Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month Magazine

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Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month Magazine

October 2008

an important part of Britain’s past an important part of Britain’s future Inside this issue

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A Nation Celebrates

Vote For Your Month

Civil Rights Champions

Fantastic Book Offer


Gypsy travlr Ad

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Sussex Police are pleased to support the Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month people from your community... Sussex Police is always looking to recruit high calibre police officers, police community support officers and special constables to help us tackle crime across Sussex. We want Sussex Police to reflect the diverse population it serves and we are interested in recruiting people who represent all our neighbourhoods and communities.

...working with your community

unlocking your potential - securing our future

GYPSIES, ROMA AND TRAVELLERS have a right to see their culture celebrated WE support Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History month YOU can get early years play and learning activities at www.savethechildren.org.uk/earlyyears

Applicants wanting to become a police officer or special constable will need to live in Sussex. All applicants will need to have lived at UK addresses with postcodes for the three years immediately prior to the date of application. For further information please contact the Positive Action Recruitment Manager on 0845 60 70 999 extension 44128 and mention Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month. To view our current vacancies visit www.sussex.police.uk

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Transport that works for everyone Our job is to create the strategic framework for transport services, which are provided by many public and private organisations, from our own executive agencies and local councils to operators such as airlines, bus, train and ferry companies.

As an employer, we are committed to supporting equality and diversity in our business, working relationships and employment practices. The Department for Transport takes diversity seriously and is committed to raising the profile of diversity, both within the Department and also across the transport industry as a whole.

Our core policy objective is transport that works for everyone. This means we have to be diverse Our job is transport that all can in every policy we develop and in use delivered in a way that everything we do. benefits the whole community.

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HISTORY MONTH

A Month to Remember

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Few people can doubt that something big has happened. June 2008 was the first national Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month England. OFIO in EC7 H7L;BB;H HISTORY MONTH Jake Bowers looks back on a month that began the long overdue KD;Ãqyyw process of educating Britain about its Gypsy, Roma and Traveller community. When historians look back at the way Britain relates to its Gypsy, Roma and Travelling communities, I believe 2008 will be seen as the year when the tide started turning. Like a high-tide mark, I believe June 1st 2008 marks the point when discrimination, persecution and hatred of our communities began to slowly retreat back to the swamp from where they came. Because never before have so many people united in a single, gentle attempt to celebrate who we are and where we came from. But like all tides, it turned slowly before gathering pace, and it still has a long way to flow. It started on June 2nd, as Lords and MPs together with the winners of

Lord Avebury and Lord Adonis present prizes in the House of Lords

Photo essay of GRTHM

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Home is where the start is

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Words of wisdom

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Standing their ground

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Activities competition

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Lady of the rings

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Whose month? Your month!

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The first Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month in pictures How one Traveller used GRTHM to get involved in her new community and break some misconceptions An fantastic book offer from the Hertfordshire University Press A tribute to two campaigners who have sadly passed away

World reknowned performers including Sheila Stewart MBE joined in the celebrations alongside rising stars like country singer Brigid Corcoran

the National Poster competition with their families, the majority from the GRT communities, gathered in parliament to award those who had put pen to paper to design a poster for Gypsy Roma and Traveller History Month (GRTHM). And from there it rolled out across England as schools, museums, prisons, fairgrounds and town halls all began to honour our ancestors. It touched thousands. Those who were part of it will know how minds were opened. Those who weren’t will only have to wait until June 2009 to see it again. There is no doubt that from the Lords to the back lanes GRTHM has been welcomed as a significant first step in which England stopped tolerating the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller community and started celebrating it. In a year in which Italy started fingerprinting all of its Gypsy inhabitants and Romany

camps were firebombed, GRTHM can only be a seen as a defence against a rising tide of anti-Gypsy racism across Europe. It attracted the attention of the United Nations which commented that “creative

The next Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month will be in June 2009. Because community members were never asked which month it should be in, this magazine also gives members of our communities the chance to decide which month Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month should be in from 2010 onwards. Our history is not owned by any

WE WANT YOUR VIEWS How many new pitches does the South East need? The South East England Regional Assembly is asking for views on pitches for Gypsies,Travellers and Travelling Showpeople in each council area. Give your views by 5pm on 21 November 2008. To take part either: visit www.southeast-ra.gov.uk/gt call 01483 555 202 secretariat@southeast-ra.gov.uk

All the winners of the competitions that were launched in the June issue Lea Fossett writes on her life as a circus performer

GRTHM needs you! Give your opinion and state your preference for when GRTHM 2010 should take place Cover image: Guitarist Ambrose Cooper by Patricia Knight.

