoscience was widely promoted, the end of the 19th century was a period of state-sponsored modernization in Germany. Industrial development altered many aspects of society. Most notably, the changes which occurred during this period caused the social norms of work and life to shift. For the Roma, this shift in the social norms of work and life led to the denial of their traditional way of life as craftsmen and artisans. János Bársony notes that "industrial development devalued their services as craftsmen, resulting in the disintegration of their communities and social marginalization."[19]

Persecution by the German Empire and the Weimar Republic edit

The developments of racial pseudoscience and modernization resulted in anti-Romani state interventions, carried out by both the German Empire and the Weimar Republic. In 1899, the Imperial Police Headquarters in Munich established the Information Services on Romani by the Security Police. Its purpose was to keep records (identification cards, fingerprints, photographs, etc.) and continuous surveillance on the Roma community. In 1904, Prussia adopted a resolution calling for regulation of Gypsy movement. In 1911, the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior organized a conference in Munich to discuss the "Gypsy problem" and to coordinate efforts against Gypsies.[20] Roma in the Weimar Republic were forbidden from entering public swimming pools, parks, and other recreational areas, and depicted throughout Germany and Europe as criminals and spies.[21]

The 1926 "Law for the Fight Against Gypsies, Vagrants and the Workshy" was enforced in Bavaria, and became the national norm by 1929. It stipulated that groups identifying as 'Gypsies' avoid all travel to the region. Those already living in the area were to "be kept under control so that there [was] no longer anything to fear from them with regard to safety in the land."[22] They were forbidden from "roam[ing] about or camp[ing] in bands", and those "unable to prove regular employment" risked being sent to forced labor for up to two years. Herbet Heuss notes that "[t]his Bavarian law became the model for other German states and even for neighbouring countries."[23]

The demand for Roma to give up their nomadic ways and settle in a specific region was often the focus of anti-Romani policy both in the German Empire and the Weimar Republic. Once settled, communities were concentrated and isolated in a single area of a town or city.[24] This segregation facilitated state-run surveillance practices and 'crime prevention.'

Following the passage of the Law for the Fight Against Gypsies, Vagrants, and the Workshy, public policy increasingly targeted the Roma on the explicit basis of race. In 1927, Prussia passed a law that required all Roma to carry identity cards. Eight thousand Roma were processed this way and subjected to mandatory fingerprinting and photographing.[25] Two years later, the focus became more explicit. In 1929, the German state of Hessen proposed the "Law for the Fight Against the Gypsy Menace". The same year, the Centre for the Fight Against Gypsies in Germany was opened. This body enforced restrictions on travel for undocumented Roma and "allowed for the arbitrary arrest and detention of gypsies as a means of crime prevention."[26]

Aryan racial purity edit

 
Romani woman with a German police officer and Nazi psychologist Robert Ritter

For centuries, Romani tribes had been subject to antiziganist persecution and humiliation in Europe.[27] They were stigmatized as habitual criminals, social misfits, and vagabonds.[27] When Hitler came to national power in 1933, anti-Gypsy laws in Germany remained in effect. Under the "Law against Dangerous Habitual Criminals" of November 1933, the police arrested many Roma, along with others the Nazis viewed as "asocial"—prostitutes, beggars, homeless vagrants, and alcoholics—and imprisoned them in internment camps.

After Hitler's rise to power, legislation against the Romani was increasingly based upon a rhetoric of racism. Policy originally based on the premise of "fighting crime" was redirected to "fighting a people".[23] Targeted groups were no longer determined on juridical grounds, but instead, were victims of racialized policy.[23]

The Department of Racial Hygiene and Population Biology began to experiment on Romani to determine criteria for their racial classification.[28]

The Nazis established the Racial Hygiene and Demographic Biology Research Unit (Rassenhygienische und Bevölkerungsbiologische Forschungsstelle, Department L3 of the Reich Department of Health) in 1936. Headed by Robert Ritter and his assistant Eva Justin, this unit was mandated to conduct an in-depth study of the "Gypsy question (Zigeunerfrage)" and to provide data required for formulating a new Reich "Gypsy law". After extensive fieldwork in the spring of 1936, consisting of interviews and medical examinations to determine the racial classification of the Roma, the unit decided that most Romani, whom they had concluded were not of "pure Gypsy blood", posed a danger to German racial purity and should be deported or eliminated. No decision was made regarding the remainder (about 10 percent of the total Romani population of Europe), primarily Sinti and Lalleri tribes living in Germany. Several suggestions were made. Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler suggested deporting the Romani to a remote reservation, as the United States had done to Native Americans, where "pure Gypsies" could continue their nomadic lifestyle unhindered. According to him:

The aim of measures taken by the State to defend the homogeneity of the German nation must be the physical separation of Gypsydom from the German nation, the prevention of miscegenation, and finally, the regulation of the way of life of pure and part-Gypsies. The necessary legal foundation can only be created through a Gypsy Law, which prevents further intermingling of blood, and which regulates all the most pressing questions which go together with the existences of Roma in the living space of the German nation.[29]

Himmler took special interest into the "Aryan" origins of the Romani and distinguished between "settled" (assimilated) and "unsettled" Romani. In May 1942 an order was issued according to which all "Gypsies" living in the Balkans were to be arrested.

Although the Nazi regime never produced the "Gypsy Law" desired by Himmler,[30] policies and decrees were passed which discriminated against the Romani people.[31] Roma were classified as "asocial" and "criminals" by the Nazi regime.[32] From 1933 on, Roma were placed in concentration camps.[33] After 1937, the Nazis started to carry out racial examinations on the Roma living in Germany.[31] In 1938, Himmler issued an order regarding the 'Gypsy question' which explicitly mentioned "race" which stated that it was "advisable to deal with the Gypsy question on the basis of race."[31] The decree made it law to register all Roma (including Mischlinge – mixed race), as well as those people who "travel around in a Gypsy fashion" over the age of six.[31] Although the Nazis believed that the Roma had originally been Aryan, over time, the Nazis said, they became mixed-race and so were classified as "non-Aryan" and of an "alien race".[34]

Loss of citizenship edit

The Nuremberg race laws passed on 15 September 1935. The first Nuremberg Law, the "Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor", forbade marriage and extramarital intercourse between Jews and Germans. The second Nuremberg law, "The Reich Citizenship Law", stripped Jews of their German citizenship. On 26 November 1935, Germany expanded the Nuremberg laws to also apply to the Roma. Romani, like Jews, lost their right to vote on 7 March 1936.[30]

Persecution and genocide edit

 
Romani prisoners at Belzec extermination camp, 1940
 
The Brown Triangle. Romani prisoners in German concentration camps such as Auschwitz were forced to wear the brown inverted triangle on their prison uniforms so they could be distinguished from other inmates.[35]

The Third Reich's government began persecuting the Romani as early as 1936 when they started to transfer the people to municipal internment camps on the outskirts of cities, a prelude to their deportation to concentration camps. A December 1937 decree on "crime prevention" provided the pretext for major roundups of Roma. Nine representatives of the Romani community in Germany were asked to compile lists of "pure-blooded" Romanis to be saved from deportation. However, the Germans often ignored these lists, and some individuals identified on them were still sent to concentration camps.[36] Notable internment and concentration camps include Dachau, Dieselstrasse, Marzahn (which evolved from a municipal internment camp) and Vennhausen.

Initially, the Romani were herded into so-called ghettos, including the Warsaw Ghetto (April–June 1942), where they formed a distinct class in relation to the Jews. Ghetto diarist Emmanuel Ringelblum speculated that Romani were sent to the Warsaw Ghetto because the Germans wanted:

... to toss into the Ghetto everything that is characteristically dirty, shabby, bizarre, of which one ought to be frightened, and which anyway has to be destroyed.[37]

Initially, there was disagreement within the Nazi circles about how to solve the "Gypsy Question". In late 1939 and early 1940, Hans Frank, the General Governor of occupied Poland, refused to accept the 30,000 German and Austrian Roma which were to be deported to his territory. Heinrich Himmler "lobbied to save a handful of pure-blooded Roma", whom he believed to be an ancient Aryan people for his "ethnic reservation", but was opposed by Martin Bormann, who favored deportation for all Roma.[21] The debate ended in 1942 when Himmler signed the order to begin the mass deportations of Roma to Auschwitz concentration camp. During Operation Reinhard (1941–43), an undetermined number of Roma were killed in the extermination camps, such as Treblinka.[38]

 
German troops round up Romani in Asperg, Germany, in May 1940

The Nazi persecution of Roma was not regionally consistent. In France, between 3,000 and 6,000 Roma were deported to German concentration camps as Dachau, Ravensbrück, Buchenwald, and other camps.[21][page needed] Further east, in the Balkan states and the Soviet Union, the Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing squads, travelled from village to village massacring the inhabitants where they lived and typically leaving few to no records of the number of Roma killed in this way. In a few cases, significant documentary evidence of mass murder was generated.[39] Timothy Snyder notes that in the Soviet Union alone there were 8,000 documented cases of Roma murdered by the Einsatzgruppen in their sweep east.[40]

In return for immunity from prosecution for war crimes, Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski stated at the Einsatzgruppen Trial that "the principal task of the Einsatzgruppen of the S.D. was the annihilation of the Jews, Gypsies, and Political commissars".[41] Roma in the Slovak Republic were killed by local collaborating auxiliaries.[21] Notably, in Denmark and Greece, local populations did not participate in the hunt for Roma as they did elsewhere.[42][43] Bulgaria and Finland, although allies of Germany, did not cooperate with the Porajmos, just as they did not cooperate with the anti-Jewish Shoah.

 
An image of 10-year-old Settela Steinbach, a Dutch Romani girl on a train to Auschwitz in 1944, became an icon of children in the Holocaust.[44]

On 16 December 1942, Himmler ordered that the Romani candidates for extermination should be transferred from ghettos to the extermination facilities of Auschwitz-Birkenau. On 15 November 1943, Himmler ordered that Romani and "part-Romanies" were to be put "on the same level as Jews and placed in concentration camps".[45] The camp authorities housed Roma in a special compound that was called the "Gypsy family camp". Some 23,000 Roma, Sinti, and Lalleri were deported to Auschwitz altogether.[1] In concentration camps such as Auschwitz, Roma wore brown or black triangular patches, the symbol for "asocials", or green ones, the symbol for professional criminals, and less frequently the letter "Z" (meaning Zigeuner, German word for gypsy).

