Film – www.romblog.at https://www.romblog.at Fri, 10 Apr 2020 13:58:05 +0000 de-DE hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.14 https://www.romblog.at/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cropped-Logo-romblog512-32x32.png Film – www.romblog.at https://www.romblog.at 32 32 International Roma Heroes Theatre Festival https://www.romblog.at/2019/08/13/international-roma-heroes-theatre-festival/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/08/13/international-roma-heroes-theatre-festival/#respond Tue, 13 Aug 2019 17:20:20 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2987

 

Independent Theater Hungary organizes the third Roma Heroes International Theatre Festival this year, between 24th August and 15th September, presenting Roma companies and their plays from several European countries. The shows take place in Eötvös 10 Theatre and in Vallai kert, RS9 Theatre.

In the past two years (2017 and 2018) we invited monodramas and storytelling performances to Hungary. The festival keeps growing and in 2019, the audience can get to know Roma chamber theatre plays. Our goal is to show the diversity of Roma theatre, also presenting different genres and topics. The artists tell stories from Germany, the Czech Republic, Romania and Hungary about the past and present of Gypsy communities, showing their everyday challenges related to education, health care, migration, integration and assimilation. „So far, the plays presented the viewpoint of one hero, but this year, different points of views and the diverse relations of Roma and non-Roma communities will be in the spotlight“, said Rodrigó Balogh, artistic director of the theatre and the festival.

The plays are performed with English subtitles and Hungarian interpreting, so they are accessible for Hungarian and foreign audience as well.

In August 2019, two plays present the active youth.

Both plays star youngsters who draw attention to the challenges and active engagement of the new generation.

Sokheren amenca! /Forever Holiday!

The coproduction of Gorki Studio in Berlin and Romano Svato company in Vienna is based on the real life story of the Yugoslavian sisters who were born in Germany but got recently deported from there, with the help of professional actors and youngsters.

Hungarian premiere: 24th August 2019, 6 p.m., Eötvös10 Közösségi és Kulturális Színtér

Audience discussion with the artists after the show.

Photo: Nihad Nino Pušija, from the play ‚Forever Holiday!



Shoddies

 

The play „Shoddies“ by Independent Theater Hungary also put youngsters on the stage to show the insane health care system, their own traumas and prejudices, and to ask themselves as well as the spectators what we can do – instead of complaining – to improve this situation.



Public rehearsal: 23rd August 2019, 6 p.m., RS9 Theatre, Vallai kert

 

Premiere: 25th August 2019, 6 p.m., RS9 Theatre, Vallai kert

 

Audience discussion with the artists after the show.

  
Photo: Alina Vincze, The „Shoddies“

 

In September 2019, two plays discuss the deadly challenges of the community.

While one play evokes history, the other explores the circumstances of a young girl’s death.

Pindral

The festival continues in September with the Czech ARA Art company, evoking Roma history in a new form, building on the elements of circus arts. The storytelling of the old Roma women guides us through the fate and past of the community, starting with the origin legend of Gypsy people, through modern history and Holocaust till the assimilation efforts of the socialist regime. Even though the story presents a Czech perspective, it raises topics and issues that are important for Roma communities in Hungary as well.

Hungarian premiere: 14th September 2019, 6 p.m., Eötvös10 Közösségi és Kulturális Színtér

Audience discussion with the artists after the show.


Photo: Jan Mihalicek, from the play Pindral


Who killed Szomna Grancsa?

Giuvlipen company from Bucharest tells the story of a young Roma girl who would like to keep studying but neither her family nor her school supports her. The play is based on a real story and presents the struggle of the girl from various perspectives, raising the validity of different approaches and at the same time pointing out collective responsibility that no one can escape.

Hungarian premiere: 15th September 2019, 6 p.m., RS9 Theatre, Vallai kert

Audience discussion with the artists after the show.

Source: Giuvlipen Theater Company

 

If you would like to book your ticket, contact us at [email protected]!

Roma Heroes International Theatre Festival is the one and only international theatre meetup in the world for Roma theatres which aims to bring together the minority and the majority, and strengthen Roma communities by showing the values and challenges of Roma theatre and communities.

 

Source: https://independenttheater.blogspot.com
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„ZDF-HISTORY: SINTI UND ROMA. EINE DEUTSCHE GESCHICHTE“ | Offensiv gegen dumpfe Ressentiments https://www.romblog.at/2019/08/03/zdf-history-sinti-und-roma-eine-deutsche-geschichte-offensiv-gegen-dumpfe-ressentiments/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/08/03/zdf-history-sinti-und-roma-eine-deutsche-geschichte-offensiv-gegen-dumpfe-ressentiments/#respond Sat, 03 Aug 2019 10:15:14 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2961 Sie gilt als eines der großen Talente des deutschen Jazz: Dotschy Reinhardt, Nachfahrin des legendären Django Reinhardt, dem bekanntesten Vertreter dieser großen Musikerdynastie.

 

Mit einer empfehlenswerten Geschichtsdokumentation interveniert das ZDF gegen das Aufleben uralter Rassismen. Leider erst im Spätprogramm.

 

In den Sechzigern boten große Kaufhäuser in den Wohnabteilungen eine tief dekolletierte „Zigeunerin“ als gerahmten Öldruck an. Die Sängerin Alexandra besang 1967 einen Gitarre spielenden „Zigeunerjungen“, wobei das unerklärte und tieftraurig stimmende Verschwinden des Wagentrosses in der letzten Strophe – „wo bist du, wer kann es mir sagen?“ – vielleicht als verkappte Erinnerung gemeint war an das, was Sinti und Roma im Nationalsozialismus erlitten hatten. Ob Kitscherotik, Operette oder Schlager, das exotische „Zigeunerwesen“ übte offenbar einen gewissen Reiz aus auf die Deutschen. Und doch:

1970 eroberte die gerade fünfzehnjährige Marianne Rosenberg die Hitparaden mit „Mr. Paul McCartney“. Ihr Vater Otto Rosenberg, ein Auschwitz-Überlebender und zeitweilig im Vorstandsmitglied im Zentralrat Deutscher Sinti und Roma engagiert, riet ihr dringend, ihre Sinti-Herkunft öffentlich nicht zu erwähnen.

Annette von der Heyde, Autorin der Geschichtsdokumentation „Sinti und Roma. Eine deutsche Geschichte“, hat einen Fernsehausschnitt entdeckt, in dem Rosa von Praunheim die junge Sängerin auf ihren vermeintlich jüdischen Nachnamen anspricht und wenig sensibel fragt, ob ihre Familie während der Nazi-Zeit „rassisch diskriminiert“ wurde. Marianne Rosenberg, sichtlich überrumpelt, verneint. Heute würde die Antwort sicherlich anders ausfallen.

 

Beleidigende Assoziationsketten

 

Nicht Marianne Rosenberg, sondern deren Schwester Petra Rosenberg, Vorsitzende des Landesverbandes Deutscher Sinti und Roma Berlin-Brandenburg, ist eine der Interviewpartnerinnen in von der Heydes Filmbeitrag. Er beginnt mit einem bekannten Klischee, der „Zigeunermusik“. Von der Heyde pariert es aber gleich mit dem ersten Schnitt. Die gezeigte Sängerin ist Dotschy Reinhardt, die sich nicht auf die vermeintlich typische wild-romantische „Zigeunermusik“ reduzieren lassen möchte, sondern traditionelle Sinti-Musik mit Gospel-, Bossa-Nova- und Blues-Einflüssen in Richtung modernen Jazz weiterentwickelt hat.