GRTHM Magazine Credits:

Traditional crafts were much in evidence, including traditional music from the Orchard Family

and educational initiatives such as this one are also required to challenge stereotypes and overcome barriers.” But its greatest impact was felt on the ground.

Looking Forward to Future History Months This magazine gives a flavour of what happened and looks forward to an even bigger and better event next year, but the events and issues surrounding Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month can’t be squeezed into an 8-page magazine, so we’ve produced a report on the month which can be downloaded at: www.grthm.co.uk/report

Inside this issue

organisation, but by us all, so please return the slip on the back page. This magazine has been produced with the help of the Department for Children Schools and Families, the central government department that funded the first national GRTHM in 2008.

Published by: The Gypsy Media Company Ltd., community producers of: • Films, radio and publications about the Gypsy and Traveller community • Research with the Gypsy and Traveller community • Cultural awareness training about the Gypsy and Traveller community The Gypsy Media Company Ltd., PO Box 313, Hastings, East Sussex TN34 9EW Telephone: 07966 786242 Edited by: Jake Bowers – Email: jake@grthm.co.uk Copywriter: Damian Le Bas – Email: damian@grthm.co.uk Research and photos: Patricia Knight – Email: patricia@grthm.co.uk Design: Graham Alexander – Email: graham@grthm.co.uk Part financed by: The Department for Children Schools and Families.

department for

children, schools and families

The Gypsy Media Company

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In Pictures: A Nation Celebr June 2nd [1] Winners of the GRTHM National Poster competition that attracted thousands of entries were given prizes at the House of Lords by Liberal Democrat peer Lord Avebury and minister Lord Adonis. Lord Avebury is in the centre of the group behind Felix Hanrahan who holds the winning entry by Lucy Mongan. [5] Professional Traveller artists with some of the winning entries to the National Poster competition which they judged. June 3rd: Romany academics, Dr Adrian Marsh, Professor Ian Hancock, and Dr Brian Belton debated the origins of the Romany people at the University of Greenwich [2]. June 4th and 28th London’s Conway Hall (June 4th) and Leeds Civic Hall (June 28th) held two international concerts featuring the talents of the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities. Organised by the Roma Support Group and Leeds Gypsy Roma Traveller Achievement Service, they featured Romani Rad [6 & 14], The Orchard Family and Brigid Corcoran on stage. Also appearing in Leeds were the Slovakian Roma Band, Romipen [13 & 22] and the Scottish Singers and Storytellers Sheila Stewart MBE [9] and Jess Smith [12] as well as William and Jimmy Dundun [10] singers and musicians from Northern Ireland. Roma artist Ferdinand Koci [7] had his first solo exhibition in Leeds as part of GRTHM 2008 and drew portraits throughout the month. [4 & 18] Musicians and two women from London’s large Polish Roma community at Conway Hall.

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June 6th to June 10th Europe’s largest Gypsy horse fair, took place in Appleby in Cumbria [8]. June 15th Gypsies and Travellers celebrated their past and future at Worcestershire County Museum [11]. June 21st Gypsy musicians Ambrose Cooper, Billy Ripley and Rosie Brinkley [20] came together with Gypsy craftsmen and elders like Britannia Lee [13] at the South East Romany Museum in Kent whilst thousands went to Cambridge Fair.

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June 24th Internationally renowned Scottish Traveller storytellers Sheila Stewart [9] and Jess Smith [12] performed in Leeds. June 25th Some of the winners of the Leeds GRTHM Poster competition receiving their awards from Ferdinand Koci [19].