Sybil Milton, a scholar of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust,[46] has speculated that Hitler was involved in the decision to deport all Romani to Auschwitz, as Himmler gave the order six days after meeting with Hitler. For that meeting, Himmler had prepared a report on the subject Führer: Aufstellung wer sind Zigeuner.[47] On some occasions, the Roma attempted to resist the Nazis' extermination. In May 1944 at Auschwitz, SS guards tried to liquidate the Gypsy Family Camp and were "met with unexpected resistance". When ordered to come out, they refused, having been warned and arming themselves with crude weapons: iron pipes, shovels and other tools. The SS chose not to confront the Roma directly and withdrew for several months. After transferring as many as 3,000 Roma who were capable of forced labor to Auschwitz I and other concentration camps, the SS moved against the remaining 2,898 inmates on 2 August. The SS murdered nearly all of the remaining inmates, most of them ill, elderly men, women and children, in the gas chambers of Birkenau. At least 19,000 of the 23,000 Roma sent to Auschwitz were murdered there.[21]

The Society for Threatened Peoples estimates the Romani deaths at 277,100.[48] Martin Gilbert estimates that a total of more than 220,000 of the 700,000 Romani in Europe were murdered, including 15,000 (mainly from the Soviet Union) in Mauthausen in January–May 1945.[49] The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum cites scholars who estimate the number of Sinti and Roma murdered as between 220,000 and 500,000.[30] Sybil Milton estimated the number of lives lost as "something between a half-million and a million-and-a-half".[3][50]

Persecution in other Axis and occupied countries edit

The governments of some Nazi German allies, namely Slovakia, Finland, Italy, Vichy France, Hungary, and Romania, also contributed to the Nazi plan to exterminate the Romani, but most of the Romani who resided in these countries survived, unlike those Romani who resided in Ustaše Croatia or those Romani who resided in areas which were directly ruled by Nazi Germany (such as occupied Poland). The Hungarian Arrow Cross government deported between 28,000 and 33,000 Romani out of a population that was estimated to be between 70,000 and 100,000.[51]

Ustaše Croatia edit

The Romani people were also persecuted by the puppet regimes that cooperated with the Third Reich during the war, especially by the notorious Ustaše regime in the Independent State of Croatia. Tens of thousands of Romani people were killed in the Jasenovac concentration camp, along with Serbs, Jews, and anti-fascist Muslims and Croats. Yad Vashem estimates that the Porajmos was most intense in Yugoslavia, where around 90,000 Romani were killed.[42] The Ustaše government virtually annihilated the country's Romani population, killing an estimated 25,000 and also deporting around 26,000.[1][52]

In May 1942, an Ustaše order was issued, according to it, the deportation of Muslim Roma who were residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina should stop.[53]

On April 24, 1945, Ustaše soldiers brutally murdered between 43 and 47 Sinti and Roma members of a traveling circus named "Braća Winter" as they temporarily settled in Kraj Donji on their way to Slovenia. The atrocity is known as the Hrastina Massacre and is perhaps the last mass murder of Sinti and Roma in Europe during World War II. In 1977, a statue was erected in the local cemetery, Marija Gorica, to honor the victims.[54]

Serbia edit

In the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia, the German occupiers and the Serbian collaborationist puppet government Government of National Salvation killed thousands of Romani in the Banjica concentration camp, Crveni Krst concentration camp and Topovske Šupe concentration camp along with Jews.[55] In August 1942, Harald Turner reported to his superiors that "Serbia is the only country in which the Jewish question and the Gypsy question have been solved."[56]

Serbian Romani were parties to the unsuccessful class action suit against the Vatican Bank and others in the U.S. federal court in which they sought the return of wartime loot.[57]

Romania edit

The Romanian government of Ion Antonescu did not systematically annihilate Roma who resided on its territory. Some resident Roma were deported to occupied Transnistria.[1] Of the estimated 25,000 Romani inmates of these camps, around 11,000 (44%, or almost half) died.[58] (See also the research of Michelle Kelso, presented in her film, Hidden Sorrows,[59] based upon research amongst the survivors and in archives.)

Italy edit

In Fascist Italy, as well as in Slovenia and Montenegro, territories which were under Italian occupation, the majority of the Roma were forcibly rounded up and incarcerated in concentration camps, but generally, they were relatively well treated, especially in contrast to the Roma who resided in the parts of Europe which were occupied by Nazi Germany. Many of them were deported to Sardinia, with much of them being given Italian identity cards that put them out of reach of extermination by the Nazis and the Ustaše. As a result, the vast majority of the Roma who resided in Italy and its occupied territories managed to survive the war.[60]

Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia edit

In the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Romani internees were sent to the Lety and Hodonín concentration camps before they were transferred to Auschwitz-Birkenau for mass murder – by poison gas. What makes the Lety camp unique is the fact that it was staffed by Czech guards, who could be even more brutal than the Germans, as testified to in Paul Polansky's book Black Silence. The genocide was so thorough, that the vast majority of Romani who currently reside in the Czech Republic are actually the descendants of migrants who moved from Slovakia to Czechoslovakia during the post-war years.

France edit

Between 16,000 and 18,000 Romani from Nazi-occupied France were killed in German camps.[42]

Denmark edit

The small Romani population in Denmark was not subjected to mass killings by the Nazi occupiers; instead, it was simply classified as "asocial". Angus Fraser attributes this to "doubts over ethnic demarcations within the travelling population".[61]

Greece edit

The Romanis of Greece were taken hostage and prepared for deportation to Auschwitz, but they were saved by appeals from the Archbishop of Athens and the Greek Prime Minister.[62]

Norway edit

In 1934, 68 Romani, most of them Norwegian citizens, were denied entry into Norway, and they were also denied transit through Sweden and Denmark when they wanted to leave Germany. In the winter of 1943–1944, 66 members of the Josef, Karoli, and Modis families were interned in Belgium and deported to the gypsy department in Auschwitz. Only four members of this group survived.[63][64]

Crimea edit

In Crimea, the Muslim Roma were protected by the Crimean Tatars from assassination. However, it later served Stalin to deport the Crimean Muslim Romani along with the Crimean Tatars to Siberia, since they were registered as Tatars.[65]

Estimated number of victims edit

The following figures are from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's online encyclopedia of the Holocaust.[66][67]

Country Roma population, 1939 Number of Victims at least killed Estimate by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Albania 20,000 ? ?
Austria 11,200 6,800 8,250
Belgium 600 350 500
Bulgaria 80,000 0 0
Czech Republic (Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia) 13,000 5,000 6,500
Estonia 1,000 500 1,000
France 40,000 15,150 15,150
Germany 20,000 15,000 15,000
Greece ? 50 50
Hungary 100,000 1,000 28,000
Italy 25,000 1,000 1,000
Latvia 5,000 1,500 2,500
Lithuania 1,000 500 1,000
Luxembourg 200 100 200
Netherlands 500 215 500
Poland 50,000 8,000 35,000
Romania 262,501 19,000 36,000
Slovakia 80,000 400 10,000
Soviet Union (1939 borders) 200,000 30,000 35,000
Yugoslavia 100,000 26,000 90,000
Total 947,500 130,565 285,650

However, new findings and documents uncovered by research experts revealed that the Roma death toll was at least about 200,000 to 500,000 of the 1 or 2 million Roma in Europe, although there are numerous experts and scholars who give much higher number of Romani deaths, such as Ian Hancock, director of the Romani Archives and Documentation Center at the University of Texas at Austin,[68] in his findings discovered that almost the entire Romani population was killed in Croatia, Estonia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.[69] Rudolph Rummel, the late professor emeritus of political science at the University of Hawaii who spent his career assembling data on collective violence by governments toward their people (for which he coined the term democide), estimated that, in total, 258,000 were killed by the Nazi regime in Europe,[70] 36,000 in Romania under Ion Antonescu[71] and 27,000 in Ustaše-controlled Croatia.[72]

In a 2010 publication, Ian Hancock stated that he agrees with the view that the number of Romanies killed has been underestimated as a result of being grouped with others in Nazi records under headings such as "remainder to be liquidated", "hangers-on", and "partisans".[73] He notes recent evidence such as the previously obscure Lety concentration camp in the Czech Republic and Ackovic's revised estimates[74] of Romani killed by the Ustaše as high as 80,000–100,000. These numbers suggest that previous estimates have been grossly underrepresented.[75]

Zbigniew Brzezinski has estimated that 800,000 Roma people were killed through Nazi actions.[2]

Medical experiments edit

Another distinctive feature of both the Porajmos and the Holocaust was the extensive use of human subjects in medical experiments.[76] The most notorious of these physicians was Josef Mengele, who worked in the Auschwitz concentration camp. His experiments included placing subjects in pressure chambers, testing drugs on them, freezing them, attempting to change their eye color by injecting chemicals into children's eyes and performing various amputations and other brutal surgeries.[76] The full extent of his work will never be known because the truckload of records which he sent to Otmar von Verschuer at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute was destroyed by von Verschuer.[77] Mengele's own journals, consisting of some 3,300 pages, are likely never to be published.[78] Subjects who survived Mengele's experiments were almost always murdered and dissected shortly afterwards.[79] One Roma survivor of medical experimentation was Margarethe Kraus.[80]

Mengele seemed particularly keen on working with Romani children. He brought them sweets and toys and personally took them to the gas chamber. They called him "Onkel Mengele".[81] Vera Alexander was a Jewish inmate at Auschwitz who looked after 50 sets of Romani twins:

I remember one set of twins in particular: Guido and Ina, aged about four. One day, Mengele took them away. When they returned, they were in a terrible state: they had been sewn together, back to back, like Siamese twins. Their wounds were infected and oozing pus. They screamed day and night. Then their parents—I remember the mother's name was Stella—managed to get some morphine and they killed the children in order to end their suffering.[81]

Recognition and remembrance edit

 
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of the Nazis in Berlin, Germany

The German government paid war reparations to Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, but not to the Romani. There were "never any consultations at Nuremberg or any other international conference as to whether the Sinti and Roma were entitled like the Jews to reparations."[82] The Interior Ministry of Wuerttemberg argued that "Gypsies [were] persecuted under the Nazis not for any racial reason but because of an asocial and criminal record".[83] When on trial for his leadership of Einsatzgruppen in the USSR, Otto Ohlendorf cited the massacres of Roma people during the Thirty Years War as a historical precedent.[84]

The European Roma Rights Centre in 2017 gave more details of the chronology of recognition and reparations:

After World War II Roma were also excluded from the right to restitution, because Federal German authorities denied that Roma were persecued due to racist reasons. After a small step in this direction in 1963, restitutions became possible in small amounts only in 1979, when the West German Federal Parliament declared that the Nazi persecution of Roma was based on racial grounds and Roma survivors were allowed to claim for restitution in a form of a onetime payment. The official acceptance of the Porajmos as genocide by the Federal Republic of Germany followed only in 1982 with a speech by Chancelor Helmut Schmidt. In August 2016, an agreement between the German Ministry for Finance and the Foreign Ministry of the Czech Republic decided on compensation for survivors of the Porajmos in the Czech Republic. This agreement, which will give 2,500 EUR to each of the handful of survivors, was greeted as a symbolic acknowledgment, but also criticised for its delay and the low amount awarded. However, this agreement has already led to renewed claims from Romani victims from the former Yugoslavia and other regions of 'romocide'.[85]


In the historiography of East Germany (GDR), the persecution of Sinti and Roma under National Socialism was largely taboo. The German historian Anne-Kathleen Tillack-Graf states that in the GDR, Sinti and Roma were not mentioned as concentration camp prisoners during the official commemorations of the liberation at the three national memorial sites Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen, and Ravensbrück, just like homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses and asocial detainees.[86] West Germany recognised the genocide of the Roma in 1982,[87] and since then the Porajmos has been increasingly recognized as a genocide committed simultaneously with the Shoah.[88] The American historian Sybil Milton wrote several articles arguing that the Porajmos deserved recognition as part of the Holocaust.[89] In Switzerland, a committee of experts investigated the policy of the Swiss government during the Porajmos.[90]

Formal recognition and commemoration of the Roma persecution by the Nazis have been difficult in practical terms due to the lack of significant collective memory and documentation of the Porajmos among the Roma. This results from both of their tradition of oral history and illiteracy, heightened by widespread poverty and continuing discrimination that has forced some Roma out of state schools. One UNESCO report of Roma in Romania showed that only 40% of Roma children are enrolled in primary school, compared to the national average of 93%.[91] Of those enrolled, only 30% of Roma children go on to complete primary school. In a 2011 investigation of the state of the Roma in Europe today, Ben Judah, a Policy Fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relations, traveled to Romania.

