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Ferenc Kiss - Romani Kris, Gypsy Lore (ERCD027) CD
'
Ferenc Kiss
Romani Kris
- Gypsy Lore'
(ER CD 027)



Music by Ferenc Kiss to the Oscar-nominated motion picture by Bence Gyöngyössy.
Featuring:
Ferenc Kiss: Fiddle, Guitar, Tambur
Zsigmond Lazar: Synthesizers
Bela Agoston: Saxophone, Clarinet
Szilagyi Levente: Trumpet
Eva Ayksz, Karoly Rostas, Mrs. Maria Baloch, Mrs. Julianna Kardelas, Julianna Crancsa, Ivancu Rita and Mrs. Erzsbet Baloch: Vocals
and THE ROMANYI ROTA GROUP





Gypsy Music from Hungary, Transylvania, Greece, Albania, Serbia, etc - Various Artists (222746) 4 x CD set
'Gypsy Music
from Hungary, Transylvania, Greece, Albania, Serbia, Turkey, Andalusia, Romania, Balkan, and Macedonia'
Various Artists
(222746)
4 x CD set



Gypsy Music from Hungary, Transylvania, Greece, Albania, Serbia, Turkey, Andalusia, Romania, Balkan, and Macedonia. This is a 4 CD set including a 28 page colour booklet in English, German, French and Spanish. Superb collection of gypsy music giving a panoramic snapshot of the genre.

The collection concentrates on the 'orchestras and interpreters who are well known in their homelands, but hardly heard of in other countries.'





Primasok,
Musicians from Transylvania and Moldavia
Various

(EDCD019)


'The best Transylvania compilation released so far - a triumph'
Songlines magazine.




Kalyi Jag - Ciganyszerelem, Gypsy Love (CDK001) CD
Kalyi Jag
'Ciganyszerelem
(Gypsy Love)'
(CDK-001)


Celebrated Gypsy band from Hungary. Traditional Gypsy music sung in Gypsy and Hungarian. Audio CD and CR ROM combined.
CD ROM section has extensive details on the band and their music, including a video clip!





Khanci Dos
Bi Granica-No Limits
(BGCD 028)


This band was formed in 1987 at Nagtecsed (North Eastern Hungary).  They represent the culture of the three main Romanu groups living in Hungary, the so called Roungro, Vlach Rom and Boyash.  
 Besides the traditional gypsy percussion instruments like spoon and waterjug they employ darabuca too.





The Roma (Gypsies)

by

T. Herbert



 

'Not all men are like trees; some must travel and cannot keep still.'
(Gypsy proverb)

True Gypsies are robust, healthy, and strong, usually of light build with dark expressive eyes and swarthy complexions ranging from deep brown to olive — although fair skinned Gypsies are not unheard of. When they are young, the men are handsome and the women beautiful, but their rugged and unconventional lifestyle can age them quickly. Gypsies call themselves Rom (Man) in the singular, and Romi or Roma in the plural; everybody else they call Gadje, which means foreigner. Wherever true Gypsies go, they remain a distinct people keeping their own language and customs and maintaining a social distance from the Gadje. The mother tongue of the Rom is known to them Romanes, Romani, or Romani-tchib (tchib means tongue). This language belongs to the Dardic group of the Indo-Iranian languages, that are a subfamily of the Indo-European family.

Roma are unique among nomadic people in that their wanderings are on a global scale, and that they do not have, nor do they claim, a homeland. Most other nomadic groups cover restricted areas, almost always wasteland or desert; conversely Roma are found everywhere, often in industrial or urban areas. The dreams, the stories, and the songs of the Gypsies, are of traveling along the endless road.

The Rom are often confused with the Tinkers of Ireland, the Voyageurs of France, and other wandering groups such as fairground attendants, circus performers, transient entertainers, and the seasonal workers that follow the crop picking seasons.

Roma are most prominent in the Balkans and in Spain but they are found all over the world and despite many centuries of wandering they still preserve a unique character and their own Bohemian ways.

It is popularly believed that the nomadic Gypsies are wanderers by instinct and inclination. However some historians believe that they are constantly moving only because of widespread discriminatory laws. Legislation that usually leave them little choice but to keep moving on. Most Roma still travel in small caravans, although some — notably in Spain where greater tolerance has been shown — live a more settled life. Those that are constantly on the move are unattached to the soil, usually earning a living as scrap metal dealers, metalworkers, musicians, horse or car dealers, car mechanics, or fortune-tellers. To some people Gypsies are colourful people who delight in a marvelous, carefree, go-as-you-please life style, unhampered by of most of the encumbrances of modernity. Others consider them to be unclean vagabonds, loafers, thieves and immoral pariahs.