Dotschy Reinhardt ist auch Autorin. Sie hat die Geschichte ihrer Familie aufgeschrieben und ein Buch über „Zigeunermythen“ in der Popkultur. In die Unterhaltungsliteratur eingegangen ist Erna Lauenburger, genannt Unku. Grete Weiskopf machte sie zur Hauptfigur des unter dem Pseudonym Alex Wedding veröffentlichten, an Tatsachen angelehnten Jugendbuches „Ede und Unku“. Eines der Werke, die von den Nationalsozialisten öffentlich verbrannt wurden. Erna Lauenburger wurde 1944 in Auschwitz ermordet.

Gemeinsam mit Juliane von Wedemeyer schrieb Janko Lauenberger das Buch „Ede und Unku – die wahre Geschichte. Das Schicksal einer Sinti-Familie von der Weimarer Republik bis heute“. Janko Lauenberger ist lange nach der NS-Ära geboren worden. Die beleidigenden Vorurteile gegen Sinti und Roma hat er dennoch kennengelernt. Mit dem Begriff Sinto habe sein Umfeld nichts anfangen können, erzählt er vor der Kamera. Wohl aber mit dem Wort „Zigeuner“. „Und dann verfallen die in so einen Gedankenrausch, und man sieht so richtig, dass sie ihr Märchenbuch aufklappen: Zigeuner ‒ die klauen. Und die können zaubern.“

 

Zur Armut gezwungen

 

Annette von der Heyde geht zurück in der Geschichte, beschreibt die Ankunft der Sinti vor 600 Jahren. Die Roma folgten Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Von Anfang an wurden die Zuwanderer diskriminiert, durften viele Berufe nicht ausüben, waren gezwungen, sich in den Nischen des Wirtschaftssystems ein Auskommen zu suchen. Sie betätigten sich als Reisende, besuchten Märkte, übernahmen die Versorgung der ländlichen, vom üblichen Warenverkehr abgeschnittenen Flecken. Woraus wiederum eine Klischeevorstellung, die des „fahrenden Volkes“, entstand. Der Historiker Dr. Frank Reuter korrigiert: Sinti und Roma waren keine Nomaden, sondern aus beruflichen Gründen unterwegs, verfügten ansonsten aber über feste Wohnsitze.

Ein anderes Gewerbe übten die Großeltern Romani Roses aus: sie betrieben ein Wanderkino und versorgten eine dankbare Diaspora mit kinematographischer Unterhaltung.

Trotz Anpassung und wirtschaftlicher und künstlerischer Teilhabe, obwohl viele Sinti und Roma im Ersten Weltkrieg für das Deutsche Reich an die Front gezogen waren, steigerte sich die ständige Diskriminierung unter der NS-Herrschaft zur schieren Barbarei. Das Schicksal des Mittelgewichtsboxers Johann Trollmann veranschaulicht den Rassenwahn: Beim Meisterschaftskampf 1933 hatte der NS-Boxverband das Ergebnis vorherbestimmt. Ein „Zigeuner“ durfte keinesfalls deutscher Meister werden. Das Publikum protestierte gegen die Fehleinscheidung und setzte die Kür des wahren Siegers durch. Ein paar Tage später wurde Trollmann der Titel wieder entzogen. Wegen „undeutschen“ Boxens. Trollmann trat noch einmal in den Ring und ließ sich bewusst auf „deutsche“ Art verprügeln. Er wurde 1944 im KZ Neuengamme Opfer einer Gewalttat.

 

Neue Nahrung für Klischees

 

Aus publizistischen Sendungen wie dieser beziehen die Sender des öffentlich-rechtlichen Systems ihre Legitimation. Vor allem aus solchen Beiträgen, die aktuell intervenieren. Denn nicht nur sind Vorurteile gegen Sinti und Roma, die wie alle Ressentiments auf Unwissen und Desinformation basieren, weiterhin in der deutschen Gesellschaft fest verankert. Sie bekamen obendrein Nahrung durch neuerliche Zuwanderung von Sinti und Roma, denen in ihren Herkunftsländern häufig jede Lebensperspektive verbaut ist, deren Kinder nicht zur Schule dürfen, die kein Land besitzen dürfen, die keine Anstellung und keine Wohnung erhalten. Der daraus resultierende Lebensstil ist eine Folge der Zwangssituation und nicht etwa angeboren, wie es die auch von manchen deutschen Politikern vorgebrachten rassistischen Stereotypen wissen wollen. Insofern wäre wünschenswert, wenn das ZDF den Programmplatz einer solchen Sendung mit dem eines belanglosen Klatschsammelsuriums wie „Mythos Monaco“ tauschen würde. Die Freunde der Hofberichterstattung von europäischen Adelshäusern wissen diese Angebote dann schon zu finden. Und wenn nicht, geht der Menschheit nichts verloren. Informative Dokumentationen hingegen sind nötig. Und sollten dem Publikum nach bestem Vermögen nähergebracht werden.

 

„ZDF-History: Sinti und Roma – Eine deutsche Geschichte“

 

von Harald Keller

 

Source:www.fr.de

 

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Simonida Selimovic | Showreel 2019 https://www.romblog.at/2019/07/24/simonida-selimovic-showreel-2019/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/07/24/simonida-selimovic-showreel-2019/#respond Wed, 24 Jul 2019 10:23:51 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2944

Showreel 2019 Simonida Selimovic from Simonida on Vimeo.

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Essay by Miguel Angel Vargas | Performing Gitanidad (Romaniness) On Stage https://www.romblog.at/2019/06/06/essay-by-miguel-angel-vargas-performing-gitanidad-romaniness-on-stage/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/06/06/essay-by-miguel-angel-vargas-performing-gitanidad-romaniness-on-stage/#respond Thu, 06 Jun 2019 10:34:00 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2847

Romani actors and musicians playing Gitano (Romani) characters, as well as Gitano characters portrayed by others outside of the culture, have been present in Spanish theatre since their arrival in the Iberian Peninsula in the fifteenth century. This long tradition can be seen in the multiple forms of Gitano representation throughout history.

Theatre, as the “newspaper of the poor,” and dance, as an expressive form often prone to exoticization, became vehicles of performance for the Spanish Gitano identity, which was ultimately constructed as a celebration of Spanish identity. However, in many ways, an authentic image of the Romani culture remains hidden behind contemporary cultural veils; narratives of conflict, resistance, and negotiation all still need to be acknowledged in the Spanish Gitano theatrical practice.

As a disclaimer, any written record of Gitanos on stage depicts a past time and only registers part of what was lived and experienced. Be it either the existing text Auto das Ciganas by Gil Vicente created in 1521, or a video recording of more recent shows created and seen at the 2018 Flamenco Biennial of Seville, the performances remain memories-in-action that try to reflect on what happened at that particular time, when the event depicted took place.