Nico Fortuna, a sociologist and Roma activist, explained the distinction between Jewish collective memory of the Shoah and the Roma experience:

There is a difference between the Jewish and Roma deportees ... The Jews were shocked and can remember the year, date and time it happened. The Roma shrugged it off. They said, "Of course I was deported. I'm Roma; these things happen to a Roma." The Roma mentality is different from the Jewish mentality. For example, a Roma came to me and asked, "Why do you care so much about these deportations? Your family was not deported." I went, "I care as a Roma" and the guy said back, "I do not care because my family were brave, proud Roma that were not deported."
For the Jews it was total and everyone knew this—from bankers to pawnbrokers. For the Roma it was selective and not comprehensive. The Roma were only exterminated in a few parts of Europe such as Poland, the Netherlands, Germany and France. In Romania and much of the Balkans, only nomadic Roma and social outcast Roma were deported. This matters and influences the Roma mentality.[92]

Ian Hancock has also observed a reluctance among Roma to acknowledge their victimization by the Third Reich. The Roma "are traditionally not disposed to keeping alive the terrible memories from their history—nostalgia is a luxury for others".[21] The effects of the illiteracy, the lack of social institutions, and the rampant discrimination faced by Roma in Europe today have produced a people who, according to Fortuna, lack a "national consciousness ... and historical memory of the Holocaust because there is no Roma elite."[92]

Acts of commemoration edit

 
Plaque in Rome, Italy, in memory of Romani people murdered in extermination camps
Holocaust by bullet, Yahad-In Unum documentary

The first memorial which commemorates victims of the Romani Holocaust was erected on 8 May 1956, in the Polish village of Szczurowa commemorating the Szczurowa massacre. Since 1996, a Gypsy Caravan Memorial has been traveling among the main remembrance sites in Poland, from Tarnów via Auschwitz, Szczurowa and Borzęcin Dolny, gathering the Romani and well-wishers in the remembrance of the Porajmos.[93] Several museums dedicate a part of their permanent exhibition to documenting that history, such as the Museum of Romani Culture in Czech Republic and the Ethnographic Museum in Tarnów in Poland. Some political organisations have tried to block the installation of Romani memorials near former concentration camps, as shown by the debate over Lety and Hodonin in the Czech Republic.

On 23 October 2007, President Traian Băsescu publicly apologized for his nation's role in the Porajmos, the first time a Romanian leader has done so. He called for the Porajmos to be taught in schools, stating that, "We must tell our children that six decades ago children like them were sent by the Romanian state to die of hunger and cold". Part of his apology was expressed in the Romani language. Băsescu awarded three Porajmos survivors with an Order for Faithful Services.[94] Before recognizing Romania's role in the Porajmos, Traian Băsescu was widely quoted after an incident on 19 May 2007, in which he insulted a journalist by calling her a "stinky gypsy". The president subsequently apologized.[95]

 
Monument to the Memory of the Holocaust of the Romani (Gypsies) in the site of German Nazi crimes during WWII, in the Polish village of Borzęcin

On 27 January 2011, Zoni Weisz became the first Roma guest of honour at Germany's official Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony. Dutch-born Weisz escaped death during a Nazi round-up when a policeman allowed him to escape. Nazi injustices against the Roma were recalled at the ceremony, including that directed at Sinto boxer Johann Trollmann.[96][97]

In July 2011, the Polish Parliament passed a resolution for the official recognition of 2 August as a day of commemoration of the genocide.[8]

On 5 May 2012, the world premiere of the Requiem for Auschwitz, by composer Roger Moreno Rathgeb, was performed at the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam by The Roma and Sinti Philharmoniker directed by Riccardo M Sahiti. The Philharmoniker is a pan-European orchestra of Roma and Sinto musicians generally employed by other classical orchestras; it is focused on the contribution of Roma culture to classical music. Dutch-Swiss Sinto Moreno Rathgeb wrote his requiem for all victims of Auschwitz and Nazi terror. The occasion of the premiere was coupled to a conference, Roma between Past and Future. The requiem has since been performed in Tilburg, Prague, Budapest, Frankfurt, Cracow, and Berlin.

On 24 October 2012, the Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism was unveiled in Berlin.[98] Since 2010, ternYpe – International Roma Youth Network has organized a commemoration week called "Dikh he na bister" (look and don't forget) about 2 August in Kraków and Auschwitz-Birkenau. In 2014 they organised the largest Youth Commemoration Ceremony in history, attracting more than 1000 young Roma and non-Roma from 25 countries. This initiative of ternYpe Network was held under the European Parliament's High Patronage granted by President Martin Schulz.[99]

In popular culture edit

  • In the 2011 documentary film, A People Uncounted: The Untold Story of the Roma, filmmaker Aaron Yeger chronicles the rich, yet difficult history of the Romani people, from ancient times to the Romani genocide which was perpetrated by the Nazis during WWII, and then, it chronicles the history of the Romani people from the end of World War II to the present day. Romani Holocaust survivors share their raw, authentic stories of life in the concentration camps, providing first-hand accounts of this minority group's experience, a subject which the public does not know about.
  • In 2009, Tony Gatlif, a French Romani film director, directed the film Korkoro, which portrays the Romani Taloche's escape from the Nazis, with help from a French notary, Justes, and his difficulty in trying to lead a sedentary life.[100] The film's other main character, Mademoiselle Lise Lundi, is inspired by Yvette Lundy, a teacher who worked in Gionges and was active in the French Resistance.[101]
  • The 1988 Polish film, And the Violins Stopped Playing, also has the Porajmos as its subject. It was criticized for showing the killing of Roma as a method of removing witnesses of the killing of Jews.[102]
  • A scene in the French-language film Train de Vie (Train of Life), directed by Radu Mihaileanu, depicts a group of Romani singing and dancing with Jews at a stop en route to a concentration camp.
  • In the graphic X-Men novel The Magneto Testament, Max Eisenhardt, who would later become Magneto, has a crush on a Romani girl who is named Magda. He later meets her again in Auschwitz, where she is in the Gypsy Camp and together, they plan their escape. The Porajmos is described in detail.[103]
  • In 2019, Roz Mortimer directed The Deathless Woman, a 'hybrid-documentary' film which is both a ghost story and a record of first person testimonies about historical crimes which were committed against the Roma during WWII (and contemporary crimes). The ghostly narrator, voiced in Romani by Iveta Kokyová, questions the absence of her history in archives and museums.[104]

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Holocaust Encyclopedia – Genocide of European Roma (Gypsies), 1939–1945". USHMM. Retrieved 9 August 2011.
  2. ^ a b Brzezinski, Zbigniew (2010). Out of Control: Global Turmoil on the Eve of the 21st Century. Simon & Schuster (Touchstone). p. 10. ISBN 978-1-4391-4380-3.,
  3. ^ a b c Hancock, Ian (2005), , The Historiography of the Holocaust, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 383–396, ISBN 978-1-4039-9927-6, archived from the original on 28 September 2011
  4. ^ also known as the Porajmos (Romani pronunciation: IPA: [pʰoɽajˈmos], meaning "the Devouring"), the Pharrajimos (meaning "the Cutting up", "the Fragmentation", "the Destruction"), and the Samudaripen ("Mass killing")
  5. ^ Davis, Mark (5 May 2015). "How World War II shaped modern Germany". euronews.
  6. ^ "Germany unveils Roma Holocaust memorial". aljazeera.com. Al Jazeera. 24 October 2012. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  7. ^ . Telegraph.co.uk. The Daily Telegraph. 27 January 2011. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  8. ^ a b "OSCE human rights chief welcomes declaration of official Roma genocide remembrance day in Poland". OSCE. 29 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  9. ^ Hancock 1997, p. 339: "Porajmos: The Romani Holocaust (1933–1945), also Baro Porajmos, lit. 'great devouring'".
  10. ^ a b Matras 2004, p. 195.
  11. ^ a b c d Hancock, Ian. . The Romani Archives and Documentation Center – RADOC. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  12. ^ Bársony & Daróczi 2008, p. x.
  13. ^ . Dosta! (Council of Europe). 5 September 2006. Archived from the original on 20 June 2006.
  14. ^ "Genocide, Holocaust, Porajmos, Samudaripen – RomArchive".
  15. ^ Mazikina, Lilit. [Romani Culture and Life]. romanykultury.info (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 October 2007.
  16. ^ Boretzky, Norbert; Igla, Birgit (2005). Kommentierter Dialektatlas des Romani. Teil 1: Vergleich der Dialekte [Annotated dialect atlas of Romani. Part 1: Comparison of dialects] (in German). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. ISBN 978-3-447-05073-9.
  17. ^ "Romlex: Lexical Database". romani.uni-graz.at. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  18. ^ Heuss 1997, p. 19.
  19. ^ Bársony & Daróczi 2008, p. 7.
  20. ^ Fitzpatrick, Matthew (2015), Purging the Empire: Mass Expulsions in Germany, 1871–1914, OUP Oxford, pp. 195–199, ISBN 978-0-19-103852-5
  21. ^ a b c d e f Rom-Rymer, Symi. "Roma in the Holocaust". Moment Magazine (July–August 2011). Retrieved 30 June 2011.
  22. ^ Report on the Bavarian Landtag 1925/6, III Tagung; Gesetz- und Verordnungsblatt fur den Freistaat Bayern, Nr. 17, 22 July 1926. as cited in Heuss 1997, p. 24.
  23. ^ a b c Heuss 1997, p. 24.
  24. ^ Sparing 1997, pp. 39–40.
  25. ^ Hancock 1991, p. 14.
  26. ^ Jessee 2010.
  27. ^ a b Hancock 2002.
  28. ^ Tyrnauer 1992, p. 19.
  29. ^ Burleigh, Michael; Wippermann, Wolfgang (1991). The Racial State: Germany 1933–1945. Cambridge University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-521-39802-2.
  30. ^ a b c "Sinti and Roma: Victims of the Nazi Era" (PDF). United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  31. ^ a b c d Longerich 2012, p. 230.
  32. ^ Longerich 2012, p. 229.
  33. ^ America's Uncounted People. The National Academies Press. 1 January 1972. doi:10.17226/20212. ISBN 978-0-309-02026-8.
  34. ^ Lewy 2000, p. 36.
  35. ^ . The Holocaust History Project. 16 May 2000. Archived from the original on 14 September 2008.
  36. ^ Fein, Helen (1979). Accounting for Genocide: National Response and Jewish Victimization During the Holocaust. New York: Free Press. pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-0-02-910220-6.
  37. ^ "From Ringelblum's Diary: The Encounter Between the Gypsies and the Jews in the Ghetto" (PDF). Yad Vashem.
  38. ^ Arad, Yitzhak (1999). Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps. Indiana University Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 978-0-253-21305-1. operation reinhard gypsies.
  39. ^ Headland, Ronald (1992). Messages of Murder: A Study of the Reports of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and the Security Service, 1941–1943. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-8386-3418-9. Retrieved 17 February 2010.
  40. ^ Snyder, Timothy (2010). Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-465-00239-9. Retrieved 30 June 2011.
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  42. ^ a b c "Gypsies" (PDF). Shoah Resource Center, The International School for Holocaust Studies. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  43. ^ Ian Hancock said there was no record of any Roma killed in Denmark or Greece. Source: Edelheit, Abraham J.; Edelheit, Hershel (1995). The History of the Holocaust: A Handbook and Dictionary. Westview. p. 458. ISBN 978-0-8133-2240-7.
  44. ^ Benevento, Gina (2 August 2017). "Remembering the Roma victims of the Holocaust". Al Jazeera. Al Jazeera Media Network. For decades Settela's face was an icon of children in the Holocaust. Her name unknown, she was simply called 'the girl with the headdress'.
  45. ^ Gilbert 2004, p. 474.
  46. ^ Honan, William H. (24 October 2000). "Sybil Milton, 59, Scholar of Nazis and Holocaust". The New York Times.
  47. ^ Milton 2009, p. 172.
  48. ^ Verdorfer, Martha (1995). Unbekanntes Volk: Sinti und Roma [Unknown people: Sinti and Roma] (in German). Gesellschaft für bedrohte Völker (Society for Threatened Peoples). Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  49. ^ Gilbert 2002, Map 182 p. 141 (with deaths by country); Map 301 p. 232.
  50. ^ Hancock 2002, p. 48.
  51. ^ Crowe, David M. (2000). "The Roma Holocaust". In Schwartz, Bernard; DeCoste, Frederick Charles (eds.). The Holocaust's ghost: writings on art, politics, law and education. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press. pp. 178–210. ISBN 978-0-88864-337-7.
  52. ^ "Concentration Camps: Jasenovac". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  53. ^ "Bosnia and Herzegovina". RomArchive.
  54. ^ Šimunkovića, Mario (2021). MASAKR NAD ROMIMA I SINTIMA U HRASTINI 1945. GODINE: zločini luburićevaca u zaprešićkom kraju. JAVNA USTANOVA SPOMEN PODRUČJE-JASENOVAC.
  55. ^ Misha Glenny. The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers, 1804–1999. Page 502: "The Nazis were assisted by several thousand ethnic Germans as well as by supporters of Dijmitrje Ljotic's Yugoslav fascist movement, Zbor, and General Milan Nedic's quisling administration. But the main Eengine of extermination was the regular army. The destruction of the Serbian Jews gives the lie to Wehrmacht claims that it took no part in the genocidal programmes of the Nazis. Indeed, General Bohme and his men in German-occupied Serbia planned and carried out the murder of over 20,000 Jews and Gypsies without any prompting from Berlin"
  56. ^ Kay, Alex J.; Stahel, David (2018). Mass Violence In Nazi-Occupied Europe. Indiana University Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0253036834.
  57. ^ . Easton & Levy. Archived from the original on 6 July 2000. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  58. ^ "The Deportation of the Roma and their Treatment in Transnistria" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  59. ^ Kelso, Michelle (2014). "Hidden Sorrows – Roma, Gypsies deported". YouTube. (56:00).
  60. ^ Reinhartz, Dennis (1999). "Unmarked graves: The destruction of the Yugoslav Roma in the Balkan Holocaust, 1941–1945". Journal of Genocide Research. 1 (1): 81–89. doi:10.1080/14623529908413936. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  61. ^ Fraser 1992, p. 267.
  62. ^ Fraser 1992, p. 268.
  63. ^ Dag og Tid, 20 February 2015, p. 16.
  64. ^ Guri Hjeltnes: Den norske stat betalte Nazi-Tyskland for å transportere vekk norske rom, Dagbladet, 13 February 2015.
  65. ^ https://riowang.com/2014/06/crimean-gypsies.html[bare URL]
  66. ^ Niewyk, Donald L. (2000). The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust. Columbia University Press. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-231-11200-0.
  67. ^ "European Romani (Gypsy) Population". The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: Holocaust Encyclopedia. USHMM. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  68. ^ Karanth, Dileep (2009). "Ian Hancock". The University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  69. ^ Hancock, Ian (23 September 2000). . The Patrin Web Journal (In WebCite). Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  70. ^ Rummel 1992, table 1.1.
  71. ^ Rummel 1997, table 14.1D line 1881.
  72. ^ Rummel 1997, table 9.1 lines 195–201.
  73. ^ Hancock 2010, p. 243.
  74. ^ Essay "The Suffering of the Roma in Jasenovac" in Lituchy, Barry M. (2006). Jasenovac and the Holocaust in Yugoslavia. New York: Jasenovac Research Institute. ISBN 978-0-9753432-0-3.
  75. ^ Hancock 2010, p. 244-5.
  76. ^ a b Harran, Marilyn J. (2002). The Holocaust Chronicles. Lincolnwood: Publications International. p. 384. ISBN 978-0-7853-2963-3.
  77. ^ Müller-Hill, Benno (1998). Murderous science: elimination by scientific selection of Jews, Gypsies, and others in Germany, 1933–1945. Plainview: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-87969-531-6.
  78. ^ "Auschwitz "Angel of Death" Josef Mengele's Unknown Writings to be Auctioned". PR Newswire. 30 June 2011.
  79. ^ Lifton, Robert Jay (1986). The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide. New York: Basic Books. p. 351. ISBN 978-0-465-04905-9.
  80. ^ Katz, Brigit. "London Library Spotlights Nazi Persecution of the Roma and Sinti". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  81. ^ a b Berenbaum, Michael (1993). The world must know: The history of the Holocaust as told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. USHMM. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-316-09135-0.
  82. ^ Wippermann, Wolfgang (2006). "Compensation withheld: The denial of reparations to the Sinti and Roma". In Kenrick, Donald (ed.). The Gypsies during the Second World War – 3 The Final Chapter. Univ of Hertfordshire Press. pp. 171–177. ISBN 978-1-902806-49-5.
  83. ^ Gilbert 1989, p. 734.
  84. ^ Gilbert 1989, p. 735.
  85. ^ Roma and Conflict: Understanding the Impact of War and Political Violence pp. 42–43, 2017, European Roma Rights Centre
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Bibliography