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June 26th Irish Traveller actor Michael Collins [15] performed his one-man show “It’s a Cultural Thing, or is it?” in Otley. June 26th and 27th Irish Travellers held a “Pavee Celidh” in Hammersmith in London [21].

In Schools A major part of Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month happened through workshops, school assemblies and after school activites in schools. Roma Artist Ferdinand Koci [17] working with a group during the GRTHM Arts week in June 2008. Children from the Traveller and non Traveller community in London learn from Irish Traveller Bridget McCarthy and Romany Gypsy Ann Emslie [3]. Some of the winners of the Leeds GRTHM Poster competition receiving their awards on 25th June 2008 [19].

n tures were take Many of these pic otographer ph by Romany o took hundreds Patricia Knight wh s during GRTHM. ait of positive portr call 01273 858746 For more details

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Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month Magazine

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Home is where the start is Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month was a chance for many communities to throw open their doors and start educating those around them. For Lisa Smith, it was an opportunity to speak to the community she has been forced to move into after her site was destroyed to make way for the 2012 Olympics. When I heard about Gypsy Roma Traveller History month I thought it would be good to invite the children’s schools to our site, so they can see how we live and learn about our way of life. We live on the council Travellers’ site in Newham, London and our community has had a very stressful time in the past few years, as our site was needed for the Olympics. They pulled down a playground to build us a new site but local people were unhappy with Lisa Smith (centre of back row) together with her family, teachers this. So were we, but even though and children who visited her site. we went to court about it, we lost. said, “I always wanted to see John’s When we were waiting to move, trailer and I wish I could live here.� the children were given cameras by Even the teachers were surprised. photographers “ON SITE ARTS� and they took photos of what happened. They said they thought Travellers were dirty but it made them realise There was an exhibition and I how ignorant they were about us. thought it would be good to repeat it on our new site and invite our children’s classes. When they came they visited the pitches where their friends live. They couldn’t believe how lovely it all is. One of the boys

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Next year I think we should have a bigger party and invite the local settled community, so they learn about our culture and get to know us better.

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Words of Wisdom

A VERY SPECIAL OFFE

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from the University of Hertfordshire Press With winter nights drawing in and Christmas around the corner, there’s no better time to read up on Gypsy, Roma and Traveller history or give others the chance to do so. So here’s an exclusive offer to provide cut-price books on Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History until the end of June 2009. Most Gypsy history is never written down, it lives in the memories of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller people until they go to the grave and take their stories with them. For centuries our culture and history were simply passed down by word of mouth. But increasingly Gypsy, Roma and Traveller writers are recording their history, some by dictating it to a friend or relative, others have learnt to read and write because of a burning desire to record their history. Much of their writing is self-published, but some publishers have woken up to the fact that there is an increasing market for writing for, by and about Gypsies, Roma and Travellers. If there’s one publisher that has blazed a trail in recording our experiences it is the University of Hertfordshiree Press. Their catalogue of books is so impressive that novelist Louise Doughty recently wrote in The Independent on Sunday: “You could do a lot worse than buying the entire back catalogue of the University of Hertfordshire Press, a tiny but valiant publishing house which is the main source of Romani Studies in this country”.

We thought that was such a good idea that Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month Magazine has teamed up with the University of Hertfordshire Press to provide cut-price books on Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History until the end of June 2009. You can get 50% off the recommended price and free postage and packing until June 30th 2009 on the books opposite. Pay by cheque using the order form below or by credit card over the phone on 01707 284654 (all major cards except America Express). Remember to mention ‘GRTHM’ when ordering by phone. Unfortunately, this offer is only available to United Kingdom residents.

Choose from these books Here To Stay: The Gypsies and Travellers of Britain Colin Clark & Margaret Greenfields

Offer price £7.50 Normally £14.99 “this is a fantastic resource book that should be required reading for all who deal with Gypsies and Travellers. A must buy!”

