Gypsies have lived among Europeans since the Middle Ages. Yet
Roms still seem exotic to Westerners, who often rely on fictional
depictions for what they know, or think"they know, about this
much-misunderstood people. The Romani Gypsies" challenges
stereotypes that have long been the unwelcome travel companions of
this community in Europe and the New World. Yaron Matras offers a
perspective-changing account of who the Roms are, how they live
today, and how they have survived over centuries.
Descendents of Indian migrants, Roms began moving into western
Europe in the 1300s, refugees of a collapsing Byzantine Empire. By
the 1500s they had spread throughout Europe, working as itinerant
smiths and toolmakers, healers and entertainers, and would soon
reach the Americas. Often described as Egyptian hence the name
Gypsies they were ostracized as beggars, vilified as criminals,
respected as artisans, and idealized as free spirits. They have
been both enslaved and protected, forced to settle down and
forcibly expelled, in a pattern of manipulation and persecution
that persists in our own time.
Matras draws on decades of first-hand research into Romani life
to explain the organization of Romani society, its shared language,
history, and traditions, as well as differences among widely
dispersed Romani groups. He also details the present-day dilemmas
surrounding the struggle of Roms for political recognition in
European countries which are, by turns, either ambivalent or openly
hostile."
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