In order to understand the distinct Gitano performance experience, it’s helpful to look at its history. Using four frameworks, I will attempt to explain the different performance periods. These are: a) the collective representation of Gitanos in religious festivals and rites; b) Gitano characters and stories in theatre as part of a popular demand for Gypsyness; c) Gitano theatre performed by Gitanos, related to the experience of the individual and transgressed expression of the flamenco art form; and d) Gitano theatre as Romani political affirmation. These frameworks show how the Gitano identity in performance art reflects and reproduces the imagery that society demands at the time.

performers dancing across a projection
Persecución, co-directed by Miguel Ángel Vargas, Belén Maya, and José María Roca. Photo by José María Roca.

From the Eighteenth-Century Masquerade of the Gitano Nation to the Evangelical Cult

 

In 1747, the Spanish Gitanos were not yet recognized as citizens with rights. That same year saw a new king rise to the Spanish crown, and the Gitanos of Seville decided to celebrate his coronation with a masquerade. Part of a chronicle of that momentous event explained the masquerade as:

A true story recounting of a curious romance, in which a knight of the city of Jerez de la Frontera breaks the news to another knight of Seville of a masquerade gone wrong, at which the Gitano Nation celebrates the exaltation to the throne of the catholic monarch Fernando the Sixth (God keep him) by gifting him a theatrical interpretation of the conquering of Mexico, and the imprisonment of its Emperor Montezuma, including a dance of young Gitanas…

Gitanos using a mythical narration of the conquest of Mexico to show they were in favor of the new king is pure theatrical ojana! (deception). These same Gitanos, only two years later, would be imprisoned along with nine thousand people as part of a process known as the General Imprisonment of Gitanos of 1749, the objective of which was the genocide of the Romani population of Spain.

After this measure and others like it failed, some of these Gitanos founded the Brotherhood of the Gitanos of Seville in 1753, a religious civil organization that has since participated in the symbolic Holy Week of Seville—a festival and public event consisting of Catholic processions with a very strong counter-reformist theatrical component. This shift from a masquerade to a religious procession shows that Gitanos knew how they could claim their citizenship—through a public demonstration of faith—and that they had the logistical capacity to do so.

In many ways, an authentic image of the Romani culture remains hidden behind contemporary cultural veils.

Gitanos’ participation in religious ceremonies throughout history, whether as dancers or as singers, has been a constant—one that contrasts the persecutory reality they were faced with. It is their deep religious faith that moves them to look for any type of theatrical experience and embraces connection as the cathartic element of community and community rituals and parties.

Whether within the Catholic faith, with plays such as The Word of God to a Gitano(1972) and Come and Follow Me (1982) both by Juan Peña El Lebrijano, or even in the evangelical faith with The Gitanos Sing to God (2010) by Tito Losada, Gitano spirituality has found a way to reconnect the community through theatre.

performers dancing against a projection
Persecución, co-directed by Miguel Ángel Vargas, Belén Maya, and José María Roca. Photo by José María Roca.

The Theatrical Gitano Expression of Gitanismo of the Nineteenth Century

 

Although the affinity for Gitanismo—a form of European cultural oppression against Roma people, which lead to an inaccurate Romani stereotype—was born in the second half of the eighteenth century, it was throughout the nineteenth century that it found its place in theatre.

The Gitanismo went from being a disruptive anti-enlightenment and anti-European trend for the wealthy classes of Spain and Europe (where there was specific performance, song, and dance à la Gitano—the Gypsy way) to becoming an almost-obsessive presence in the main theatres of the country through their roles in dance and theatre performances. This was also the time when Gitano characters found places in major historical operas, above all in Carmen by Bizet, based on the 1845 novella by Prosper Mérimée Merimee. This marked the beginning of the path of European obsession with sexualizing Romani women.

There were two popular subgenres whose dramatic structures served as the backbone for what was then known as teatro Gitanesco: the theatrical tonadilla—a short, satirical musical comedy popular in eighteenth-century Spain—and the sainetes—a one-act tidbit, farce, or dramatic vignette with music. There are dozens of works during this period with Gitano characters—with titles and texts in Caló, the Spanish Gitano ethnolect—that feature and enforce crude caricatures of Gitanos, strongly contrasting the real situation of Romani people in Spain. The social imagery of Gitanos in “theatre of the poor” shows unworried Gitanos only interested in love affairs, robbery, and parties. The best-known example is El Gitano Canuto, o día de toros en Sevilla, written in 1816 by Juan Ignacio González del Castillo.

However, all of this theatrical exposure over a century and a half had consequences for Gitano artists, who felt compelled—or socially condemned—to look and perform like these images, something that is still present nowadays for Romani people. However, in more private settings, and thanks to Gitano artists like Lita Claver, who worked in alternative genres like cabaret, the theatrical Gitanismo found one of its counter-narratives by reversing all the happy and naive aesthetics to more dangerous and controversial ones.

 

The Gitano Individual in the Twentieth Century

 

The appearance of the flamenco genre in the 1860s, which partially stemmed from teatro Gitanesco, opened the doors to a type of subjective theatrical expression that fought against the stifling corset of mediocre fiction in which Gitanos were inaccurately depicted. This kind of performance took risks with lyrical and individual expression, breaking the fourth wall with a raw and exposed aesthetic. It coexisted with other forms that continued to use the image of the Gitano as “other,” but flamenco helped Gitano artists excel in foreign environments with their own personality.

The reclaiming of the Gitano identity came at the end of the Franco dictatorship, when flamenco became a dignified art form.

During a big part of nineteenth century, many Gitana artists performed anonymously, something depicted in many of the posters from the time period, where they were announced as simply “famous Gitana dancers.” By the end of that century and during a big part of the twentieth century, as flamenco became a highly demanded product—which lead to the professionalization of many artists—many contemporary Gitana artists were leading companies and touring shows as singers, dancers, or entrepreneurs.

Some examples include Pastora Pavón Niña de los Peines, Imperio Argentina, and Carmen Amaya. On top of creating their own work, these artists were featured in classic pieces by non-Gitano writers, like Manuel de Falla and Federico García Lorca—an inclusion, yes, but not the ultimate signifier that would make the Gitano artists accepted as contemporary scenic and musical creators.

Although the situation of Romani people in Spain was still harsh, the creativity and professionalism of the women allowed them to excel in a predominantly male-led world. Carmen Amaya became an international symbol for Romani artists.

a group of performers dancing onstage with an audience watching
Persecución, co-directed by Miguel Ángel Vargas, Belén Maya, and José María Roca. Photo by José María Roca.

Romani Consciousness On Stage in the Twenty-First Century

 

The idea of Spanish Gitano theatre as political disruption comes from José Heredia Maya’s play Camelamosnaquerar. The reclaiming of the Gitano identity came at the end of the Franco dictatorship, when flamenco became a dignified art form after some years of decadency. This was when theatre groups such as the Teatro Estudio Lebrijano and La Cuadra de Sevilla, under the influence of Grotowski’s “poor theatre” philosophy, started to break censorship through the use of flamenco, and when aesthetics around rituals and agriculture became almost stylistic constants.

Teatro Gitano, recognized as theatre with political significance, created a process and kind of work that Gitano theatremakers still follow. Watching Camelamos naquerar,Romani audiences experienced catharsis, witnessing for the first time the true representation of their history and struggle. This led to the creation of many Romani advocacy organizations.