Histories can only be written using contemporary written sources and the Roma, being on the whole (until recent times) illiterate, have left no written sources of their own for the historian to study. The history of the Roma therefore, can only be reconstructed using legends and the documents that the surrounding nations chose to write. This kind of historical study is often called ‘external history’, as opposed to ‘internal history that has its sources in more traditional material, using documents written both from inside and outside of a community. It must be concluded therefore, that any history of the Roma can only be based on documents written by the nations through which they traveled. As most of these documents are the product of superstition, hatred, and conflicts with the surrounding cultures it must be further concluded that they are biased, one-sided accounts.

The origins of the Gypsy people are obscure but it is believed that they originated in the 11th century in an area of north-west India called Gurjarat / Rajasthan. This conjecture has been reinforced by 18th century anthropologists who found strong similarities in their features, their blood groupings, and their language. There are, however, usually suggestions of some intermixing with the populations through which they traveled and lived.

Gurjara was a member of a powerful confederacy of land-owning and military clans called Rajput. All members of the Rajput had a ruling caste made up of a chieftain and his family, and an upper caste of warlords and landowners. There would also have been lower castes of supportive artisans and labourers; blacksmiths and weapon-smiths, shepherds and goat-herds, butchers and dairy farmers, entertainers and all the other occupations necessary to keep the community functioning.

Between 1001-1026, Mahmud Ghazni Emperor of the Ghaznavid Empire (now Afghanistan), launched a series of raids to the area, raping, pillaging, and plundering and carrying off slaves. At least half a million slaves were taken and put to labour at this time. During these raids, groups of people were displaced and forced to move out of the area. Among these dislocated people was a group of lower caste artisans and entertainers who made their way to the Upper Indus Valley, and it is thought that these were the forebears of the Gypsies. Later in the 11th century, they left India, and made their way to North-west China; eventually following the Silk Road into ancient Persia.

After many generations of traveling, Roma shoemakers are recorded living on Mount Athos in Greece in 1290. In 1322 they are recorded on the island of Crete, and in 1370 in the Peloponnesus. Roma are recorded In Prizren, Serbia in 1348, and are known to have been living in villages near Rila Monastery, Bulgaria, in 1378, and by 1383, Roma are known to have lived in Hungary. In Romania in 1385 the very first recorded sale of Roma for slavery took place. Large numbers of them lived along the Albanian coast at around 1400, and in 1407 they are noted in Germany. During the early years of the 15th century they are recorded in most of Europe, including France, Belgium, Holland, Bologna, Slovakia, and Spain. By the end of the 15th century Roma are living as far west as the British Isles and as far east as Lithuania and Latvia.

During these early migratory years Gypsies sometimes claimed to be Christian pilgrims from “Little Egypt”, often producing letters of protection from the Pope. According to some chroniclers, these documents were counterfeit but there is no evidence to support this claim. Early accounts suggest they were well respected and benevolently received in the West at that time. However, because they had no military, political, or economic strength, they were an easy target for nationalists and fascists, and as time passed one country after another enacted repressive law against them.

Ever since they arrived in Europe the Roma have been outlawed, enslaved, hunted, tortured, and murdered, their life has been a constant struggle to escape persecution. From the time of the  abolition of Roma slavery (Slobuzenja) in 1856, to the present day, the Roma have fought for social justice and their inalienable right to exist without let or hindrance. This struggle has been largely met by unresponsive communities and uncaring world governments.

As mentioned above, the first recorded sale of Roma slaves was in Romania in 1385; a little later, in 1416, Roma were expelled from the Meissen region of Germany. In 1445 Prince Vlad Dracul of Wallachia kidnapped 12,000 Gypsies from Bulgaria and put them to slave labour, and in 1449, Roma were driven out of the city of Frankfurt, Germany. The very first anti-Gypsy laws were passed in Switzerland in 1471, and in the same year 17,000 Roma were transported into Moldavia for slave labour, by Stephan the Great.

More humanely in 1472 Duke Friedrich of the Rhine Palatinate asked his people to help Roma pilgrims, and in 1476 King Matthias of Slovakia ordered safe-conduct for them. Anti-Gypsy legislation was passed in Brandenburg in 1482, and in Spain in 1492. Slovakia proved to be Gypsy friendly again in 1492 and 1496 when King Vladislav issued safe-conduct orders for them.