  • Hancock, Ian (1991). "Gypsy History in Germany and Neighboring Lands: A Chronology to the Holocaust and Beyond". Nationalities Papers. 19 (3): 395–412. doi:10.1080/00905999108408210. S2CID 129039283.
  • Tyrnauer, Gabrielle (1992). The Fate of the Gypsies During the Holocaust.
  • Heuss, Herbert (1997). German policies of Gypsy persecution (1870–1945).
  • Sparing, Frank (1997). The Gypsy Camps – The creation, character and meaning of an instrument for the persecution of Sinti and Romanies under National Socialism.
  • Kenrick, Donald, ed. (1999). The Gypsies during the Second World War. Vol. 2 In the Shadow of the Swastika. Gypsy Research Centre and Univ. of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 978-0-900458-85-9.
  • Kenrick, Donald, ed. (2006). The Gypsies during the Second World War. Vol. 3 The Final Chapter. Gypsy Research Centre and Univ. of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 978-1-902806-49-5.
  • Jessee, Erin (3 February 2010). Nazi Atrocities: The Genocide of the Roma/Sinti. Lecture at Concordia University. Montreal, Quebec.
  • Lewy, Guenter (2000). The Nazi Persecution of the Gypsies. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-512556-6.
  • Longerich, Peter (2012). Heinrich Himmler: A Life. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-965174-0.
  • Matras, Yaron (2004). "A conflict of paradigms: review article (Reviewed by Yaron Matras)" (PDF). Romani Studies. 14 (2): 193–219. doi:10.3828/rs.2004.7.
  • Milton, Sybil (1992). Nazi Policies Toward Roma and Sinti, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Gypsy Lore Society. ASIN B0006RI6NA. Preview in ProQuest.
  • Milton, Sybil (2009). "The Holocaust: The Gypsies". In Totten, Samuel; Parsons, William S. (eds.). Century of Genocide (3rd ed.). Routledge.
  • Rummel, Rudolph J. (1992). Democide: Nazi Genocide and Mass Murder. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
  • Rummel, Rudolph J. (1997). Statistic of Democide: Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900. Center for National Security Law, University of Virginia and Transaction Publishers.

Further reading

  • Bernadac, Christian (ed.) (1980). L'Holocauste oublié. Le martyre des Tsiganes Éditions Famot (in French).
  • Fonseca, Isabel (1996). Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies And Their Journey. Chapter 7, The Devouring. London: Vintage. ISBN 978-0-679-73743-8.
  • Kenrick, Donald; Puxon, Grattan (2009). Gypsies Under the Swastika. Univ of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 978-1-902806-80-8.
  • Klamper, Elisabeth (1993). Persecution and Annihilation of Roma and Sinti in Austria, 1938–1945. Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 5, 3 (2).
  • Korb, Alexander (2010). "A Multipronged Attack: Ustaša Persecution of Serbs, Jews, and Roma in Wartime Croatia". Eradicating Differences: The Treatment of Minorities in Nazi-Dominated Europe. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 145–163. ISBN 978-1-4438-2449-1.
  • Milton, Sybil (2001). "'Gypsies' as Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany". In Gellately, Robert; Stoltzfus, Nathan (eds.). Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08684-2. In Google Books.
  • Montemarano, Mike (22 April 2015). . Art on the Banks Journal.
  • Pamieci, Ksiega (1993). Memorial Book: The Gypsies at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Introduction by Jan Parcer. K G Saur Verlag for State Museum of Auschwitz-Birkenau. ISBN 978-3-598-11162-4.
  • Polansky, Paul (1998). Black Silence: The Lety Survivors Speak. G plus G. ISBN 978-0-89304-241-7.
  • Ramati, Alexander (1986). And the Violins Stopped Playing: A Story of the Gypsy Holocaust. War time biography of Roman (Dymitr) Mirga, on which the film of the same name is based.
  • Rose, Romani, ed. (1995). The Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma. Heidelberg: Documentary and Cultural Centre of German Sinti and Roma.
  • Sonneman, Toby (2002). Shared Sorrows: A Gypsy Family Remembers the Holocaust. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 978-1-902806-10-5.
  • Tyrnauer, Gabrielle (1989). Gypsies and the Holocaust: A Bibliography and Introductory Essay. Concordia University – Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies.
  • Winter, Walter (2004). Winter Time: Memoirs of a German Sinto who survived Auschwitz (Translated and annotated by Struan Robertson). Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978-1-902806-38-9.

External links edit

  • Digital exhibition: "Racial Diagnosis: Gypsy". The Nazi genocide of the Sinti and Roma and the long struggle for recognition
  • Desicritics
  • Extensive online resource on the Holocaust of the Romanies from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project: "Forget You Not"
  • Non-Jewish Victims of Persecution in Germany—About the Holocaust, Yad Vashem
  • , Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Minnesota
  • Documentation and Cultural Centre of German Sinti and Roma (German)
  • Roma-Sinti Genocide (Parajmos) Resources, Prevent Genocide International
  • Persecution and resistance of Gypsies under Nationalsocialism (in German)
  • A People Uncounted. The Untold Story of the Roma. Dir. Aaron Yeger. 2011. Film.

