Tag Archives: Holocaust

Germany: Exhibition

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The exhibition “Race Diagnosis: Gypsy”  will be held from February 23 to March 23 in the state parliament in Mainz, Germany.

The exhibition on the genocide of the Sinti and Roma shows the history of their persecution from the exclusion and disenfranchisement of the minority in the German Reich to their systematic annihilation in occupied Europe. In addition, the history of the survivors of the Holocaust, who were only later recognized as victims of the Nazis, is dealt with. At the end there is an outlook on the human rights situation of the Sinti and Roma in Europe after 1989.

Auschwitz: Education

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The memorial museum Auschwitz-Birkenau will launch a new online education entitled “Roma – the experience of extermination”. It is part of their current work in raising awareness about the Roma Genocide during the Holocaust.

Austria: Vandalism

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The monument commemorating the Roma victims of the Holocaust in Salzburg, Austria, was again damaged by vandals over the weekend. This is unfortunately not the first time.

Germany, the Catholic Church, and Roma

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Munich Archbishop Cardinal Reinhard Marx wants to conduct a review of the historical responsibility of the Catholic Church for the persecution of the Sinti and Rom during the Nazi. Marx visited the documentation and cultural centre of the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma.

The visit also dealt in particular with the role of the then Archbishop of Munich, Cardinal Michael Faulhaber (1869-1952) and his attitude towards Sinti and Roma.

Roma, the Holocaust, and Compensation

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Survivors of the Nazi genocide of Sinti and Roma are worse off than other groups when it comes to compensation. A commission set up by former Interior Minister Seehofer (CSU) is calling for compensation for this disadvantage. But the traffic light coalition does not want to implement it.

Greece: Series and Stereotypes

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At the beginning of the 20th century, in Thessaloniki, the second largest city in Greece, more than a third of the population was Jewish. The series Le Bracelet of Fire, directed by Giorgos Gikapeppas, has been released on February 4 on the public television channel ERT and from January 25 on the Ertflix group platform and retraces for the first time the history of a family of Thessaloniki through the darkest events of the 20th century.

However … The first episode, at the 37th minute and 45th second has a “Gypsy”, called Angelis is saying:

I stole, I stole (past continuous)

But it is allowed for the Gypsies to steal.

God gave us this right.

And he “explains” that the Romans gave an order to a Gypsy to forge the 4 nails to crucify Jesus. But when the Gypsy found out it was to crucify Christ he swallowed one. From then onwards God gave the Gypsies the right to steal.

This later tale is one that Roma told in Western Europe (but not in Greece) as the reason for their continuous travels (and originally as to why they claimed to be pilgrims).

In any case, that is a bunch of stereotypes…

Auschwitz Museum on Roma

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An online educational session prepared by the International Center for Education about Auschwitz and the Holocaust will be devoted to the Roma Holocaust. It will take place on February 23, the Auschwitz Museum announced.

“The Roma were recognized by the German Nazis as enemies of the Third Reich, therefore they were sentenced to isolation and extermination. In February 1943, their deportation to KL Auschwitz began. A family camp called Zigeunerlager was established in Birkenau. The Roma incarcerated there came mainly from territories of Germany, Austria, the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and occupied Poland. The Zigeunerlager existed until August 2, 1944. At that time, about 4,200-4,300 men, women and children were loaded onto trucks and taken to the gas chamber” – reminded Dr. Maria Martyniak, responsible for the projects educational in the museum.

French Chronicle …

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A new museum in Montreuil en Bellay will be created to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust. This location was an internment camp in France for Roma.

Other news are much more usual: An association devoted to the promotion of Roma culture (well, it is a bit of a stereotyped culture) celebrates its ten years. In the North, a family is facing expulsion. In the Southeast in Grenoble, neighbours of a squat are complaining. And finally, the story of a former fort near Paris which is supposed to be turned into a centre for oncology and is literally full of garbage. Until 2021, Roma were sorting out the garbage there.

Lety Memorial

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More on the upcoming memorial on the site of the former concentration camp for Roma in Lety, in the Czech Republic.

In just one year, the Roma and Sinti Holocaust Memorial in Bohemia should stand in Lety u Písek. The company Protom, which won the tender, undertook to complete the monument in 345 days.

Minister of Culture for the ODS Martin Baxastated:

“It was an event that was forgotten for decades, now the construction of the memorial here in Lety has been inaugurated. It will create a place that will be a permanent reminder of what happens when we slacken in our efforts to defend the values of freedom and democracy.”

The construction of the monument will cost less than one hundred million crowns. The winner of the indoor and outdoor exhibition competition should be announced this month. The Museum of Roma Culture would like to open the monument in 2024. The German government has also promised the museum funding for the outdoor exhibition. Norwegian funds will also contribute 26.5 million crowns to the memorial.

Poland and Holocaust

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On February 2, 1943, in Imbramowice, near Wrocław, the Germans murdered 43 Roma, including women and children from families who lived there with Polish families at the time. It is also known that seven people escaped, the Germans caught them and murdered them the next day in Wolbrom. There were 50 victims in total.