The work of Belen Maya in Romnia, Celia Montoya in Tras-pasos.Light and Memory to the Forgotten Ones, Paco Suárez in Ithaca, Manuel de Paula in Chachipén, Sonia Carmona in De profunda dignitatis, and even my own work in Gilǎ falls within this style. Each one of us is making a proud affirmation of resistance inherent to being Gitano, to being Roma.

These works have another common element: they are the result of collective processes aimed at pointing out both the hurtful and unresolved problems in society, mainly the inherent racism in Spain and Europe, and promoting the rich diversity of Romani identities and stories on stage and the debate around their importance.

Though there are many more examples of how Gitano performance has been used and seen throughout history, these frameworks act as a way to start recognizing Gitanos’ theatrical history and promote the re-imagining of the Gitano identity.

 

THOUGHTS FROM THE CURATOR

 

Mihaela Dragan
Mihaela Dragan
From cultural appropriation to (mis)representations, I and four other writers map the presence of Roma theatre in Europe. We endeavor to do this in order to counter our silenced history. We cannot continue to be erased and left out of the history of theatre. It’s time to reclaim space and culture for Roma theatre. In these essays, we document the history of Roma theatre in Europe, as well as contemporary Roma theatre productions, as we understand that the future of the theatre is Roma, too.

Roma Theatre in Europe

 

Source:howlround.com

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Oscar-nominierter Filmemacher, Roma-Aktivist, spricht am Smith College https://www.romblog.at/2019/06/03/oscar-nominierter-filmemacher-roma-aktivist-spricht-am-smith-college/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/06/03/oscar-nominierter-filmemacher-roma-aktivist-spricht-am-smith-college/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2019 13:05:21 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2833 Der Kommunikationsberater Murray Nossel (oben) und Nesime Salioska, ein Anwalt der Roma-Rechte, werden ihre Arbeit in „Transforming Roma Narratives: Advocacy Through Storytelling“ am 4. Juni um 19 Uhr im Weinstein Auditorium am Smith College in Northampton vorstellen.

 

NORTHAMPTON – Murray Nossel, ein von einem Oscar nominierter Dokumentarfilmer mit einem Hintergrund in klinischer Psychologie, hilft der Welt seit den 1990er Jahren, ihre Geschichten als eine Form der Fürsprache zu erzählen.

Nesime Salioska, eine Verfechterin der Roma aus der Republik Nordmakedonien , einer von den Nazis verfolgten ethnischen Gruppe, die bis heute diskriminiert wird, nutzt die Erzählmethode, die Nossel während der Arbeit mit AIDS-Patienten in New York City entwickelt hat, um ihr zu helfen Gemeinschaft erzählen ihre eigenen Erzählungen als einen Weg nach vorne.

Nossel , deren Arbeit mit den Roma in Europa seit 2014 durch eine von den George Soros Open Society Foundations finanzierte Initiative unterstützt wird, und Salioska, die sich in ihrer Fürsprache auf Gesundheitsfragen konzentriert hat, werden ihre Ansätze in „ Transforming Roma Narratives : Advocacy Through Storytelling “, Dienstag, 4. Juni, 19 Uhr, im Weinstein Auditorium des Smith College.

Die Präsentation, die von der Smith College School for Social Work gesponsert wird, ist für die Öffentlichkeit zugänglich.

Salioska war eine von zwei mazedonischen Frauen, die in diesem Jahrzusammen mit 12 weiteren Roma-Aktivistinnen aus anderen Ländern den Preis der Europäischen Union für die Integration der Roma in den westlichen Balkanländern und in der Türkei „Frauen als Basisaktivistinnen – unbekannte Helden“ erhielten .

 

Sie wurde vom Bevölkerungsfonds der Vereinten Nationen für ihre Bemühungen in Bezug auf die Frage der Kinderehen nominiert, die dazu beitrugen, dass das nationale Parlament in ihrem Land ein Gesetz verabschiedete, das die Eheschließung unter 18 Jahren zum Verbrechen machte.

Die Änderung wird sowohl als Aufklärungsarbeit für die Praktiken angesehen, die für die betroffenen Frauen häufig zu einem Leben in Armut und Analphabetismus führen kann, als auch als Hilfe bei der Suche nach Strafverfolgungsmaßnahmen für Sozialarbeiter.

Der promovierte Sozialarbeiter der New Yorker Columbia University und der in Südafrika geborene Psychiater Dr. Paul Browde , mit dem Nossel das Stück über die beiden Wiederverbindungen „Two Men Talking“ schrieb, gründeten in New York eine Kommunikationsberatungsfirma 2002 rief Narativ dazu auf, die von Nossel entwickelte Methodik zu fördern, die von Unternehmen verwendet wurde, um ihre Mitarbeiter kennenzulernen, gemeinnützige Organisationen und Einzelpersonen für Bildungszwecke.

 

„Es ist universell“, sagte Nossel über das, was er an der Methodik mag.

„Jeder kann es lernen und auf sein eigenes Leben anwenden. Es kann als Kommunikationsmittel mit der Familie, bei der Arbeit und für die Interessenvertretung auf der sozialen und politischen Bühne genutzt werden. “

Er sagte, es beruhe auf seiner Lehre, dass das Zuhören in einer sicheren Umgebung ohne Urteilsvermögen zur Formschale wird, in die die Flüssigkeit des Erzählens fließt.

„Die Roma befinden sich am äußersten Rand der Gesellschaft, insbesondere in Osteuropa“, sagte Nossel, der daran gearbeitet hat, Roma-Führer in seiner Methode des Erzählens als Anwalt auszubilden, um dem entgegenzuwirken, was er „tiefgreifende politische, kulturelle Benachteiligung“ nennt.

„Es gibt eine enorme Unwissenheit über die Roma und sie werden im medizinischen und pädagogischen Kontext als untermenschlich behandelt. Die Schulung ihrer Führungskräfte hat zwei wichtige Ergebnisse gebracht: Die Beflügelung ihrer Anhänger mit der Überzeugung, dass Geschichte und Kultur aufgedeckt und erzählt werden müssen und dass ihr Vermächtnis Informationen und Aufklärung bieten kann, wenn Roma die Wahrheit über Roma sagen. “

Nossel sagte, dass die Leute am Rande nicht erkennen, dass sie eine „Stimme und ein Leben haben, über das es sich zu reden lohnt“.

 

„Sie müssen jemanden haben, der daran interessiert ist, Ihnen und Ihrer Geschichte zuzuhören“, sagte er.

„(Co-Moderatorin) Nesime Salioska erzählt ihre Geschichte und schafft Raum für andere, um ihre zu erzählen und sich mit den gleichen Dingen zu identifizieren. – Roma werden von Lehrern angewiesen, im hinteren Teil des Klassenzimmers zu sitzen, weil sie dort hingehören. “

Nossel, der einen Bachelor- und Master-Abschluss in Psychologie an der University of the Witwatersrand in Südafrika erworben hatte, sagte, dass er in Südafrika geboren wurde, als die Apartheid-Politik die Bevölkerung nach Rasse oder Nationalität trennte, was ihn sehr auf das Persönliche und das Politische und das Entwickelte aufmerksam machte in ihm die Faszination, „zu sehen, wie jemand durch Familie, Geschichte und insbesondere durch die Umstände eines Landes geprägt ist“.

