Showing posts with label Roma/Sinti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roma/Sinti. Show all posts

Monday, July 12, 2010

New Museum on Vashon Honors Romani Culture



Morgan Ahern, a long-time supporter of the Holocaust Center and recent addition to the Holocaust Center's Speakers Bureau, is an outspoken voice for Romani culture and rights around the world. Check out her blog at http://lolodiklo.blogspot.com/.

Mobile museum on Vashon honors Romani culture
By ELIZABETH SHEPHERD
Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber Arts Editor
Jul 08 2010, 4:12 PM · UPDATED

Vashon has a new museum, but it doesn’t look like most other museums. For one thing, it’s on wheels.

The Romani Traveling Museum and Education Center is tucked inside a 14-foot, wood-paneled 1967 travel trailer parked in Burton. Inside is a treasure trove of items that speaks to the rich culture of the Romani people, an ethnic group commonly referred to as Gypsies.
Colorful scarves are draped across the ceiling, and vibrant fabrics cover the sofas.Captivating photographs of Romani people from all over the world cover almost every inch of wall space. A small library of books, DVDs and music CDs detailing Gypsy life fill the remaining nooks and crannies.

But the museum is not only a celebration of a lively and exotic culture. It also aims to tell a complex and often heartbreaking story that began almost 1,000 years ago, when the Romani people began to migrate to Europe from India, facing discrimination and persecution wherever they moved.

Orchestrating this remarkable display is Morgan Ahern, an Islander who has devoted much of her life to working as an advocate and documentarian for the Romani people. A tall, striking woman, she bears the distinctive look of her heritage — a warm olive complexion and huge brown eyes characteristic of many Romani people...Read Article

Monday, March 1, 2010

Roma/Sinti (Gypsies) during the Holocaust and in Today's World

Morgan Ahern, Founder of Lolo Diklo/Red Bandanna: Roma Against Racism – an organization with a mission to make people aware of the real lives and history of the Roma/Sinti people - spoke to a group of educators last week at the Holocaust Center. The presentation was offered for the Holocaust Center's Education Advisory Committee and as a followup for participants of the Holocaust Center's recent teacher seminar in January.

Morgan Ahern’s grandmother, Jenneroze, and her extended family lived in Europe when the Nazi party came to power. As Nazi domination spread, Jenneroze began to plan a safety route for her family. But no countries were accepting “Gypsy” refugees...

The Roma/Sinti people, “Gypsies” as they are commonly called, left their native India circa 1000. Since their arrival in Europe in the 1300s, they have faced discrimination and prejudice. In Romanes (the language spoken by Roma) the Holocaust is called Porrajmos, which means “The Great Devouring.” Approximately 60% of Europe’s Roma/Sinti were murdered under the Third Reich. Morgan will speak about her family’s experience as Roma/Sinti during the Holocaust and the continued persecution of the Roma/Sinti people both in the United States and in Europe today.

In 2008, Morgan Ahern contributed to the Holocaust Center’s series “Stories Among Us: Personal Accounts of Genocide” which was published in the Seattle Times in partnership with the Newspapers In Education (NIE) Program. Read "Morgan's Story" from the "Stories Among Us" NIE series.
For more information about the Romani people, or for a list of movies and websites please visit
The Lolo Diklo blog at http://lolodiklo.blogspot.com/.

Morgan is a member of the Holocaust Center's Speakers Bureau.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Madonna Booed in Bucharest for Defending Gypsies

August 27, 2009
By ALINA WOLFE MURRAY, Associated Press Writer Alina Wolfe Murray, Associated Press Writer


BUCHAREST, Romania – At first, fans politely applauded the Roma performers sharing a stage with Madonna. Then the pop star condemned widespread discrimination against Roma, or Gypsies — and the cheers gave way to jeers.

The sharp mood change that swept the crowd of 60,000, who had packed a park for Wednesday night's concert, underscores how prejudice against Gypsies remains deeply entrenched across Eastern Europe.

Despite long-standing efforts to stamp out rampant bias,
read more...

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

International Day of Remembrance for Roma Sinti


The International Romani Union (Representing Roma and Sinti) have called Sunday 2 August 2009 as International Day of Remembrance for the Roma/Sinti who suffered "the devouring", and who suffer throughout Europe today. Read more...