The secretary of the Roma Association in Poland, Władysław Kwiatkowski is related to the families of the victims of the German murder and commemorates this murder 80 years ago.

May they rest in peace.

Lety Memorial

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The memorial to the Roma Holocaust on the grounds of the former pig farm in Lety will be completed within a year and will cost 199 million CZK (4.2 million EUR). In February, the winner of the competition for the indoor and outdoor exhibition of the monument will be announced.

Motion for a Roma Holocaust Remembrance Day

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Yesterday evening, the National Council unanimously passed a motion for a resolution to the government with the aim of recognizing the genocide of Roma and Sinti during National Socialism as a historical fact and establishing August 2 as a national day of remembrance for all victims of this genocide.

German Evangelical Church and Roma

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The head of the council of the Evangelical Church in Germany, Anette Kurschus, acknowledged that her church was involved in the exclusion of Sinti and Roma during the National Socialist period. Kurschus said in Berlin that the Evangelical Church took many blamable actions. The church was involved in betraying people and handing them over to be destroyed. Kurschus also announced an increased commitment against today’s discrimination of the minority.

This is a historical event. When will the other denominations follow?

France, the Holocaust, and Roma

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A conference in Strasbourg on the Alsatian criminal police and the persecution of Sinti and Roma between 1940 and 1944.

At last one speaks about it.

Auschwitz Liberation – The Speech

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“Survivor Marian Turski warned: “Auschwitz did not fall from the sky”. The survivor Halina Birenbaum wrote: “It’s not rain, it’s people”. Auschwitz arose out of lust for power and megalomania. Paradoxically, it was the quintessence of the great progress, industrialization of the 20th century. The camp was thought out, planned, designed, sketched, drawn and expanded. Architects, planners, designers and surveyors worked on it,” said Cywiński, the director of the Auschwitz Museum.

The director of the museum recalled that in this place “German Nazis dehumanized, humiliated and murdered Jews, Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war and many others.” “Here are the authentic remnants of the misalliance of Viennese Romanticism and Prussian Positivism. We see how fragile our civilization is. Our world turned out to be fragile in the era of murderous anti-Semitism, uebermensch ideology and the desire for the so-called Lebensraum. Our world is still fragile.

Piotr Cywiński, addressing former prisoners, recalled that they had gone through “the darkest path of war”. “And it’s hard for us to stand here. Harder than previous years. War first violates treaties, then borders, then people. Civilian victims, dehumanized, intimidated, humiliated, do not die accidentally. They are hostages of this wartime megalomania. Warsaw Wola, Zamojszczyzna, Oradour and Lidice today are called Bucza, Irpień, Hostomel, Mariupol and Donetsk,” he stressed.

The director of the Memorial pointed out that today ‘written in Russian’ is similar to the one from over 78 years ago, sick megalomania, lust for power. The myths about uniqueness, greatness and primacy sound similar.

As Cywiński said, “the period that we used to call the post-war era is clearly ending before our eyes.” “For many decades, the post-war period looked different in the east than in the west of Europe. But on the one hand and on the other hand, our thoughts and identity were held together by the overriding awareness of the post-war period. And here it is today, it all passes. Again, innocent people are dying en masse in Europe. Russia, unable to seize Ukraine, decided to destroy it. We see it every day, even now – standing here. So it’s hard to stay here today,” he said.

The director of the Auschwitz Museum appealed that “we, the free people, should be able to behave differently today”. “To be silent is to give voice to the perpetrators. To remain neutral means to reach out to the rapist. Remaining indifferent is nothing more than giving permission to murderers,” he stressed.

The director emphasized that today, in front of our eyes, memory tells us: I’m checking! “Today you can see very clearly whose doors are opening and whose doors are closed. (…) Let us be aware that our every gesture counts just as every lack of a gesture counts. There is a choice in everything. Today the time has come again for necessary human choices. And only in memory can we find the keys that will guide us through our own choices,” he said.

The director’s speech was the final word at the main anniversary ceremony. Former prisoners spoke in front of him: Eva Umlauf, a Jewess, and a Pole, Zdzisława Włodarczyk.

The Germans established the Auschwitz camp in 1940 to imprison Poles there. Auschwitz II-Birkenau was established two years later. It became a place of extermination of Jews. There was also a network of sub-camps in the camp complex. In Auschwitz, the Germans killed at least 1.1 million people, mainly Jews, as well as Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war and people of other nationalities.

On January 27, 1945, Red Army soldiers opened the gates of the camp. Extremely exhausted prisoners, of whom there were still about 7,000. – including half a thousand children – greeted them as liberators.

Roma Holocaust Remembrance Day

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The Austrian constitutional committee voted unanimously in favour of a motion for a resolution by the coalition parties aimed at introducing a National Day of Remembrance for Roma and Sinti. Specifically, it is proposed that the Roma and who were persecuted and murdered under the Nazi regime be commemorated on August 2nd. On this day, the Holocaust victims of this ethnic minority are already being commemorated at European level.

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