Len Smith, Travellers’ Times

Learn Romani: Das-dúma Rromanes Ronald Lee

Offer price £7.50 Normally £14.99 “a very good book with step-by-step learning of the Kalderash version of the Vlax Romani dialect ... an excellent tool to help repair our own decayed dialect. Well worth the modest price”. Len Smith, Travellers’ Times

The Roads of the Roma Edited by Ian Hancock, Siobhan Dowd, Rajko Djuric

Offer price £6.00 Normally £11.99 “The Roads of the Roma has taken me into a new world of great beauty, imagination and mystery. The ‘invisible people’ step into the light along a path of poetry”. Antonia Fraser

We Are The Romani People Ian Hancock

Offer price £5.00 Normally £9.99 “…intellectual tour de force that will grab the interested reader by the throat until the last page is turned”. Thomas Acton, Journal of

Ethnic and Migration Studies

Please send me the following book/s (write required quantity of books in the box): .................................................................................................................................................. ..................................................................................................................................................

Donald Kenrick

Offer price £5.00 Normally £9.99 This book traces the migration of the Gypsies over many centuries from India and across Europe as far as Britain.

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The Romani World: A historical dictionary of the Gypsies

..................................................................................................................................................

Donald Kenrick

Name:

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Address:...................................................................................................................................... ............................................................................................................................................................ ............................................................................................................................................................ .........................................................................................

Telephone:

Post code: ....................................

OFIO EC7 H7L;BB;H HISTORY MONTH

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I enclose a cheque for: £........................... (made payable to: University of Hertfordshire)

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Gypsies: From the Ganges to the Thames

Send your completed form with a cheque to: University of Hertfordshire Press, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, AL10 9AB

OFIO EC7 H7L;BB;H HISTORY MONTH

KD;Ãqyyw

Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month Magazine OFIO EC7 H7L;BB;H

HISTORY MONTH

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Offer price £7.50 Normally £14.99 “a valuable reference, covering just about everything anyone with interest in Gypsies could want”. Len Smith, Travellers’ Times

Stopping Places: A Gypsy history of South London and Kent Simon Evans

Offer price £6.50 Normally £12.99 “I cannot recommend this book enough to anyone with an interest in Gypsy life and history. Wonderful photos … A true account of a lifestyle that was snatched from under our feet”. Mick Harrington, a Kent

Traveller, Travellers’ Times

Shared Sorrows: A Gypsy family remembers the Holocaust Toby Sonneman

Offer price £6.00 Normally£12.00 “tough, sad, truthful and full of information missing or insufficiently understood in Holocaust histories... an extraordinary untold story”. Grace Paley, author

Smoke in the Lanes Dominic Reeve

Offer price £5.00 Normally £9.99 A classic account of the reality of life as a Gypsy in the 1950s.

Winter Time: Memoirs of a German Sinto who survived Auschwitz Walter Winter

Offer price £5.00 Normally £9.99 “One of the most unusual and moving war stories you’ll ever read”. Daily Express

The Gypsies during the Second World War: The Final Chapter (Vol. 3) Donald Kenrick

Offer price £7.50 Normally £14.99 The concluding part of an important 3-volume series examining the persecution of the Gypsy people during the Second World War plus an overview of what happened after 1945.

A false dawn: My life as a Gypsy woman in Slovakia Ilona Lacková

Offer price £6.00 Normally £11.99 A vivid picture of life in a pre-war Gypsy settlement on the edge of a Slovak village. Ilona witnessed the destruction of the Romani culture, language and way of life but Romani traditions remain the guiding force of her life.


Month Standing Their Ground History Winners In the last issue of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month magazine we looked at our contribution to sports and arts. In this one, we remember two individuals who stood their ground to provide a better future for us all.

Sylvia Dunn In September, Sylvia Dunn, founder of the National Association of Gypsy Women, passed away after a long battle with illness. This is how some of her many friends remember her. Kay Beard and Rachel Francis of the UK Association of Gypsy Women write: “She was the first woman who took up the banner for the Romany Gypsy women in the UK, a ‘Rebel with a Cause’ and what a trail she blazed for a half a century. Without a shadow of a doubt Sylvi was our ‘Emily Pankhurst’. She cleared and smoothed the way for us lesser mortals who could only hope to walk in her shadow. Furthermore, she not only fought for justice and equality for her own community, Sylvi was also very mindful and an ardent campaigner for the Irish Traveller Community.” Thomas Acton, Professor of Romani Studies, University of Greenwich writes:

“She was an inspirational figure who was radicalised by the struggle for her own ground, and formed the first Romani Women’s association in Britain.” Sylvia Dunn, Gypsy civil rights campaigner, Born 31st December 1931, died 21st September 2008. She is survived by her two children Donna and Tucker.

