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The Romani Diaspora, Part Two


Article # : 15113 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 4 / 1989  5,264 Words
Author : Ian Hancock
Ian Hancock is the UN and UNICEF representative for the International Romani Union and a professor of linguistics and English at the University of Texas at Austin. He has published extensively on the Roma; most recently he has written The Pariah Syndrome: An Account of Gypsy Slavery and Persecution.

       Coming originally from India, the Roma reached Europe in the twelfth or thirteenth century at the time of, and because of, the Christian holy wars with the Muslim invaders of the Byzantine Empire and the Holy Land. As the newly arrived Roma were thought to be part of that Islamic threat, names were wrongly applied to them that they still bear today: Heiden, Tatar, Egyptian, Saracen, and so forth. All testify to their mistaken identity and account for the prejudice the Romani experienced throughout Europe.
       
        Gypsies first arrived in America because they were sent as convicts and felons, in an attempt on the part of European countries to get rid of them. Portugal began shipping off Gypsies in the 1500s to India, Africa, and South America, and there were Gypsies with Columbus on his third voyage to the Americans in 1498. The first full-scale shipment of Spanish Gypsies into North America followed a government proclamation dated 1749 ordering their expulsion to the West Indies. Between 1769 and 1800, when Louisiana was under Spanish domination, numbers of Gypsies were transported there as part of Spain's solucion americana. Jones, writing in 1834, and Olmsted, writing in 1861, both refer to these Louisiana Gypsies who, by that time, had intermarried with the free black slaves in that state.
       
        Queen Christina of slaves ordered the shipment of Gypsies to her colony in Delaware in 1648. Gypsies also came to America from Germany following the Thirty Years' War, selling themselves to redemptioners for the price of their fare. Gypsies had been the subjects of cruel persecution in Germany ever since their first appearance there in 1407, and by 1514, the first of many murderous "Gypsy hunts" had been legalized, in which Gypsies were tracked down ... (1998 of 32513 Characters)
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