romani, holocaust, romani, genocide, planned, effort, nazi, germany, world, allies, collaborators, commit, ethnic, cleansing, eventually, genocide, against, european, roma, sinti, peoples, during, holocaust, part, world, iieuropean, roma, sinti, asperg, nazi, . The Romani Holocaust or the Romani genocide 4 was the planned effort by Nazi Germany and its World War II allies and collaborators to commit ethnic cleansing and eventually genocide against European Roma and Sinti peoples during the Holocaust era 5 Romani HolocaustPart of World War IIEuropean Roma and Sinti in Asperg Nazi Germany are rounded up for deportation by Nazi German authorities on 22 May 1940LocationNazi Germany and its occupied territoriesDate1935 1945TargetEuropean Roma and SintiAttack typeGenocide ethnic cleansing mass murderDeathsAt least 150 000 Other estimates give figures such as 500 000 1 800 000 2 or even as high as 1 5 million 3 383 396 PerpetratorsNazi Germany and its alliesMotiveAntiziganism Germanisation Pan Germanism RacismUnder Adolf Hitler a supplementary decree to the Nuremberg Laws was issued on 26 November 1935 classifying the Romani people or Roma as enemies of the race based state thereby placing them in the same category as the Jews Thus the fate of the Roma in Europe paralleled that of the Jews in the Holocaust 1 Historians estimate that between 250 000 and 500 000 Romani and Sinti were killed by Nazi Germans and their collaborators 25 to over 50 of the estimate of slightly fewer than 1 million Roma in Europe at the time 1 Later research cited by Ian Hancock estimated the death toll to be at about 1 5 million out of an estimated 2 million European Roma 3 In 1982 West Germany formally recognized that Nazi Germany had committed genocide against the Romani people 6 7 In 2011 Poland officially adopted 2 August as a day of commemoration of the Romani genocide 8 Within the Nazi German state first persecution then extermination was aimed primarily at sedentary Gypsy mongrels In December 1942 Heinrich Himmler ordered the deportation of all Roma from the Greater Germanic Reich and most were sent to the specially established Gypsy concentration camp at Auschwitz Birkenau Other Roma were deported there from the Nazi occupied Western European territories Approximately 21 000 of the 23 000 European Roma and Sinti sent there did not survive In areas outside the reach of systematic registration e g in the German occupied areas of Eastern and Southeastern Europe the Roma who were most threatened were those who in the German judgment were vagabonds though some were actually refugees or displaced persons Here they were killed mainly in massacres perpetrated by the German military and police formations as well as by the Schutzstaffel SS task forces and in armed resistance against the Nazi German occupation of Europe 1 Contents 1 Alternate terms 2 History 2 1 Anti Romani discrimination before 1933 2 1 1 Emergence of scientific racism 2 1 2 Persecution by the German Empire and the Weimar Republic 2 2 Aryan racial purity 2 3 Loss of citizenship 2 4 Persecution and genocide 3 Persecution in other Axis and occupied countries 3 1 Ustase Croatia 3 2 Serbia 3 3 Romania 3 4 Italy 3 5 Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia 3 6 France 3 7 Denmark 3 8 Greece 3 9 Norway 3 10 Crimea 3 11 Estimated number of victims 4 Medical experiments 5 Recognition and remembrance 5 1 Acts of commemoration 5 2 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksAlternate terms editThe term porajmos also porrajmos or pharrajimos literally devouring or destruction in some dialects of the Romani language 9 was introduced by Ian Hancock in the early 1990s 10 Hancock chose to use the term coined by a Kalderash Rom from a number of suggestions which were given during an informal conversation in 1993 11 The term is mostly used by activists and as a result its usage is unknown to most Roma including relatives of victims and survivors 10 Some Russian and Balkan Romani activists protest against the use of the word porajmos 11 In various dialects porajmos is synonymous with poravipe which means violation and rape a term which some Roma consider offensive Janos Barsony and Agnes Daroczi pioneering organisers of the Romani civil rights movement in Hungary prefer to use the term Pharrajimos a Romani word which means cutting up fragmentation destruction They argue against the use of the term porrajmos saying that it is marhime unclean untouchable p orrajmos is unpronounceable in the Roma community and thus it is incapable of conveying the sufferings of the Roma 12 Balkan Romani activists prefer to use the term samudaripen mass killing 13 first introduced by linguist Marcel Courthiade in the 1970s in Yugoslavia in the context of Auschwitz and Jasenovac It is a neologism of sa Romani for all and mudaripen murder It can be translated as murder of all or mass murder The International Romani Union now uses this term 14 Ian Hancock dismisses this word arguing that it does not conform to Romani language morphology 11 Some Ruska Roma activists offer to use the term Kali Tras Black Fear 15 Another alternative that has been used is Bersa Bibahtale The Unhappy Years 11 Lastly adapted borrowings such as Holokosto Holokausto etc are also used in the Romani language on some occasions citation needed Linguistically the term porajmos is composed of the verb root porrav and the abstract forming nominal ending imos This ending is of the Vlax Romani dialect whereas other varieties generally use ibe n or ipe n 16 For the verb itself the most commonly given meaning is to open stretch wide or to rip open whereas the meaning to open up the mouth devour occurs in fewer dialects 17 History editMain article History of the Romani people Anti Romani discrimination before 1933 edit Main article Anti Romani sentiment Emergence of scientific racism edit In the late 19th century the emergence of scientific racism and Social Darwinism linking social differences with racial differences provided the German public with pseudoscientific justifications for prejudices against Jews and Roma During this period the concept of race was systematically employed in order to explain social phenomena Proponents of this approach attempted to validate the belief that races were not variations of a single species of man because they had distinctly different biological origins Proponents of this approach established a purportedly scientifically based racial hierarchy which they believed defined certain minority groups as the other on the basis of biology 18 In addition to being a period in which racial pseudoscience was widely promoted the end of the 19th century was a period of state sponsored modernization in Germany Industrial development altered many aspects of society Most notably the changes which occurred during this period caused the social norms of work and life to shift For the Roma this shift in the social norms of work and life led to the denial of their traditional way of life as craftsmen and artisans Janos Barsony notes that industrial development devalued their services as craftsmen resulting in the disintegration of their communities and social marginalization 19 Persecution by the German Empire and the Weimar Republic edit The developments of racial pseudoscience and modernization resulted in anti Romani state interventions carried out by both the German Empire and the Weimar Republic In 1899 the Imperial Police Headquarters in Munich established the Information Services on Romani by the Security Police Its purpose was to keep records identification cards fingerprints photographs etc and continuous surveillance on the Roma community In 1904 Prussia adopted a resolution calling for regulation of Gypsy movement In 1911 the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior organized a conference in Munich to discuss the Gypsy problem and to coordinate efforts against Gypsies 20 Roma in the Weimar Republic were forbidden from entering public swimming pools parks and other recreational areas and depicted throughout Germany and Europe as criminals and spies 21 The 1926 Law for the Fight Against Gypsies Vagrants and the Workshy was enforced in Bavaria and became the national norm by 1929 It stipulated that groups identifying as Gypsies avoid all travel to the region Those already living in the area were to be kept under control so that there was no longer anything to fear from them with regard to safety in the land 22 They were forbidden from roam ing about or camp ing in bands and those unable to prove regular employment risked being sent to forced labor for up to two years Herbet Heuss notes that t his Bavarian law became the model for other German states and even for neighbouring countries 23 The demand for Roma to give up their nomadic ways and settle in a specific region was often the focus of anti Romani policy both in the German Empire and the Weimar Republic Once settled communities were concentrated and isolated in a single area of a town or city 24 This segregation facilitated state run surveillance practices and crime prevention Following the passage of the Law for the Fight Against Gypsies Vagrants and the Workshy public policy increasingly targeted the Roma on the explicit basis of race In 1927 Prussia passed a law that required all Roma to carry identity cards Eight thousand Roma were processed this way and subjected to mandatory fingerprinting and photographing 25 Two years later the focus became more explicit In 1929 the German state of Hessen proposed the Law for the Fight Against the Gypsy Menace The same year the Centre for the Fight Against Gypsies in Germany was opened This body enforced restrictions on travel for undocumented Roma and allowed for the arbitrary arrest and detention of gypsies as a means of crime prevention 26 Aryan racial purity edit Main articles Nazi racial theories Nazi eugenics and Racial policy of Nazi Germany nbsp Romani woman with a German police officer and Nazi psychologist Robert RitterFor centuries Romani tribes had been subject to antiziganist persecution and humiliation in Europe 27 They were stigmatized as habitual criminals social misfits and vagabonds 27 When Hitler came to national power in 1933 anti Gypsy laws in Germany remained in effect Under the Law against Dangerous Habitual Criminals of November 1933 the police arrested many Roma along with others the Nazis viewed as asocial prostitutes beggars homeless vagrants and alcoholics and imprisoned them in internment camps After Hitler s rise to power legislation against the Romani was increasingly based upon a rhetoric of racism Policy originally based on the premise of fighting crime was redirected to fighting a people 23 Targeted groups were no longer determined on juridical grounds but instead were victims of racialized policy 23 The Department of Racial Hygiene and Population Biology began to experiment on Romani to determine criteria for their racial classification 28 The Nazis established the Racial Hygiene and Demographic Biology Research Unit Rassenhygienische und Bevolkerungsbiologische Forschungsstelle Department L3 of the Reich Department of Health in 1936 Headed by Robert Ritter and his assistant Eva Justin this unit was mandated to conduct an in depth study of the Gypsy question Zigeunerfrage and to provide data required for formulating a new Reich Gypsy law After extensive fieldwork in the spring of 1936 consisting of interviews and medical examinations to determine the racial classification of the Roma the unit decided that most Romani whom they had concluded were not of pure Gypsy blood posed a danger to German racial purity and should be deported or eliminated No decision was made regarding the remainder about 10 percent of the total Romani population of Europe primarily Sinti and Lalleri tribes living in Germany Several suggestions were made Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler suggested deporting the Romani to a remote reservation as the United States had done to Native Americans where pure Gypsies could continue their nomadic lifestyle unhindered According to him The aim of measures taken by the State to defend the homogeneity of the German nation must be the physical separation of Gypsydom from the German nation the prevention of miscegenation and finally the regulation of the way of life of pure and part Gypsies The necessary legal foundation can only be created through a Gypsy Law which prevents further intermingling of blood and which regulates all the most pressing questions which go together with the existences of Roma in the living space of the German nation 29 Himmler took special interest into the Aryan origins of the Romani and distinguished between settled assimilated and unsettled Romani In May 1942 an order was issued according to which all Gypsies living in the Balkans were to be arrested Although the Nazi regime never produced the Gypsy Law desired by Himmler 30 policies and decrees were passed which discriminated against the Romani people 31 Roma were classified as asocial and criminals by the Nazi regime 32 From 1933 on Roma were placed in concentration camps 33 After 1937 the Nazis started to carry out racial examinations on the Roma living in Germany 31 In 1938 Himmler issued an order regarding the Gypsy question which explicitly mentioned race which stated that it was advisable to deal with the Gypsy question on the basis of race 31 The decree made it law to register all Roma including Mischlinge mixed race as well as those people who travel around in a Gypsy fashion over the age of six 31 Although the Nazis believed that the Roma had originally been Aryan over time the Nazis said they became mixed race and so were classified as non Aryan and of an alien race 34 Loss of citizenship edit Main article Nuremberg Laws The Nuremberg race laws passed on 15 September 1935 The first Nuremberg Law the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor forbade marriage and extramarital intercourse between Jews and Germans The second Nuremberg law The Reich Citizenship Law stripped Jews of their German citizenship On 26 November 1935 Germany expanded the Nuremberg laws to also apply to the Roma Romani like Jews lost their right to