Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 8 – Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s promise to secure the full rehabilitation of the Crimean
Tatars, a promise made to obscure Russian aggression and to try to attract the
support of some in that nation for his occupation of their homeland, is echoing
not only among the larger and more organized of the punished peoples but among
others as well.
The world knows the tragic story of
Nazi oppression of ethnic minorities in Crimea and of Soviet deportation of
more than 200,000 Crimean Tatars, 70,000 Greeks, and 14,000 Bulgarians to
Central Asia. What is less widely known
is that Stalin deported the small Roma community from that peninsula as well.
Some 800 Roma were executed during
the German occupation, but that did not wipe out the entire community,
especially because most of the Roma in Crimea at that time were Muslims and
shared much of the culture of the Crimean Tatars. Indeed, Soviet sources lumped
them together in a single category most of the time.
But the Roma of Crimea like Roma
elsewhere are proud of their national heritage, and Putin’s comments have given
them the opportunity to speak out.
Yesterday, Nadezhda Demeter, the head of the Federation of National
Cultural Autonomies of the Roma in the Russian Federation, said she would raise
the issue of the rehabilitation of the Crimean Roma.
She made her remarks at a conference
that was evaluating the Russian government’s Plan for the Socio-Cultural
Economic and Ethno-Cultural Development of the Roma for 2013-2014 (nazaccent.ru/content/11252-rossijskie-cygane-postavyat-vopros-o-reabilitacii.html).
Demeter said she was “surprised”
that despite all the discussion about “the rehabilitation of the Crimean Tatars
who had been deported,” no one had “raised the question about the
rehabilitation of the Crimean Roma” who were deported to Central Asia at the
same time and on the same trains.
She said she had read the memoirs of
some of the Roma deported in 1944 who recalled that “in the first train car, the
Roma were put, in the second, the Tatar, and so on.”
Responding to Demeter’s remarks,
Nato Trotsenko, the head of the ethno-cultural analysis and development of the
Department of State Policy on Inter-Ethnic Relations of the Russian Ministry
for Regional Affairs, suggested that she raise the issue at an upcoming meeting
of the Russian Presidential Council of Inter-Ethnic Relations.
According to the Roma leader in the
Russian Federation, Russia’s Roma “completely support” Putin’s policies in
Crime because, according to her, conditions for the Roma in Ukraine have been
difficult and many Roman “want to come to Russia.” Another participant in the
meeting spoke about a possible “genocide of the Roma” there.
Almost certainly, the Moscow
authorities are counting on this small group to muddy the waters of Western
discussions of Crimea, especially since the Crimean Tatars are almost
unanimously against the Russian annexation of that Ukrainian peninsula. But there are three reasons why things may
not work out the way Russian officials hope.
First, by raising the Roma issue,
something Russian officials have been reluctant to do, Moscow has opened the
way to a broader discussion of the mistreatment of Roma in Russia by
well-organized Roma and human rights groups in Europe. Demeter’s statement is likely to be read by
them very differently than Moscow expects it to be.
Second, many ethnic Russians are
likely to be furious if one of the consequences of the Russian annexation of
Crimea is an influx, however small, of Muslim Roma into Russian cities.
Relations between Russians and Roma have never been good, but the victimization
of Roma has seldom been a major focus of Western attention. This could change that.
And third, Putin’s words have
already encouraged Russian Germans to talk about the restoration of their
national republic inside the Russian Federation and other groups to gain
rehabilitation, including the return of their historic lands. The Roma claim will only add fuel to that
fire, one that even the Kremlin leader will find it hard to put out.
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