Nossel, dessen Dokumentarfilm „Warum können wir nicht wieder eine Familie sein?“ 2002 für den Oscar als bester Dokumentarfilm nominiert wurde, ist Autor von „Powered by Storytelling: Geschichten ausgraben, basteln und präsentieren, um die Geschäftskommunikation zu transformieren“. letztes Jahr veröffentlicht. Zu seinen weiteren Dokumentarfilmen zählen „Turn to Me“ mit dem verstorbenen Friedensnobelpreisträger und Holocaust-Überlebenden Elie Wiesel, „Paternal Instinct“ und „A Brooklyn Family Tale“.

 

Er ist auch Gründer des World Mother Storytelling Project, das gerade ein Pilotprogramm abgeschlossen hat, in dem Schüler der Bronx geschult wurden, die Geschichten ihrer Mutter zu interviewen und aufzuzeichnen und sie dann als kollektives Element im Unterricht zu teilen Teil der Nossel-Methodik.

Das Projekt war zum Teil von Nossels eigener Erkenntnis vor 13 Jahren inspiriert, nachdem seine Eltern in Johannesburg mit vorgehaltener Waffe entführt worden waren und die Aktionen seiner Mutter dazu beigetragen hatten, das Paar in Sicherheit zu bringen, dass er die Stärken und Kämpfe seiner Mutter, die eine hatte, nicht wirklich kannte Karriere als Konzertpianistin, als nur wenige Frauen außerhalb des Hauses arbeiteten. Er kehrte nach Johannesburg zurück und lernte „sie und mich anders zu verstehen“.

„Als ich die Geschichte meiner Mutter kennenlernte, dachte ich tief darüber nach, dass Frauen ihre Geschichten erzählen und Kinder der Geschichte ihrer Mutter zuhören müssen“, sagte Nossel.

„Viele, viele Mütter haben unbeschreibliche Geschichten über Mut und Belastbarkeit.“

 

 

Source:masslive.com

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Video | Internationaler Tag der Roma – 8. April 2019 | Raidokulturhaus Wien https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/24/video-internationaler-tag-der-roma-8-april-2019-raidokulturhaus-wien/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/24/video-internationaler-tag-der-roma-8-april-2019-raidokulturhaus-wien/#respond Fri, 24 May 2019 12:48:49 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2755

Film von Serdar Erdost zum denkwürdigen Internationalen Tag der Roma am 8.4. in Anwesenheit unseres sehr verehrten Herrn Bundespräsidenten Alexander Van der Bellen, sowie der Wiener Vizebürgermeisterin Birgit Hebein.

Auch war es uns eine große Ehre Michael Köhlmeier als Moderator, sowie den Obmann des Vereines Deutscher Sinti und Roma Romani Rose und auch Ursula Hemetek, Mirjam Karoly, Michael O’Flaherty und den jungen Robert Gabris als PodiumsdiskutantInnen begrüßen zu dürfen!

Musik dazu wurde in grandioser Weise vom Harri Stojka Roma Ensemble dargeboten!

Besonderer Dank gilt auch Marion Dworzack, sowie Katrin Pröll.

 

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Solidarität mit den Unterdrückten und Entrechteten https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/24/solidaritaet-mit-den-unterdrueckten-und-entrechteten/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/24/solidaritaet-mit-den-unterdrueckten-und-entrechteten/#respond Fri, 24 May 2019 12:42:47 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2752 Im Österreichischen Kulturforum in New York wurde am vergangenen Donnerstag die Dokumentation „Schatten der Scham“ von Sabina Zwitter Grilc, ORF-Journalistin und Mitarbeiterin von „Heimat Fremde Heimat“, gezeigt.

Als besonderen Gast konnte das Österreichische Kulturforum die australisch-amerikanische Autorin Lily Brett begrüßen. Brett spricht in dem Film – neben Harry Belafonte, Peter Handke, André Heller und vielen anderen – über die Weitergabe des NS-Traumas. Nach der Präsentation vor vielen jüdischen Holocaust-Überlebenden und Emigranten betonte Lily Brett im Gespräch mit der Filmautorin, wie wichtig es sei, das Leid der Opfer in schriftlicher und filmischer Form für die Nachwelt festzuhalten. Erst das Benennen des Leides mache es möglich über Heilung des Traumas nachzudenken. „Am wichtigsten ist jedoch die Solidarität mit jenen, die heute unterdrückt und entrechtet werden“, mahnte die Schriftstellerin eindringlich.

Lily Brett im Gespräch mit Sabina Zwitter Grilc im Österreichischen Kulturforum in New York

Stefanie Korherr

Lily Brett (li) im Gespräch mit Sabina Zwitter Grilc (re)

Lily Brett

Lily Brett, Nachfahrin polnisch-jüdischer Eltern, ist Schriftstellerin in New York City. Sie lebte von 1948–1989 in Australien und war Reporterin des Musikmagazins „Rolling Stone“. Lily Brett ist eine der meistgelesenen Autorinnen der zweiten NS-Opfergeneration und klärt mit ihren Romanen, Novellen und Gedichten auf überraschend unterhaltsame Weise über die Folgen des Holocaust und die Weitergabe des NS-Traumas auf.

Empathie und nicht Rache

Lily Bretts Eltern konnten beide das Konzentrationslager Auschwitz überleben und sich nach dem Krieg finden. Bretts Mutter habe ihr einen Grundsatz mit auf den Lebensweg gegeben, der sie bis heute bestimmt: „Es ist nicht wichtig, dass wir überlebt haben, sondern, dass wir als ‚Menschen‘ überlebt haben.“ Diese Mitmenschlichkeit, diese Perspektive, im Feind immer auch den Menschen zu erkennen, wollte die Autorin dem Publikum mit auf den Weg geben. Vor allem nach den immer wieder schockierenden Berichten der Verbrechen der Nationalsozialisten und ihre Folgen – wie im Film „Schatten der Scham“ die Einblicke in die Seelen der Opfer zeigen – sei es wichtig Empathie und nicht Rache in den Vordergrund des Denkens zu stellen.

Präsentation der Dokumentation "Schatten der Scham" im Austrian Cultural Forum in New York

Stefanie Korherr

vlnr. Österreichisches Kulturforum-Direktor Michael Haider, Nationalfonds-Leiterin Hannah Lessing, Autorin Lily Brett, Filmautorin Sabina Zwitter Grilc

Volksgruppen als Bereicherung

„Die besondere Leistung von ‚Schatten der Scham‘ ist es, dass in dieser Filmdokumentation das Leid der jüdischen Holocaust-Opfer mit jenem der Roma und Kärntner SlowenInnen zusammengebracht wird“, betonte in ihrer Einleitung zur Filmpräsentation die Leiterin des Österreichischen Nationalfonds, Hannah Lessing. In diesem Sinne sei es dem Österreichischen Kulturforum ein besonderes Anliegen in den USA zu zeigen, dass die österreichischen Volksgruppen – von den Kärntner Slowenen bis zu den Roma – Österreich durch ihre Muttersprachen bereichern, betonten sowohl der Direktor des Kulturforums, Michael Haider, wie auch sein Vize, Christian Ebner. Daher werde die Arbeit von Autoren aus der Volksgruppe, wie etwa jene von Maja Haderlap, auch aktiv unterstützt.