vote on 7 March 1936 30 Persecution and genocide edit nbsp Romani prisoners at Belzec extermination camp 1940 nbsp The Brown Triangle Romani prisoners in German concentration camps such as Auschwitz were forced to wear the brown inverted triangle on their prison uniforms so they could be distinguished from other inmates 35 The Third Reich s government began persecuting the Romani as early as 1936 when they started to transfer the people to municipal internment camps on the outskirts of cities a prelude to their deportation to concentration camps A December 1937 decree on crime prevention provided the pretext for major roundups of Roma Nine representatives of the Romani community in Germany were asked to compile lists of pure blooded Romanis to be saved from deportation However the Germans often ignored these lists and some individuals identified on them were still sent to concentration camps 36 Notable internment and concentration camps include Dachau Dieselstrasse Marzahn which evolved from a municipal internment camp and Vennhausen Initially the Romani were herded into so called ghettos including the Warsaw Ghetto April June 1942 where they formed a distinct class in relation to the Jews Ghetto diarist Emmanuel Ringelblum speculated that Romani were sent to the Warsaw Ghetto because the Germans wanted to toss into the Ghetto everything that is characteristically dirty shabby bizarre of which one ought to be frightened and which anyway has to be destroyed 37 Initially there was disagreement within the Nazi circles about how to solve the Gypsy Question In late 1939 and early 1940 Hans Frank the General Governor of occupied Poland refused to accept the 30 000 German and Austrian Roma which were to be deported to his territory Heinrich Himmler lobbied to save a handful of pure blooded Roma whom he believed to be an ancient Aryan people for his ethnic reservation but was opposed by Martin Bormann who favored deportation for all Roma 21 The debate ended in 1942 when Himmler signed the order to begin the mass deportations of Roma to Auschwitz concentration camp During Operation Reinhard 1941 43 an undetermined number of Roma were killed in the extermination camps such as Treblinka 38 nbsp German troops round up Romani in Asperg Germany in May 1940The Nazi persecution of Roma was not regionally consistent In France between 3 000 and 6 000 Roma were deported to German concentration camps as Dachau Ravensbruck Buchenwald and other camps 21 page needed Further east in the Balkan states and the Soviet Union the Einsatzgruppen mobile killing squads travelled from village to village massacring the inhabitants where they lived and typically leaving few to no records of the number of Roma killed in this way In a few cases significant documentary evidence of mass murder was generated 39 Timothy Snyder notes that in the Soviet Union alone there were 8 000 documented cases of Roma murdered by the Einsatzgruppen in their sweep east 40 In return for immunity from prosecution for war crimes Erich von dem Bach Zelewski stated at the Einsatzgruppen Trial that the principal task of the Einsatzgruppen of the S D was the annihilation of the Jews Gypsies and Political commissars 41 Roma in the Slovak Republic were killed by local collaborating auxiliaries 21 Notably in Denmark and Greece local populations did not participate in the hunt for Roma as they did elsewhere 42 43 Bulgaria and Finland although allies of Germany did not cooperate with the Porajmos just as they did not cooperate with the anti Jewish Shoah nbsp An image of 10 year old Settela Steinbach a Dutch Romani girl on a train to Auschwitz in 1944 became an icon of children in the Holocaust 44 On 16 December 1942 Himmler ordered that the Romani candidates for extermination should be transferred from ghettos to the extermination facilities of Auschwitz Birkenau On 15 November 1943 Himmler ordered that Romani and part Romanies were to be put on the same level as Jews and placed in concentration camps 45 The camp authorities housed Roma in a special compound that was called the Gypsy family camp Some 23 000 Roma Sinti and Lalleri were deported to Auschwitz altogether 1 In concentration camps such as Auschwitz Roma wore brown or black triangular patches the symbol for asocials or green ones the symbol for professional criminals and less frequently the letter Z meaning Zigeuner German word for gypsy Sybil Milton a scholar of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust 46 has speculated that Hitler was involved in the decision to deport all Romani to Auschwitz as Himmler gave the order six days after meeting with Hitler For that meeting Himmler had prepared a report on the subject Fuhrer Aufstellung wer sind Zigeuner 47 On some occasions the Roma attempted to resist the Nazis extermination In May 1944 at Auschwitz SS guards tried to liquidate the Gypsy Family Camp and were met with unexpected resistance When ordered to come out they refused having been warned and arming themselves with crude weapons iron pipes shovels and other tools The SS chose not to confront the Roma directly and withdrew for several months After transferring as many as 3 000 Roma who were capable of forced labor to Auschwitz I and other concentration camps the SS moved against the remaining 2 898 inmates on 2 August The SS murdered nearly all of the remaining inmates most of them ill elderly men women and children in the gas chambers of Birkenau At least 19 000 of the 23 000 Roma sent to Auschwitz were murdered there 21 The Society for Threatened Peoples estimates the Romani deaths at 277 100 48 Martin Gilbert estimates that a total of more than 220 000 of the 700 000 Romani in Europe were murdered including 15 000 mainly from the Soviet Union in Mauthausen in January May 1945 49 The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum cites scholars who estimate the number of Sinti and Roma murdered as between 220 000 and 500 000 30 Sybil Milton estimated the number of lives lost as something between a half million and a million and a half 3 50 Persecution in other Axis and occupied countries editThe governments of some Nazi German allies namely Slovakia Finland Italy Vichy France Hungary and Romania also contributed to the Nazi plan to exterminate the Romani but most of the Romani who resided in these countries survived unlike those Romani who resided in Ustase Croatia or those Romani who resided in areas which were directly ruled by Nazi Germany such as occupied Poland The Hungarian Arrow Cross government deported between 28 000 and 33 000 Romani out of a population that was estimated to be between 70 000 and 100 000 51 Ustase Croatia edit The Romani people were also persecuted by the puppet regimes that cooperated with the Third Reich during the war especially by the notorious Ustase regime in the Independent State of Croatia Tens of thousands of Romani people were killed in the Jasenovac concentration camp along with Serbs Jews and anti fascist Muslims and Croats Yad Vashem estimates that the Porajmos was most intense in Yugoslavia where around 90 000 Romani were killed 42 The Ustase government virtually annihilated the country s Romani population killing an estimated 25 000 and also deporting around 26 000 1 52 In May 1942 an Ustase order was issued according to it the deportation of Muslim Roma who were residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina should stop 53 On April 24 1945 Ustase soldiers brutally murdered between 43 and 47 Sinti and Roma members of a traveling circus named Braca Winter as they temporarily settled in Kraj Donji on their way to Slovenia The atrocity is known as the Hrastina Massacre and is perhaps the last mass murder of Sinti and Roma in Europe during World War II In 1977 a statue was erected in the local cemetery Marija Gorica to honor the victims 54 Serbia edit In the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia the German occupiers and the Serbian collaborationist puppet government Government of National Salvation killed thousands of Romani in the Banjica concentration camp Crveni Krst concentration camp and Topovske Supe concentration camp along with Jews 55 In August 1942 Harald Turner reported to his superiors that Serbia is the only country in which the Jewish question and the Gypsy question have been solved 56 Serbian Romani were parties to the unsuccessful class action suit against the Vatican Bank and others in the U S federal court in which they sought the return of wartime loot 57 Romania edit The Romanian government of Ion Antonescu did not systematically annihilate Roma who resided on its territory Some resident Roma were deported to occupied Transnistria 1 Of the estimated 25 000 Romani inmates of these camps around 11 000 44 or almost half died 58 See also the research of Michelle Kelso presented in her film Hidden Sorrows 59 based upon research amongst the survivors and in archives Italy edit In Fascist Italy as well as in Slovenia and Montenegro territories which were under Italian occupation the majority of the Roma were forcibly rounded up and incarcerated in concentration camps but generally they were relatively well treated especially in contrast to the Roma who resided in the parts of Europe which were occupied by Nazi Germany Many of them were deported to Sardinia with much of them being given Italian identity cards that put them out of reach of extermination by the Nazis and the Ustase As a result the vast majority of the Roma who resided in Italy and its occupied territories managed to survive the war 60 Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia edit In the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia Romani internees were sent to the Lety and Hodonin concentration camps before they were transferred to Auschwitz Birkenau for mass murder by poison gas What makes the Lety camp unique is the fact that it was staffed by Czech guards who could be even more brutal than the Germans as testified to in Paul Polansky s book Black Silence The genocide was so thorough that the vast majority of Romani who currently reside in the Czech Republic are actually the descendants of migrants who moved from Slovakia to Czechoslovakia during the post war years France edit Between 16 000 and 18 000 Romani from Nazi occupied France were killed in German camps 42 Denmark edit The small Romani population in Denmark was not subjected to mass killings by the Nazi occupiers instead it was simply classified as asocial Angus Fraser attributes this to doubts over ethnic demarcations within the travelling population 61 Greece edit The Romanis of Greece were taken hostage and prepared for deportation to Auschwitz but they were saved by appeals from the Archbishop of Athens and the Greek Prime Minister 62 Norway edit In 1934 68 Romani most of them Norwegian citizens were denied entry into Norway and they were also denied transit through Sweden and Denmark when they wanted to leave Germany In the winter of 1943 1944 66 members of the Josef Karoli and Modis families were interned in Belgium and deported to the gypsy department in Auschwitz Only four members of this group survived 63 64 Crimea edit In Crimea the Muslim Roma were protected by the Crimean Tatars from assassination However it later served Stalin to deport the Crimean Muslim Romani along with the Crimean Tatars to Siberia since they were registered as Tatars 65 Estimated number of victims edit The following figures are from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum s online encyclopedia of the Holocaust 66 67 Country Roma population 1939 Number of Victims at least killed Estimate by the United States Holocaust Memorial MuseumAlbania 20 000 Austria 11 200 6 800 8 250Belgium 600 350 500Bulgaria 80 000 0 0Czech Republic Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia 13 000 5 000 6 500Estonia 1 000 500 1 000France 40 000 15 150 15 150Germany 20 000 15 000 15 000Greece 50 50Hungary 100 000 1 000 28 000Italy 25 000 1 000 1 000Latvia 5 000 1 500 2 500Lithuania 1 000 500 1 000Luxembourg 200 100 200Netherlands 500 215 500Poland 50 000 8 000 35 000Romania 262 501 19 000 36 000Slovakia 80 000 400 10 000Soviet Union 1939 borders 200 000 30 000 35 000Yugoslavia 100 000 26 000 90 000Total 947 500 130 565 285 650 However new findings and documents uncovered by research experts revealed that the Roma death toll was at least about 200 000 to 500 000 of the 1 or 2 million Roma in Europe although there are numerous experts and scholars who give much higher number of Romani deaths such as Ian Hancock director of the Romani Archives and Documentation Center at the University of Texas at Austin 68 in his findings discovered that almost the entire Romani population was killed in Croatia Estonia Lithuania Luxembourg and the Netherlands 69 Rudolph Rummel the late professor emeritus of political science at the University of Hawaii who spent his career assembling data on collective violence by governments toward their people for which he coined the term democide estimated that in total 258 000 were killed by the Nazi regime in Europe 70 36 000 in Romania under Ion Antonescu 71 and 27 000 in Ustase controlled Croatia 72 In a 2010 publication Ian Hancock stated that he agrees with the view that the number of Romanies killed has been underestimated as a result of being grouped with others in Nazi records under headings such as remainder to be liquidated hangers on and partisans 73 He notes recent evidence such as the previously obscure Lety concentration camp in the Czech Republic and Ackovic s revised estimates 74 of Romani killed by the Ustase as high as 80 000 100 000 These numbers suggest that previous estimates have been grossly underrepresented 75 Zbigniew Brzezinski has estimated that 800 000 Roma people were killed through Nazi actions 2 Medical experiments editFurther information Nazi human experimentation Another distinctive feature of both the Porajmos and the Holocaust was the extensive use of human subjects in medical experiments 76 The most notorious of these physicians was Josef Mengele who worked in the Auschwitz concentration camp His experiments included placing subjects in pressure chambers testing drugs on them freezing them attempting to change