"I am very happy to meet the Roma delegates. You are the children of India who migrated and lived in challenging circumstances in foreign lands for centuries. Yet you maintained your Indian identity," Swaraj said after opening International Roma Conference and Cultural Festival here.
Organised by ICCR - the cultural wing of External Affairs Ministry and Antar Rashtriya Sahayog Parishad-Bharat (ARSP), the three-day conference aimed at revisiting and reviving what is considered as a "lost page of Indian history" is hosting 33 scholars and 12 cultural performers from 12 countries and 15 scholars from India.
Said to trace their ancestry to groups in India like Dom, Banjara, Gujjar, Sansi, Chauhan, Sikligar, Dhangar etc. And other nomadic tribes from North West India, the Romas are traditionally believed to have been ironsmiths.
Some scholars claim that the first wave of migration took place when emperor Alexander took blacksmiths from India to make weapons.
They are called differently in different countries -- Zigeuner in Germany, Tsyiganes or Manus in France, Tatara in Sweden, Gitano in Spain, Tshingan in Turkey and Greece, Tsigan in Russia, Bulgaria and Romania and as gypsies in Britain.
"Romas are the indigenous people of India, there are many scholars and researchers who trace the orgins of Rromanis to India. We use same Indian words and we come from the great India. We want India to accept Romas as its diaspora and give us nationality," Jovan Damjanovic, president, World Roma Organisation- Rromanipen.
Damjanovic who has come from Serbia said accepting origins of the about 15 million Rromani people can help India give a boost at all levels be it political, economic or cultural.
Swaraj pointed out that the Romas were present in good
numbers in the countries where the community migrated.
For instance, in Eastern European countries such as Romania and Bulgaria, the Roma community constitutes 12 per cent of the population. Other European countries having large number of Roma population include Russia, Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia, Spain and France.
Their population is about 2.75 million in Turkey. Though majority are based in Europe, Roma community is present in almost all the continents, including around one million in the US and approximately 8,00,000 Roma in Brazil.
"Precious heritage of Roma community and its relations with India needs to be carefully preserved and documented. The research needs to be enhanced with renewed vigour," she said.
Lokesh Chandra, President, ICCR in his keynote address referred to persecution of the Romas across centuries.
"In 1701-50 Germany passed 68 edits to persecute them. In 1715-19 Scottish Roma were transported to America, 5000 Roma were deported to Nazi camps, Turkey home to world's largest Roma population passed a law in 1934 that allows government to deny them citizenship," Chandra said.
He added that like the Silk Route, a Steel Route must have linked India and Greece via Iranian lands. "The Roma seems to have trod Steel Route as itinerant ironsmiths in continuation of age-old traditions," he said.
Swaraj said the aim of the conference is in consonance with 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam' (world is one family).
"India is not a mercantile nation, pursuing only material objectives but a civilisation of values, vision and promoting harmony. We have a natural affinity and concern for the people of Indian origin and their well-being," she said.
The first Roma conference was held in 1976 in Chandigarh, and in 1983 the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi inaugurated the International Roma Cultural Festival. In 2001 former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee interacted with Roma scholars and delegates at a Roma conference.
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