Präsentation der Dokumentation "Schatten der Scham" im Austrian Cultural Forum in New York

Stefanie Korherr

Im Publikum u.a. Timo de Weduwen – International Institute for Counter-Terrorism (mi), Sarah Hilding – United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (re)

Leidensgeschichte der eigenen Familie thematisieren

„Nicht wir Jüdinnen und Juden, sondern die andern sollten sich ‚Schatten der Scham‘ ansehen und das gleich mehrfach“, forderte in der Diskussion eine Besucherin. Manche Nachkommen der jüdischen Opfer sahen den Film an diesem Abend als Anstoß, Einblick in die Leidensgeschichte ihrer eigenen Familien zu geben. Die Auswirkung der Gewalt der Nationalsozialisten auf das Leben der Opfer in zweiter und dritter Generation rückte in der Diskussion in den Mittelpunkt. Erwähnte Beispiele aus Österreich und den USA machten sichtbar, dass sowohl der europäische Antisemitismus als auch jener in den USA bittere Realität ist und die Leugnung des Holocausts bzw. das Nichtwissen darüber auf der Tagesordnung steht.

Präsentation der Dokumentation "Schatten der Scham" im Austrian Cultural Forum in New York

Stefanie Korherr

Präsentation von „Shadows of Shame“ im Österreichischen Kulturforum in New York

Schatten der Scham / Shadows of Shame

Der Dokumentarfilm „Schatten der Scham“ (in der englischen Version „Shadows of Shame“) von Sabina Zwitter Grilc befasst sich mit den Traumata, die der nationalsozialistische Wahnsinn in der Vergangenheit verursacht hat und gegenwärtig noch verursacht. Dabei gehen drei junge Frauen der Frage nach, warum es zu diesem Verbrechen kommen konnte. Betroffene aus den Reihen der Kärntner SlowenInnen, der Roma und Romnja sowie der Jüdinnen und Juden kommen zu Wort. Darüber hinaus nehmen zahlreiche prominente Personen Stellung. Der Film versteht sich als eine Würdigung der Opfer des Rassenwahns, die in bewegenden Erzählungen Einblick in ihr erlittenes Leid geben.

 

Source: volksgruppen.orf.at

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Main hero in the next Batman film will be Romani – „Nightwing“ to call attention to the rights of Romani people https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/17/main-hero-in-the-next-batman-film-will-be-romani-nightwing-to-call-attention-to-the-rights-of-romani-people/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/05/17/main-hero-in-the-next-batman-film-will-be-romani-nightwing-to-call-attention-to-the-rights-of-romani-people/#respond Fri, 17 May 2019 12:39:58 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2731 Nightwing – The hero of Batman’s movie (FOTO: www.batman.wikia.com)

 

 

Warner Bros announced in February that they will be releasing „Nightwing“, a film that not only tells the story of the most popular characters in the Batman family, but also sheds light on Romani human rights issues through its title character. „Nightwing“ (the superhero formerly known as “Robin”) could serve as one of the first times the Romani identity will be shown to the mainstream in a positive light.

The Romani people constitute the biggest ethnic minority in Europe but remain socially segregated in the countries they inhabit. „Nightwing“ could serve to change their image.

Vicente Rodriguez is an organizer of the Romani advocacy group RomaPop, an international alliance working for social justice specifically in the narratives of popular culture vehicles such as comic books and the movies and television series based on them. The group has made presentations about the inclusiveness of the characters developed by popular franchises during various Comic Con meetings, sometimes facing antigypsyism themselves in the process, according to their Facebook profile.

In an interview with Comics Alliance, a website that is part of the TownSquare Media portfolio of sites covering the entertainment industry, Rodriguez said „Nightwing“ could potentially change how the world perceives the historically oppressed Romani population. „This… could be an advancement for the rights of people of color in comic book narratives in Hollywood; and it could mark the way forward for the industry,” he said.

Chris McKay, director of the 2017 „Lego Batman Movie“, is heading the project, a live-action film that will tell the story of Dick Grayson, an extremely likeable, attractive and strong superhero — a stark contrast to the unfortunate stereotype of Romani people as lazy, loud and unintelligent. The Nightwing character has previously been featured in movies like „Batman: Under the Red Hood“ and television shows such as „Teen Titans“ and „Batman Beyond“, but in those productions the connection to his Romani identity, which has been established over the last 20 years of Batman comic books, was never part of the story.

This could be a chance for a major Hollywood production company to tell the story of the Roma the right way. Although the film is still under negotiations, a concern among many fans is how accurately the Romani identity will be portrayed in the film.

The production team will be tasked with authentically telling his story and staying true to the Romani experience. How successful the film is could have broader implications for how Romani people are viewed by future generations.

“Representation matters; it’s not a Romani issue, it’s a human rights issue,” Rodriguez said in his interview with Comics Alliance. “So far, nobody has had the courage to represent us in any positive light, in a human light; if it happens just once, we could have a precedent, a small light at the end of a very dark tunnel.”

Ankita Bhanot
Source: www.romea.cz
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Dijana Pavlovic works to give the Roma a more political voice https://www.romblog.at/2019/01/18/dijana-pavlovic-works-to-give-the-roma-a-more-political-voice/ https://www.romblog.at/2019/01/18/dijana-pavlovic-works-to-give-the-roma-a-more-political-voice/#respond Fri, 18 Jan 2019 15:57:50 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=2476

The actress-turned-activist is based in Italy, where anti-Roma attitudes are marked. She uses performance and poetry to change perceptions of Roma people.

Dijana Pavlovic, Roma activist, at an anti-racism demonstration in central Milan, Italy, Sept. 30, 2018. Ms. Pavlovic has been a leading figure in Italy lobbying for the equal rights of the Roma minority.

Courtesy of Dijana Pavlovic

On a stage above a rapt audience, Dijana Pavlovic’s words fill Piazza del Duomo in Milan, Italy. “Now and forever resist!” she yells, finishing an impassioned reading of Erri De Luca’s poem “La notte degli zingari” or “The Night of the Gypsies.” The poem is a poignant retelling of the genocide of the Roma people during World War II, when about 3,000 died in a single night at Auschwitz in 1944.

The audience gives fierce applause to Ms. Pavlovic, a theater actress-turned-activist who is one of the most visible members of Italy’s Roma community. The crowd bursts into a spirited singing of “Bella Ciao,” an Italian folk song and an anthem of the anti-Fascist movement.

“The Roma movement in Italy and all Europe is growing up. It’s organizing, and we’re winning in the wider movement against this terrible period, this black period of racism,” says Pavlovic in an interview with the Monitor, her voice hoarse from her performance.

Using a taro patch in Hawaii, this couple teaches the islands’ values to youths

 

Pavlovic is trying to change how Italians interact with and perceive one of the country’s oldest minorities. And she’s working to boost the Roma’s political representation. She’s run for several offices herself, and although she was unsuccessful, she thinks the campaigns have helped reshape stereotypes of the Roma. Knowing that such work is ongoing, she is also among those promoting political mentoring for young Roma.

Her poetry reading, at a large Italian Democratic Party protest, was during a busy weekend for her last fall. She also helped organize a Roma concert and a rally against Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who has taken a hard-line immigration stance.

