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Opinion

We must speak up for the Roma, the 'forgotten' victims

'If genocide gets no attention, the circumstances that led to it hardly change at all. The same hatred. The same language.'

October 30, 2019 17:59
Margarete Kraus, A Czech Roma who was sent to Auschwitz
3 min read

Never forget’ is something we say about the Shoah, again and again. And, as the genocide of Europe’s Jews passes out of living memory, it is a challenge to all of us born after the war to keep alive the memory of those terrible events.

So the title of the Wiener Holocaust Library’s latest exhibition is particularly chilling. Forgotten Victims: The Nazi Genocide of the Roma and Sinti, gives a wealth of information about the murder of as many as 500,000 people, tracing the history of persecution against Roma and Sinti people in Europe from before the war to the present day, and examining reasons why so little attention has been given to their plight.

An estimated 20,000 Roma and Sinti people were murdered at Auschwitz. Others were massacred by Wehrmacht units and death squads or deported to “colonies” where conditions were so brutal that thousands more died. They were raped, murdered, experimented on by “racial scientists”. In Romani, it is known as the Porajmos —“the devouring”.

Since the war, survivors and their communities have struggled to get recognition or compensation. At first, Germany refused to accept that there had been a Roma and Sinti genocide at all, claiming that the killings were carried out for criminal and “asocial” reasons. That word, “asocial”, those accusations of criminality, dog Roma people still.