their eye color by injecting chemicals into children s eyes and performing various amputations and other brutal surgeries 76 The full extent of his work will never be known because the truckload of records which he sent to Otmar von Verschuer at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute was destroyed by von Verschuer 77 Mengele s own journals consisting of some 3 300 pages are likely never to be published 78 Subjects who survived Mengele s experiments were almost always murdered and dissected shortly afterwards 79 One Roma survivor of medical experimentation was Margarethe Kraus 80 Mengele seemed particularly keen on working with Romani children He brought them sweets and toys and personally took them to the gas chamber They called him Onkel Mengele 81 Vera Alexander was a Jewish inmate at Auschwitz who looked after 50 sets of Romani twins I remember one set of twins in particular Guido and Ina aged about four One day Mengele took them away When they returned they were in a terrible state they had been sewn together back to back like Siamese twins Their wounds were infected and oozing pus They screamed day and night Then their parents I remember the mother s name was Stella managed to get some morphine and they killed the children in order to end their suffering 81 Recognition and remembrance editSee also Genocide recognition politics and Holocaust denial nbsp Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of the Nazis in Berlin GermanyThe German government paid war reparations to Jewish survivors of the Holocaust but not to the Romani There were never any consultations at Nuremberg or any other international conference as to whether the Sinti and Roma were entitled like the Jews to reparations 82 The Interior Ministry of Wuerttemberg argued that Gypsies were persecuted under the Nazis not for any racial reason but because of an asocial and criminal record 83 When on trial for his leadership of Einsatzgruppen in the USSR Otto Ohlendorf cited the massacres of Roma people during the Thirty Years War as a historical precedent 84 The European Roma Rights Centre in 2017 gave more details of the chronology of recognition and reparations After World War II Roma were also excluded from the right to restitution because Federal German authorities denied that Roma were persecued due to racist reasons After a small step in this direction in 1963 restitutions became possible in small amounts only in 1979 when the West German Federal Parliament declared that the Nazi persecution of Roma was based on racial grounds and Roma survivors were allowed to claim for restitution in a form of a onetime payment The official acceptance of the Porajmos as genocide by the Federal Republic of Germany followed only in 1982 with a speech by Chancelor Helmut Schmidt In August 2016 an agreement between the German Ministry for Finance and the Foreign Ministry of the Czech Republic decided on compensation for survivors of the Porajmos in the Czech Republic This agreement which will give 2 500 EUR to each of the handful of survivors was greeted as a symbolic acknowledgment but also criticised for its delay and the low amount awarded However this agreement has already led to renewed claims from Romani victims from the former Yugoslavia and other regions of romocide 85 In the historiography of East Germany GDR the persecution of Sinti and Roma under National Socialism was largely taboo The German historian Anne Kathleen Tillack Graf states that in the GDR Sinti and Roma were not mentioned as concentration camp prisoners during the official commemorations of the liberation at the three national memorial sites Buchenwald Sachsenhausen and Ravensbruck just like homosexuals Jehovah s Witnesses and asocial detainees 86 West Germany recognised the genocide of the Roma in 1982 87 and since then the Porajmos has been increasingly recognized as a genocide committed simultaneously with the Shoah 88 The American historian Sybil Milton wrote several articles arguing that the Porajmos deserved recognition as part of the Holocaust 89 In Switzerland a committee of experts investigated the policy of the Swiss government during the Porajmos 90 Formal recognition and commemoration of the Roma persecution by the Nazis have been difficult in practical terms due to the lack of significant collective memory and documentation of the Porajmos among the Roma This results from both of their tradition of oral history and illiteracy heightened by widespread poverty and continuing discrimination that has forced some Roma out of state schools One UNESCO report of Roma in Romania showed that only 40 of Roma children are enrolled in primary school compared to the national average of 93 91 Of those enrolled only 30 of Roma children go on to complete primary school In a 2011 investigation of the state of the Roma in Europe today Ben Judah a Policy Fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relations traveled to Romania Nico Fortuna a sociologist and Roma activist explained the distinction between Jewish collective memory of the Shoah and the Roma experience There is a difference between the Jewish and Roma deportees The Jews were shocked and can remember the year date and time it happened The Roma shrugged it off They said Of course I was deported I m Roma these things happen to a Roma The Roma mentality is different from the Jewish mentality For example a Roma came to me and asked Why do you care so much about these deportations Your family was not deported I went I care as a Roma and the guy said back I do not care because my family were brave proud Roma that were not deported For the Jews it was total and everyone knew this from bankers to pawnbrokers For the Roma it was selective and not comprehensive The Roma were only exterminated in a few parts of Europe such as Poland the Netherlands Germany and France In Romania and much of the Balkans only nomadic Roma and social outcast Roma were deported This matters and influences the Roma mentality 92 Ian Hancock has also observed a reluctance among Roma to acknowledge their victimization by the Third Reich The Roma are traditionally not disposed to keeping alive the terrible memories from their history nostalgia is a luxury for others 21 The effects of the illiteracy the lack of social institutions and the rampant discrimination faced by Roma in Europe today have produced a people who according to Fortuna lack a national consciousness and historical memory of the Holocaust because there is no Roma elite 92 Acts of commemoration edit nbsp Plaque in Rome Italy in memory of Romani people murdered in extermination camps source source source source source source source Holocaust by bullet Yahad In Unum documentaryThe first memorial which commemorates victims of the Romani Holocaust was erected on 8 May 1956 in the Polish village of Szczurowa commemorating the Szczurowa massacre Since 1996 a Gypsy Caravan Memorial has been traveling among the main remembrance sites in Poland from Tarnow via Auschwitz Szczurowa and Borzecin Dolny gathering the Romani and well wishers in the remembrance of the Porajmos 93 Several museums dedicate a part of their permanent exhibition to documenting that history such as the Museum of Romani Culture in Czech Republic and the Ethnographic Museum in Tarnow in Poland Some political organisations have tried to block the installation of Romani memorials near former concentration camps as shown by the debate over Lety and Hodonin in the Czech Republic On 23 October 2007 President Traian Băsescu publicly apologized for his nation s role in the Porajmos the first time a Romanian leader has done so He called for the Porajmos to be taught in schools stating that We must tell our children that six decades ago children like them were sent by the Romanian state to die of hunger and cold Part of his apology was expressed in the Romani language Băsescu awarded three Porajmos survivors with an Order for Faithful Services 94 Before recognizing Romania s role in the Porajmos Traian Băsescu was widely quoted after an incident on 19 May 2007 in which he insulted a journalist by calling her a stinky gypsy The president subsequently apologized 95 nbsp Monument to the Memory of the Holocaust of the Romani Gypsies in the site of German Nazi crimes during WWII in the Polish village of BorzecinOn 27 January 2011 Zoni Weisz became the first Roma guest of honour at Germany s official Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony Dutch born Weisz escaped death during a Nazi round up when a policeman allowed him to escape Nazi injustices against the Roma were recalled at the ceremony including that directed at Sinto boxer Johann Trollmann 96 97 In July 2011 the Polish Parliament passed a resolution for the official recognition of 2 August as a day of commemoration of the genocide 8 On 5 May 2012 the world premiere of the Requiem for Auschwitz by composer Roger Moreno Rathgeb was performed at the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam by The Roma and Sinti Philharmoniker directed by Riccardo M Sahiti The Philharmoniker is a pan European orchestra of Roma and Sinto musicians generally employed by other classical orchestras it is focused on the contribution of Roma culture to classical music Dutch Swiss Sinto Moreno Rathgeb wrote his requiem for all victims of Auschwitz and Nazi terror The occasion of the premiere was coupled to a conference Roma between Past and Future The requiem has since been performed in Tilburg Prague Budapest Frankfurt Cracow and Berlin On 24 October 2012 the Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism was unveiled in Berlin 98 Since 2010 ternYpe International Roma Youth Network has organized a commemoration week called Dikh he na bister look and don t forget about 2 August in Krakow and Auschwitz Birkenau In 2014 they organised the largest Youth Commemoration Ceremony in history attracting more than 1000 young Roma and non Roma from 25 countries This initiative of ternYpe Network was held under the European Parliament s High Patronage granted by President Martin Schulz 99 In popular culture edit In the 2011 documentary film A People Uncounted The Untold Story of the Roma filmmaker Aaron Yeger chronicles the rich yet difficult history of the Romani people from ancient times to the Romani genocide which was perpetrated by the Nazis during WWII and then it chronicles the history of the Romani people from the end of World War II to the present day Romani Holocaust survivors share their raw authentic stories of life in the concentration camps providing first hand accounts of this minority group s experience a subject which the public does not know about In 2009 Tony Gatlif a French Romani film director directed the film Korkoro which portrays the Romani Taloche s escape from the Nazis with help from a French notary Justes and his difficulty in trying to lead a sedentary life 100 The film s other main character Mademoiselle Lise Lundi is inspired by Yvette Lundy a teacher who worked in Gionges and was active in the French Resistance 101 The 1988 Polish film And the Violins Stopped Playing also has the Porajmos as its subject It was criticized for showing the killing of Roma as a method of removing witnesses of the killing of Jews 102 A scene in the French language film Train de Vie Train of Life directed by Radu Mihaileanu depicts a group of Romani singing and dancing with Jews at a stop en route to a concentration camp In the graphic X Men novel The Magneto Testament Max Eisenhardt who would later become Magneto has a crush on a Romani girl who is named Magda He later meets her again in Auschwitz where she is in the Gypsy Camp and together they plan their escape The Porajmos is described in detail 103 In 2019 Roz Mortimer directed The Deathless Woman a hybrid documentary film which is both a ghost story and a record of first person testimonies about historical crimes which were committed against the Roma during WWII and contemporary crimes The ghostly narrator voiced in Romani by Iveta Kokyova questions the absence of her history in archives and museums 104 See also edit nbsp Genocide portalRescue of Roma during the Porajmos Roma Holocaust Memorial DayReferences editNotes a b c d e f g Holocaust Encyclopedia Genocide of European Roma Gypsies 1939 1945 USHMM Retrieved 9 August 2011 a b Brzezinski Zbigniew 2010 Out of Control Global Turmoil on the Eve of the 21st Century Simon amp Schuster Touchstone p 10 ISBN 978 1 4391 4380 3 a b c Hancock Ian 2005 True Romanies and the Holocaust A Re evaluation and an overview The Historiography of the Holocaust Palgrave Macmillan pp 383 396 ISBN 978 1 4039 9927 6 archived from the original on 28 September 2011 also known as the Porajmos Romani pronunciation IPA pʰoɽajˈmos meaning the Devouring the Pharrajimos meaning the Cutting up the Fragmentation the Destruction and the Samudaripen Mass killing Davis Mark 5 May 2015 How World War II shaped modern Germany euronews Germany unveils Roma Holocaust memorial aljazeera com Al Jazeera 24 October 2012 Retrieved 8 March 2015 Holocaust Memorial Day Forgotten Holocaust of Roma finally acknowledged in Germany Telegraph co uk The Daily Telegraph 27 January 2011 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 8 March 2015 a b OSCE human rights chief welcomes declaration of official Roma genocide remembrance day in Poland OSCE 29 July 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Hancock 1997 p 339 Porajmos The Romani Holocaust 1933 1945 also Baro Porajmos lit great devouring a b Matras 2004 p 195 a b c d Hancock Ian On the interpretation of a word Porrajmos as Holocaust The Romani Archives and Documentation Center RADOC Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 8 March 2015 Barsony amp Daroczi 2008 p x What does Samudaripen mean Dosta Council of Europe 5 September 2006 Archived from the original on 20 June 2006 Genocide Holocaust Porajmos Samudaripen RomArchive Mazikina Lilit Romany Kultury i Dzhiipen Romani Culture and Life romanykultury info in Russian Archived from the original on 23 October 2007 Boretzky Norbert Igla Birgit 2005 Kommentierter Dialektatlas des Romani Teil 1 Vergleich der Dialekte Annotated dialect atlas of Romani Part 1 