At the heart of what Pavlovic does is a desire for the Roma to be proud of their identity.

“Dijana is someone who has a certain authority,” says Marcos Andrade, coordinator of ROMED, a program through the Council of Europe that mediates between Roma communities and local authorities. “As an actress and political actor in the public sphere, she has been an inspiring example for Roma women. She was involved from the moment we started [in 2012] as a facilitator, and then as our national program officer.”

 

Views of the Roma

 

Discrimination against the Roma, both in Italy and in Europe more broadly, is nothing new. As many as 12 million live in Europe, and the Council of Europe has estimated the Roma population in Italy to be 140,000. A 2014 study that gauged views of the Roma in seven European countries found that Italians were the wariest of the minority. Eight-five percent of the country had an unfavorable view of the Roma people, according to the Pew Research Center. No Roma hold local or national office in Italy, although there are three Roma representatives from other countries in the European Parliament.

The current climate in Europe also includes the rise of populism and challenging conditions for migrants. In Italy the tough immigration policies of Mr. Salvini, as well as Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, have been popular. Italian ports have turned away boats carrying migrants and refugees from North Africa. And a recently enacted law has made it easier to deport migrants and allow Italian citizenship to be stripped if an immigrant is convicted of terrorism.

Hostility toward migrants is also being felt by minorities in Italy, including the Roma. This past June, Salvini called for a census of the Roma and vowed to deport those who are not Italian.

As May elections for the European Parliament approach, Roma across the continent are preparing to field candidates and gain political representation.

“The Roma are the biggest transnational minority in Europe, and they can be a European political actor with a lot of demographic force,” Mr. Andrade says. “If you put together the Roma vote within Europe and the EU, you arrive to the size of a medium member state.”

Pavlovic hadn’t thought much about her Roma heritage before moving to Italy. The Serb had migrated to Italy in 1999 to further pursue her career on the stage. Learning Italian, she made a name for herself in Milan’s performing arts scene.

She traces her transformation from an actress into a Roma activist to 2005. It was a few days after an Italian newspaper published a review of her performance in Jean Genet’s play “The Maids,” and she was barraged with phone calls and visits.

Those outside her theater weren’t mobbing fans or talent scouts. They were organizers and leaders of the local Roma community, wanting her help in drawing attention to their marginalized existence.

“They asked me to make a performance about the Porajmos, the Roma Holocaust,” Pavlovic recalls. “I said it was a great idea. I had the culture, the identity necessary, and I started working on it.”

Soon after Opera Nomadi, one of Italy’s oldest Roma associations, asked her to be a mediator for Roma children in a Milan public elementary school. On her first day as a mediator, she became aware of how deep the stigma against Roma runs in Italy.

“I went to the school, and the children were coming on a bus from a Roma camp. And on the outside of the bus was written ‘pulmino Rom’ – Roma bus. They were all getting out of this bus, but they were all Italians. I had never felt this level of discrimination before.”

From 1965 through the 1980s, successive Christian Democratic governments created separate classes for Roma children in the Italian public school system. Roma advocates say the policy decision has had lasting repercussions on Roma educational standards.

“I realized that inside of this kind of mechanism – schools [and nongovernmental organizations] – there is no way out. And that’s why I said, ‘OK, I want to do politics because this is an issue of policy,’ ” she says.

 

Running for office

 

Pavlovic officially entered the political scene in 2006 when she was nominated for the Milan City Council. In 2008, she was nominated for the Italian Parliament, and then the European Parliament in 2011. She lost all three of those races, but she points to a wider importance of the campaigns.

“I was the first Roma candidate on the national level…. It was time to break this idea in Italy that Roma are only capable of assistance, to show that we can participate in the political life of the society,” she says.

Not only does Pavlovic aim to help Roma gain a voice within Italy. She also wants to connect them to Roma across Europe, and toward that end she’s a founding member of the European Roma Institute for Arts and Culture in Berlin. In addition, she helped organize Aug. 2 protests at Italian embassies across Europe against the Salvini policies regarding Roma treatment.

Zeljko Jovanovic, director of the Open Society Foundations’ Roma Initiatives Office in Berlin, points to Pavlovic’s work acting as a bridge between fledgling Roma communities in various European countries. “Dijana has been fighting an uphill battle for a very long time, and we see a sense of hope that there are other people around her and a growing support from the Roma community for this struggle,” he says.

Pavlovic’s current focus is on creating academies that can develop young Roma leaders into political candidates. One member of her new academy is Fiorello Miguel Lebbiati, a human rights activist from Tuscany, Italy. Mr. Lebbiati is Sinti, which is an ethnic group associated with the Roma people. “[Pavlovic is] a great leader,” he says. “She gave us courage, and she’s able to help us in every kind of problem we can find on our path.”

His grandfather was imprisoned in a concentration camp in Italy during World War II because of his Sinti identity, and that history has been a factor in Lebbiati’s drive to organize the Italian Roma community.

“I feel like a partigiano [partisan] 2.0. I don’t have to fight with weapons, but I have to fight for the future of Italy by getting involved in politics,” he says.

Pavlovic’s academy endeavor is part of a broader movement across Europe in which so-called Roma political schools are engaging with a generation that’s more assertive of its identity and place on the continent. Some schools in Bosnia and Herzegovina have already seen success in getting Roma candidates elected.

“Our kids are our moral responsibility,” Pavlovic says. “If we become stronger, if we have political power that will represent them, then it will also be easier for them to come out and accept themselves as Roma.”

 

Source: www.csmonitor.com

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Opinion | Romani Voices | Part 1 INTRO: Emir Kusturica and his “Gypsies “ by Laura Moldovan https://www.romblog.at/2018/11/11/opinion-romani-voices-part-1-intro-emir-kusturica-and-his-gypsies-by-laura-moldovan/ https://www.romblog.at/2018/11/11/opinion-romani-voices-part-1-intro-emir-kusturica-and-his-gypsies-by-laura-moldovan/#respond Sun, 11 Nov 2018 14:11:51 +0000 https://www.romblog.at/?p=1767 Foto: andricgrad.com

Article by Laura Moldovan | Translation by Samuel Mago

Deutsch | Romanes | Rumänisch

 

The series „Romani Voices“ is giving people of the Roma community the opportunity to publish their opinions. The following text was written by Laura Moldovan. It is not a film review. It does not question the ability of Kusturica as a director. This text describes the perception of Laura Moldovan. It is her analysis of the „gypsies“ that Kusturica shows in his films and an analysis of what these constructed „gypsies“ and their caricatured world do with the perceptions of those who see these award-winning and highly acclaimed films.

The text is divided into 4 parts: an intro and 3 individual texts for different movies.

You are here: Part 1 Intro: Emir Kusturica and his „Gypsies“

Part 2: Opinion on „Time of the Gypsies“ (1989)
Part 3: Opinion on „Black cat, white cat“
Part 4: Opinion on „Blue Gipsy – All the invisible children“

 

 More information and Emir Kusturica´s biographie here

 

Part 1: INTRO

Emir Kusturica and his “Gypsies “

 

 

by Laura Moldovan

He is probably the best-known filmmaker in the word of the Roma people. Hardly any name is as linked to the cinematography of the Roma as the name of this Gadjo. The admirers of his work are convinced that his movies are introducing them to the real life of the Roma. It almost feels as if they had spent their childhood with the main characters of “Black Cat, White Cat”. Even the Roma themselves seem to identify themselves with his movies.
Only at second glance the cat jumps out of the bag: The work of Emir Kusturica is merely the stereotypical representation of what is known by the majority of the people as “Gypsies”. And Antigypsyism becomes a box office bomb.