He mistrusted academics within the “Gypsy industry”, who he believed worked with Travellers only to further their own careers, and he was equally intolerant of corruption within Gypsy organisations. This attitude led to his involvement in a bitter libel suit with the National Gypsy Council, which he eventually won in 1997. Eli helped hundreds of Romani families fight the local planning regulations that stopped them

Just a few of the many, varied entries

Activity: Poem

• Devonnie McCoy Hillcrest Primary School Leeds • Nsimba Pedro, Salford EMTES

Activity: Story

• Nsimba Pedro, Salford EMTES

Activity: Shelters/Dens Activity: Photographs

Eli Frankham, who died in 2000, was the founder and president of the National Romany Rights Association (NRRA) and a political leader of Britain’s 300,000-strong Romany community.

Eli was born in a horse-drawn Romany vardo at Chanctonbury Ring in Sussex. For much of his young life, he travelled in southern England, until his family bought land in the Hampshire village of Horndean, where he was sent to school. Unlike many of his generation, he learnt to read and write, although he also experienced the racism that he was to spend a lifetime fighting. “I was the only Gypsy in that school,” he recalled years later. “They’d call out ‘Gippo, Gippo’. I had a rough time, so I started to fight and play hookey.”

Congratulations to all the winners listed below. Prizes and certificates are on the way to you all!

• Hareesa , Cristiano and Devontie; all from the Hillcrest Primary School

Eli Frankham

A former professional boxer, and a wise countryman, musician and storyteller, he was known and respected by ordinary travellers across Britain and Europe.

The June edition of this magazine featured an Activity Competition with numerous categories, but all celebrating Gypsy, Roma and Traveller culture. It was was open to everyone wherever they lived and drew entries from all over the world. Samples of the entries can be seen on our website www.GRTHM.co.uk

from settling in caravans on their own land. As a result, thousands of Romani children have gained access to education, healthcare and sanitation. Working voluntarily, he won huge respect from his people, and spent thousands of pounds pursuing his goals. He never received any official recognition. Eli was both modern and traditional. He believed that education was crucial to Romani emancipation, but he also valued Romani tradition. He both kept and traded horses all his life, recorded old Romani stories and songs, and would not be seen in public without a diklo, or Romani scarf, around his neck. Unlike other, more commercially-minded Travellers, who have exploited the myth of the Gypsy King, Eli never claimed any title, but if any man could have filled that position it would have been him. He had the charisma and the intelligence; most of all, he had the love of his people. Eli Frankham, Romani poet and civil rights leader, born November 26th 1928; died December 3rd 2000. At the time of his death Eli was survived by his wife, Gert, and six children.

• Marta Kotlarska and Malgorzata Mirga and the Traditional Romani settlement in Poland - Zawisza Czarny - Nowy Sacz

Activity: Artwork

• Jamee Mul, Robert Lewis, Samiya and Samantha (motor and trailer); all from the Hillcrest Primary School

Activity: Music

• Silvester Balaz, Abbey Wood School, London SE2 9AJ • Isaac Lee

Activity: Songs

• Nsimba Pedro , Salford EMTES • Year 5 pupils, St. Andrew’s Lane Primary School, Hertfordshire • Mambu Manaka, Hillcrest Primary School

Activity: Who do we think we are? • Mary Harber, Eagles Farm, Kent • Sanchez Tamara Williams, Hillcrest Primary School • Simona Slepcik, Hillcrest Primary School

Activity: Re-cycling • Fahreen and Areep; Hillcrest Primary School

Activity: Fairground Ride or Circus Act • Alima Ali, David Vosockis and Aquan; all from the Hillcrest Primary School