Comparison of dialects in German Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 05073 9 Romlex Lexical Database romani uni graz at Retrieved 4 September 2015 Heuss 1997 p 19 Barsony amp Daroczi 2008 p 7 Fitzpatrick Matthew 2015 Purging the Empire Mass Expulsions in Germany 1871 1914 OUP Oxford pp 195 199 ISBN 978 0 19 103852 5 a b c d e f Rom Rymer Symi Roma in the Holocaust Moment Magazine July August 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2011 Report on the Bavarian Landtag 1925 6 III Tagung Gesetz und Verordnungsblatt fur den Freistaat Bayern Nr 17 22 July 1926 as cited in Heuss 1997 p 24 a b c Heuss 1997 p 24 Sparing 1997 pp 39 40 Hancock 1991 p 14 Jessee 2010 a b Hancock 2002 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simply called the girl with the headdress Gilbert 2004 p 474 Honan William H 24 October 2000 Sybil Milton 59 Scholar of Nazis and Holocaust The New York Times Milton 2009 p 172 Verdorfer Martha 1995 Unbekanntes Volk Sinti und Roma Unknown people Sinti and Roma in German Gesellschaft fur bedrohte Volker Society for Threatened Peoples Retrieved 8 March 2015 Gilbert 2002 Map 182 p 141 with deaths by country Map 301 p 232 Hancock 2002 p 48 Crowe David M 2000 The Roma Holocaust In Schwartz Bernard DeCoste Frederick Charles eds The Holocaust s ghost writings on art politics law and education Edmonton University of Alberta Press pp 178 210 ISBN 978 0 88864 337 7 Concentration Camps Jasenovac Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 4 September 2015 Bosnia and Herzegovina RomArchive Simunkovica Mario 2021 MASAKR NAD ROMIMA I SINTIMA U HRASTINI 1945 GODINE zlocini luburicevaca u zapresickom kraju JAVNA USTANOVA SPOMEN PODRUCJE JASENOVAC Misha Glenny The Balkans Nationalism War and the Great Powers 1804 1999 Page 502 The Nazis were assisted by several thousand ethnic Germans as well as by supporters of Dijmitrje Ljotic s Yugoslav fascist movement Zbor and General Milan Nedic s quisling administration But the main Eengine of extermination was the regular army The destruction of the Serbian Jews gives the lie to Wehrmacht claims that it took no part in the genocidal programmes of the Nazis Indeed General Bohme and his men in German occupied Serbia planned and carried out the murder of over 20 000 Jews and Gypsies without any prompting from Berlin Kay Alex J Stahel David 2018 Mass Violence In Nazi Occupied Europe Indiana University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0253036834 Vatican Bank Claims Easton amp Levy Archived from the original on 6 July 2000 Retrieved 8 March 2015 The Deportation of the Roma and their Treatment in Transnistria PDF Yad Vashem Retrieved 8 March 2015 Kelso Michelle 2014 Hidden Sorrows Roma Gypsies deported YouTube 56 00 Reinhartz Dennis 1999 Unmarked graves The destruction of the Yugoslav Roma in the Balkan Holocaust 1941 1945 Journal of Genocide Research 1 1 81 89 doi 10 1080 14623529908413936 Retrieved 25 April 2022 Fraser 1992 p 267 Fraser 1992 p 268 Dag og Tid 20 February 2015 p 16 Guri Hjeltnes Den norske stat betalte Nazi Tyskland for a transportere vekk norske rom Dagbladet 13 February 2015 https riowang com 2014 06 crimean gypsies html bare URL Niewyk Donald L 2000 The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust Columbia University Press p 422 ISBN 978 0 231 11200 0 European Romani Gypsy Population The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Holocaust Encyclopedia USHMM Retrieved 8 January 2016 Karanth Dileep 2009 Ian Hancock The University of Texas at Austin Retrieved 6 November 2015 Hancock Ian 23 September 2000 Downplaying the Porrajmos The Trend to Minimize the Romani Holocaust The Patrin Web Journal In WebCite Archived from the original on 26 October 2009 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Rummel 1992 table 1 1 Rummel 1997 table 14 1D line 1881 Rummel 1997 table 9 1 lines 195 201 Hancock 2010 p 243 Essay The Suffering of the Roma in Jasenovac in Lituchy Barry M 2006 Jasenovac and the Holocaust in Yugoslavia New York Jasenovac Research Institute ISBN 978 0 9753432 0 3 Hancock 2010 p 244 5 a b Harran Marilyn J 2002 The Holocaust Chronicles Lincolnwood Publications International p 384 ISBN 978 0 7853 2963 3 Muller Hill Benno 1998 Murderous science elimination by scientific selection of Jews Gypsies and others in Germany 1933 1945 Plainview Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 87969 531 6 Auschwitz Angel of Death Josef Mengele s Unknown Writings to be Auctioned PR Newswire 30 June 2011 Lifton Robert Jay 1986 The Nazi Doctors Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide New York Basic Books p 351 ISBN 978 0 465 04905 9 Katz Brigit London Library Spotlights Nazi Persecution of the Roma and Sinti Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 5 April 2021 a b Berenbaum Michael 1993 The world must know The history of the Holocaust as told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum USHMM p 196 ISBN 978 0 316 09135 0 Wippermann Wolfgang 2006 Compensation withheld The denial of reparations to the Sinti and Roma In Kenrick Donald ed The Gypsies during the Second World War 3 The Final Chapter Univ of Hertfordshire Press pp 171 177 ISBN 978 1 902806 49 5 Gilbert 1989 p 734 Gilbert 1989 p 735 Roma and Conflict Understanding the Impact of War and Political Violence pp 42 43 2017 European Roma Rights Centre Tillack Graf Anne Kathleen 2012 Erinnerungspolitik der DDR Dargestellt an der Berichterstattung der Tageszeitung Neues Deutschland uber die Nationalen Mahn und Gedenkstatten Buchenwald Ravensbruck und Sachsenhausen in German Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang pp 3 90 ISBN 978 3 631 63678 7 Barany Zoltan D 2002 The East European gypsies regime change marginality and ethnopolitics Cambridge University Press pp 265 266 ISBN 978 0 521 00910 2 Duna William A 1985 Gypsies A Persecuted Race Duna Studios via Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies University of Minnesota Milton 1992 Milton 2009 Roma Sinti und Jenische Schweizerische Zigeunerpolitik zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus Roma Sinti and Jenische Swiss Gypsy politics at the time of National Socialism Romania World Data on Education PDF Report 7 ed UNESCO IBE 2012 p 19 a b Judah Ben Invisible Roma Moment Magazine July August 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2011 The Porajmos in Roma Memory in Czech Republic Hungary and Poland Geschichtswerkstatt europa eVZ Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Romanian Leader Apologizes to Gypsies USA Today 23 October 2007 Violence against Roma Romania Human Rights First Archived from the original on 11 November 2009 Evans Stephen 27 January 2011 Roma appeal against discrimination on Holocaust Day BBC News Retrieved 27 January 2011 German President makes historic speech at Auschwitz Deutsche Welle 27 January 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2011 Roma Genocide Remembrance Initiative ternYpe International Roma Youth Network Retrieved 8 March 2015 Patronage of the European Parliament for Dik I Na Bistar Look amp Don t Forget European Parliament Retrieved 8 March 2015 Nyiri Mary 2010 It s Only a Movie Film Review of Kokoro Freedom KinoCritics com Yvette Lundy inspire un film a Tony Gatlif France 3 Champagne Ardenne in French France Televisions 8 April 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Hancock 2010 p 256 X Men Magneto Testament Digital Comics Marvel Comics comicstore marvel com Retrieved 3 May 2016 Mortimer Roz 6 October 2019 The Deathless Woman Documentary Wonderdog Productions II retrieved 14 April 2022 Bibliography Barsony Janos Daroczi Agnes 2008 Pharrajimos The Fate of the Roma During the Holocaust IDEA ISBN 978 1 932716 30 6 Crowe David Kolsti John eds 1991 The Gypsies of Eastern Europe Armonk NY M E Sharpe Routledge ISBN 978 0 87332 671 1 Hancock Ian 1991 Gypsy History in Germany and Neighboring Lands A Chronology to the Holocaust and Beyond Nationalities Papers 19 3 395 412 doi 10 1080 00905999108408210 S2CID 129039283 Tyrnauer Gabrielle 1992 The Fate of the Gypsies During the Holocaust Fraser Angus 1992 The Gypsies Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19605 1 Gilbert Martin 1989 Second World War London Guild Publishing Gilbert Martin 2002 The Routledge Atlas of the Holocaust London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28145 4 Note formerly The Dent Atlas of the Holocaust 1982 1993 Gilbert Martin 2004 The Second World War A Complete History Revised edition Henry Holt amp Co ISBN 978 0 8050 7623 3 Hancock Ian 1997 A Glossary of Romani Terms American Journal of Comparative Law 45 2 329 344 doi 10 2307 840853 JSTOR 840853 Hancock Ian 2002 We are the Romani People Hatfield University Of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 19 8 Hancock Ian 2010 Karanth Dileep ed Danger Educated Gypsy Selected Essays University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 98 3 Heuss Herbert Sparing Frank Fings Karola et al eds 1997 The Gypsies during the Second World War Vol 1 From Race Science to the Camps Gypsy Research Centre and University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 0 900458 78 1 Heuss Herbert 1997 German policies of Gypsy persecution 1870 1945 Sparing Frank 1997 The Gypsy Camps The creation character and meaning of an instrument for the persecution of Sinti and Romanies under National Socialism Kenrick Donald ed 1999 The Gypsies during the Second World War Vol 2 In the Shadow of the Swastika Gypsy Research Centre and Univ of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 0 900458 85 9 Kenrick Donald ed 2006 The Gypsies during the Second World War Vol 3 The Final Chapter Gypsy Research Centre and Univ of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 49 5 dd Jessee Erin 3 February 2010 Nazi Atrocities The Genocide of the Roma Sinti Lecture at Concordia University Montreal Quebec Lewy Guenter 2000 The Nazi Persecution of the Gypsies Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512556 6 Longerich Peter 2012 Heinrich Himmler A Life OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 965174 0 Matras Yaron 2004 A conflict of paradigms review article Reviewed by Yaron Matras PDF Romani Studies 14 2 193 219 doi 10 3828 rs 2004 7 Milton Sybil 1992 Nazi Policies Toward Roma and Sinti 1933 1945 Vol 2 Gypsy Lore Society ASIN B0006RI6NA Preview in ProQuest Milton Sybil 2009 The Holocaust The Gypsies In Totten Samuel Parsons William S eds Century of Genocide 3rd ed Routledge Rummel Rudolph J 1992 Democide Nazi Genocide and Mass Murder New Brunswick Transaction Publishers Rummel Rudolph J 1997 Statistic of Democide Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900 Center for National Security Law University of Virginia and Transaction Publishers Further reading Bernadac Christian ed 1980 L Holocauste oublie Le martyre des Tsiganes Editions Famot in French Fonseca Isabel 1996 Bury Me Standing The Gypsies And Their Journey Chapter 7 The Devouring London Vintage ISBN 978 0 679 73743 8 Kenrick Donald Puxon Grattan 2009 Gypsies Under the Swastika Univ of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 80 8 Klamper Elisabeth 1993 Persecution and Annihilation of Roma and Sinti in Austria 1938 1945 Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 5 3 2 Korb Alexander 2010 A Multipronged Attack Ustasa Persecution of Serbs Jews and Roma in Wartime Croatia Eradicating Differences The Treatment of Minorities in Nazi Dominated Europe Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 145 163 ISBN 978 1 4438 2449 1 Milton Sybil 2001 Gypsies as Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany In Gellately Robert Stoltzfus Nathan eds Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08684 2 In Google Books Montemarano Mike 22 April 2015 A Case for Heritage The Romani Art on the Banks Journal Pamieci Ksiega 1993 Memorial Book The Gypsies at Auschwitz Birkenau Introduction by Jan Parcer K G Saur Verlag for State Museum of Auschwitz Birkenau ISBN 978 3 598 11162 4 Polansky Paul 1998 Black Silence The Lety Survivors Speak G plus G ISBN 978 0 89304 241 7 Ramati Alexander 1986 And the Violins Stopped Playing A Story of the Gypsy Holocaust War time biography of Roman Dymitr Mirga on which the film of the same name is based Rose Romani ed 1995 The Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma Heidelberg Documentary and Cultural Centre of German Sinti and Roma Sonneman Toby 2002 Shared Sorrows A Gypsy Family Remembers the Holocaust Hatfield University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 10 5 Tyrnauer Gabrielle 1989 Gypsies and the Holocaust A Bibliography and Introductory Essay Concordia University Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies Winter Walter 2004 Winter Time Memoirs of a German Sinto who survived Auschwitz Translated and annotated by Struan Robertson Hatfield University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 38 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Porajmos Digital exhibition Racial Diagnosis Gypsy The Nazi genocide of the Sinti and Roma and the long struggle for recognition Historical Amnesia The Romani Holocaust Desicritics Extensive online resource on the Holocaust of the Romanies from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project Forget You Not Non Jewish Victims of Persecution in Germany About the Holocaust Yad Vashem Histories Narratives and Documents of the Roma and Sinti Gypsies Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies University of Minnesota Documentation and Cultural Centre of German Sinti and Roma German English A Brief Romani Holocaust Chronology Roma Sinti Genocide Parajmos Resources Prevent Genocide International Memorial of Poraimos Romani a project by Yahad In Unum and Roma Dignity Roma and Sinti Under Studied Victims of Nazism Symposium Proceedings PDF 98 r Persecution and resistance of Gypsies under Nationalsocialism in German Gypsies A Persecuted Race A People Uncounted The Untold Story of the Roma Dir Aaron Yeger 2011 Film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romani Holocaust amp oldid 1188672974, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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