 

Black benefactor, white liar



Kusturica is a very intelligent person. He is consciously twisting the facts as he pleases:

The Gypsies of my film survive like insects, according to the principle of the natural selection, according to the beauty of the colours and the shapes of the wings.

he says in 1999 in an interview published in the German Novo Magazine, 1999. He is calling us „insects“ thereby using the rhetoric of the Nazis, but immediately continues to aestheticize the sentence with beautiful words. So – Gypsies are insects, parasites. But they are also beautiful insects, right?
In 2002, Emir Kusturica was named Goodwill-Ambassador by UNICEF. „I wanted to help the kids as much as I can“ he said in an interview with www.zmag.org. The fact that he is actually putting the future of the young Roma generation at stake with his films by portraying them as parasites of the lowest stratum of society obviously doesn’t matter.

“I was raised in a middle-class family close to the place where the Gypsies lived [in Sarajevo], and I was always enthusiastic about their freedom, the way they accepted life, their direct connection to joy, and their strength and optimism. Gypsies have a very bad position in society because every middle-class mother-fucker likes to have somebody beneath him. If you go to the district in Skopje in Macedonia where the Gypsies live, you’ll find a lot of people who hate them and who want nothing more than to be one step above them

said Kusturica in an interview with Graham Fuller (1999).

 

 

The Time of Stereotypes

 

The so-called „freedom“ of the Roma is vehemently demanded in „Time of the Gypsies“ (1989) by a mad and stubborn protagonist right at the beginning of the film. The general feeling arises that the Roma are just not normal and submissive and do not want to integrate themselves into society.
The „direct connection to joy“ of the Roma is also portrayed in „Blue Gipsy“ (2005), as a manipulation tool using this „joie de vivre“ to pick people’s pockets. See Youtube Video:

 

The shown scene gives the public the impression that one should not be misled by „happy Roma“. Music, dance and joy – the only positive features attributed to the Roma – are shown negatively by Kusturica in this context.

„Black Cat, White Cat“ (1998) clearly shows that for Kusturica this „freedom“ and „joy of life“ means nothing but insolence and a primitive attitude towards life. Like in the scene in which a young man picks up his grandfather from the hospital alongside a marching band.

 

 

A popular theme in his work are Roma, who survive like insects. Despite this recurring image, Kusturica’s films are without a trace of the Roma genocide. We can see symbols for this in scenes such as the one from “Time of the Gypsies“, which shows a floating house.

 

 

Screenshot „Black cat, white cat“

 

The two old men from „Black Cat, White Cat“, (Spoiler alert!) who rise from death at the end of the movie are also marked by this symbolism. This subject of survival is proposing a question to the audience:
„Why don’t they just die?“. However, replacing the question mark at the end of this question with the desire to wipe out the Roma.

 

 

 

Satire as a cover for racism

 

Kusturica uses the art of filmmaking to live out his personal racist ideas safely kept under the cover of satire. Every detail has a meaning and there is symbolism behind every punch line.

Because we have no state of our own, no political representation, and few instances working to protect the rights of the Roma, Kusturica allows himself to denigrate and vilify the Roma in his films.

There is a hidden hatred against Roma manifesting behind his rhetoric and the symbolism of his films, downright Antigypsyism.

 

Screenshot „Black cat, white cat“

 

Kursturica’s work is generalizing. Negative characteristics and events – such as child trafficking, arranged marriages, forced marriages, begging, drugs, violence, theft, smuggling, corruption and gambling – are attributed to the Roma and made into their origin. Traditions and customs of the Roma on the other hand are mocked and exaggerated. The characters are not particularly attractive: we often see characters with golden teeth, hats and mustaches. Their clothes are cheesy and tasteless, their names are foreign and strange.

 

 

 

 

His main characters are often antagonists with human features. Even if they initially win the hearts of viewers with their „non-gypsy“ features, eventually it’s always pointed out that the exception only confirms the rule.

It is striking that the „gypsies“ in Kusturica’s films always live in isolation, in their own way, excluded from society. Contact with non-Roma is rare. If they do meet non-Roma, it is people who practice professions that are forbidden for the Roma in this made-up world: priests, mayors, doctors, nurses.

After all, if he had portrayed a Roma man integrated in society pursuing one of those professions, his image of a criminal, lazy and primitive people would not have been able to hold up cinematically.

 

 From Idol to Idiot


Kusturica meets Coppola  | Source: kustu.com

 

Emir Kusturica was a big admirer of Francis Ford Coppola, which evidently shows in his work. At a personal meeting with the filmmaker at the Cannes Film Festival on May 11, 1997, Kusturica and Coppola finally met. Only then Kusturica realized that Coppola had never heard about him and his films. This obviously hurt him deeply, as this quote shows:

„I do everything not to become like Coppola,“

he stated afterwards in an interview with the French journal L’Evénement du Jeudi (2000). This statement tells a lot about Kusturica. He always overestimates his fame. „I’m not saying that I’m a genius, but …“ In any confrontation with the criticism, Kusturica is embarrassed and offended.

„He did not want to recognize me, I think. I was astonished that he had never heard about a single of my films „,

he says. Like this, even his former idol turns into an enemy because he does not receive the recognition and glory he attributes to himself.

„I’ve liked Coppola before. Today, Coppola does business. He has no time to be a director. He must be very unhappy. I’m recognized, which brings great advantages when you need to find funding for a new movie. I expose myself each minute of my life. I make the actor. I play music. Because I don’t want to be Coppola! With his fat belly, he couldn’t play rock.“,

he says in L’Evénement du Jeudi (2000).

 

 

Gypsy Whisperer

 

Kusturica’s work on Roma has received several awards. The work of a non-Roma who earned his money on the back of my people and abused the Roma for his own recognition and prestige. Regardless of his acquired wealth, it is painful and severe how he has built a successful career by defaming the Roma over time.

As the most popular international director for movies about Roma, he has laid the foundation for many of today’s prejudices. I am convinced that Kusturica’s films have significantly contributed to creating the negative image of our minority in the minds his viewers, and thus greatly increased xenophobia and Antigypsyism. Kusturica is a wanderer, just like the fictional fairytale-gypsies in his films.

„I am a man without a country, traveling between Paris and New York and Belgrade and Montenegro. My roots are in Herzegovina, but I don’t care about nationality. „,

he says in the interview with Graham Fuller. According to this logic, he should actually be empathetic towards his Gypsies, right?

 

Why does Emir Kusturica hate the Roma so much then? Maybe he has even answered this question himself:

 

„Because every middle-class motherfucker wants to have someone beneath him.“

 

Further artikels releated to Emir Kusturica:

You are here: Part 1 Intro: Emir Kusturica and his „Gypsies“

Part 2: Opinion on „Time of the Gypsies“ (1989)
Part 3: Opinion on „Black cat, white cat“
Part 4: Opinion on „Blue Gipsy – All the invisible children“

 

 

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