Activity: Portfolio

• Kingsway Playroup and Pre-school Centre, Heysham

www.grthm.co.uk

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Lady of the Rings Lea Fossett has entertained people from Loch Ness to Shanghai in the circus. But she warns that new laws are making it difficult. She speaks to Damian Le Bas. We are travellers and we’re living in the caravans, but the huge difference from Gypsies and Irish Travellers is we are occupational travellers. We just travel when we work: if we’re not at work, we stay at home. The circus people are the smallest group I think. But as far as the children’s education goes, for us it’s the same level of importance as for everyone else. The circus parents are probably the most keen to educate their kids among travelling groups. When I started the main concern was to finish primary school, now it’s to finish secondary school. Another big difference is we travel all around the world, the circus people! You go wherever your contract is for. You can be commissioned to work all over the place. We go to America, across Europe, the Far East.

because I’m Hungarian, and they make friends with people who live in other countries. There are lots of positive things about it. They meet so many people. They start to work at a very early age: one of my children starred in the show finale at the age of one and a half. The children grow up with the work as part of the lifestyle. It is a hard life for them, but because it’s harder, they have no time to go silly. I don’t know many circus people who have gone off on drugs, or anything like that. They never have time to do things like that because they are always working and busy doing different things. There have been a lot of changes in recent years. Forty, Fifty years ago, it was mainly little family circuses. Now the circus is like an industry as well. And the changes in the law make our lives hell sometimes. You have to have a licence for everywhere you go and it’s huge amounts of money for the ground.

All three of my children speak fluent Russian, because they have worked with so many Russian artists. They speak a little Hungarian,

Whose month? Your month! The success of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month will be repeated in June 2009. But, argues Jake Bowers, it needs greater involvement from the communities it represents. Britain’s 300,000 Gypsies, Roma and Travellers own little territory, but have to endure a mountain of misunderstanding. So when a central government department decided to dedicate an entire month to educating everyone about our culture, it was embraced by most Gypsies, Roma and Travellers as a welcome breath of fresh air in the often poisonous debate as to where Gypsies, Roma and Travellers should live. But the truth is that GRTHM was not an idea or date that came from the community itself. It was started by those in Gypsy and Traveller education keen to fight the misunderstanding that blights the lives of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller youth. Those in Traveller Education Services give three reasons as to why June was chosen:

• So it could happen in school term time, when they have the ability to involve and educate as many pupils as possible • June is a month which already includes many traditional Gypsy and Traveller events such as Appleby Fair and the Epsom Derby • That traditional Gypsy and Traveller culture is often best enjoyed in the open air in the summer.

If you think about it, in this country there isn’t much family entertainment, where you know everyone can be safe. You can take your grandma to the circus and you can take a three-year-old child: it’s not like the towns HISTORY MONTH KD;Ãqyyw where there’s drunks about. It’s one of the only completely clean and safe entertainments there is for the whole family.

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OFIO EC7 H7L;BB;H HISTORY MONTH

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This June, Gypsies and Travellers came together in partnership with those working in education. But is June really the right month to hold it in? Some would prefer to see it in April, when Roma national day is held, others are quite happy for it to remain in June. Whatever your opinion, one thing is undisputed, Gypsy, Roma and Traveller people have never been consulted on the date. In order to make Gypsy Roma and Traveller History Month a date everyone can unite around, the survey slip below needs you to fill it in and return it. The month with the greatest number of votes will be Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month from 2010 onwards.

GRTHM 2008 involved all the Travelling communities but was driven by Traveller Education departments. Here Romipen play whilst a group dance, during the GRTHM Arts week in June

If you’d like to organise events as part of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month in June 2009, you don’t need anyone’s permission, but please let us know so we can help to publicise it.

Complete and return this slip to: GRTHM Survey, The Gypsy Media Company Ltd., PO Box 313, Hastings, East Sussex TN34 9EW 1. How would you describe yourself? Roma

Gypsy

Irish Traveller

Show person

Romanichal

Bargee

Other (please state) ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������

2. From 2010 onwards, I think Gypsy, Roma and Traveller History Month should be in (if you wish suggest more than one month by numbering the boxes in order of preference): January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

3. Comments/concerns/suggestions ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������

# 8

Name: ............................................................................................................................ Address: ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Gypsy Roma Traveller History Month Magazine

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