In 1493, Roma were expelled from Milan, and in 1498. Landau and Freiburg declared that the Roma were traitors, Turkish spies, and carriers of the plague. Gypsies in Spain in 1499 were ordered  cease traveling and find a trade, failure to obey was punishable by lashing and banishment. Repeat offenders suffer amputation of the ears, sixty days in chains, and re-banishment. If anyone was foolish enough to offend a third time they became the slaves of those who capture them. In 1500, Roma were accused of practising witchcraft, treachery, and child kidnapping by the Augsburg Reichstag. Louis XII prohibited Gypsies from living in France in 1504, and in 1510 they were prohibited by the Grand Council of France from living in France. The punishment was confiscation of all goods and banishment; second offenders are hanged.

In 1512, families, of Roma arrive in Stockholm, Sweden claiming that they came from "Little Egypt". They are welcomed and given money and a place to stay. A few years later, King Gustav Vasa (1521-1560), accused them of being spies and ordered that they be driven out from the  country. In 1525 all people calling themselves Egyptians were given two days to leave Holland by Charles V, and the first anti-Gypsy laws were enacted Portugal in 1526. The first law expelling Gypsies from England was introduced by Henry VIII in 1530; the penalty for bringing them into England was a fine of £40, and the Gypsies were hanged.

During the rest of the 16th, 17th, and 18th century the harassment, persecution, and legislation against the Roma continued throughout most of Europe and Scandinavia. Punishment for merely being Rom in Western Europe included deportation (if lucky), galley slavery, flogging, mutilation, or even execution. Persecution of Gypsies has been the norm ever since.

In Eastern Europe they were enslaved to work either in the fields or in the households of the landowners. When slavery was abolished in the 19th century, the slaves that had been made to work in the homes of the landowners had lost their ancient tongue and acquired the Romanian, Latin based, language. These Romanian speaking Roma have now spread through Hungary and the Balkans into Western Europe and all parts of the western hemisphere. The agricultural slaves maintained much more of their ancient traditions including the Roma language. The Levara, the Churara, and the Macuaya all speak dialects of Roma known as Vlax, and these are the most numerous and widespread of the Gypsies.

In 20th century Germany Gypsies were persecuted by the Nazis every bit as relentlessly as the Jews were. Like the Jews, Gypsies were singled out as an ethnic group to be completely exterminated, at least a million were murdered in Nazi Germany and other occupied countries. Many more were annihilated by other regimes that were collaborating with the Nazis at that time. After the War, the Communist countries in Eastern Europe tried to assimilate the Roma into the general populations, with very little success.

According to reports from Helsinki Watch, Human Rights Watch, and other human rights organisations, since the end of Communist rule in Eastern Europe, the Rom have faced increased discrimination and persecution. It seems that the official policy in most of the former Communist countries is ethnocide: the destruction of their culture, their language, and their identity. With the ultimate objective of making them disappear by either exterminating or assimilating them into the general populations.

Since 1997, Roma have been recognised by the United Nations as a legitimate race with rights to their own identity, culture, religion and language. This however, has little meaning in reality and the Roma have once again become scapegoats and the target for skinheads and other lawless right wing groups in Romania, Hungary, The Czech Republic, and Slovakia. They are regarded in these countries as backward savages that need to be civilised. Indeed, in all countries Gypsies are still denied an identity of their own and wherever they exist they remain a persecuted, unwanted, ethnic minority.

Since the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe, large numbers of Gypsy asylum seekers have arrived in Western Europe. Although they are entitled to apply for asylum, many are deported before their case is heard because they do not have documentation, or if they do, their papers are often false. Like other persecuted peoples, Roma are often helped (for large sums of money) to the West by unscrupulous criminals, dangerously carried in the containers of transport vehicles

Roma have never been a threat to the societies in which the live and their crimes are usually of a petty nature consisting of petty pilfering, shoplifting and some confidence tricking. Major and dangerous crimes such as drugs dealing and trafficking, loan-sharking, arson, assassination for payment and the like are forbidden by their own codes. Such crimes would be regarded as dirty; the perpetrator would be regarded as polluted and ostracised by his or her peers.

Roma have to face continuing political and cultural persecution, but they still travel the ‘endless road’, making music, telling tales, tricking the gadje, raising their children, and struggling to get by. These days as well as the traditional horse-drawn wagon, they can be seen traveling by car, truck and camper van. Their communities are both urban and rural, but they are united by the common dream of the ‘endless road’, the Gypsy ideal of freedom. Gypsy music and dance continues to enrich communities everywhere they sojourn and each land they pass through. Tales of their wanderings, songs from heart, passionate music drawn from much suffering, transformed into joy by their natural exuberance. This is the folklore of the Roma, this is their generous gift to the gadje, and this must not be allowed to die.

(c) T. Herbert 2001


End


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