--- On Sun, 18/10/09, Pardeep Attri <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Pardeep Attri <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Fw: Re: [Insight Young Voices Blog] Comment: "Babasaheb Ambedkar 
and ‘the Dalits of Europe’ "
To: "C.K. Vishwanath" <[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, 18 October, 2009, 9:38 PM

Babasaheb Ambedkar and ‘the Dalits of Europe’

                        By Pardeep Singh Attri
Dispatches from Hungary - I


Jai bhim Network's logo
Jai Bhim Network is a group that is working among the Romas (derogatorily
referred as Gypsies) in Hungary. In their effort of creating linkages
with the Dalit movement of India and draw inspiration the network has
been in constant interaction with many of the young Dalit activists in
India. The network is also instrumental in inviting young Dalit
students and activists to stay with the community in Hungary and
exchange their views. Towards this three of us – me, Swati Kamble and
Bharat are in Hungary since last fortnight and will be writing for our
blog on our experiences. Here is my first post.

It was 14th April 2008, when I wrote an article titled Schools, Toilets or 
Temples?
On the same day I got an email from one Mr. Derdak Tibor, appreciating
the article. He is a Hungarian activist working with the Roma community
in the country.

Hungarian Roma community leader Janos Orsos with Buddhist kids in Maharashtra, 
December 2005 
This was the beginning of long email
exchanges between us where I was able to learn a lot about the lives
and the problem faced by Romas (derogatorily referred as Gypsies),
especially in Hungary. Till then I had a very limited knowledge about
the community, derived mostly from the English movies that I saw.
‘Gypsies’ are normally considered to be
a nomadic group with the worldwide population of about 12 million,
originally from south Asia. With their 8 million population in Europe
they constitute one of the biggest minority blocks in many European
countries and have the history of being discriminated, stigmatized and
persecuted by white Europeans based on their prejudices and
stereotyping of the community. They are still mostly found segregated
from the mainstream, hated and ridiculed by the white society.
After communicating with Tibor, as an
Indian Dalit I was not surprised to recognize the fact that most often
than not these movies displayed the prejudices and stereotypes that are
prevalent in Europe against the Romas.
Babasaheb as a source of inspiration
One of the most interesting facts that
Derdak Tibor informed me was that his group of Roma activists and
community leaders in Hungary derive their inspiration from Babasaheb
Ambedkar and Buddhism and trying to inculcate Ambedkarite thoughts in
their movement towards equal rights for the Roma community. They have
created a support network called Jai Bhim Network, embraced Buddhism
and opened an high school in the name of Dr Ambedkar High School for
the Roma children in Hungary.
Roma activists find their situation in
the otherwise ‘white’ Hungary almost akin to the Dalits of India and
therefore they now call their community, ‘the Dalits of Europe’ as the
Romas are also found in other European countries too and face the
similar prejudices and discrimination every where.
Apparently, the connection with
Babasaheb and the Indian Dalits started when Derdak Tibor found a book
on Babasaheb in Paris and got inspired after reading it. He was
immediately able to draw the linkages between the discrimination faced
by Indian Dalits and Romas in Europe. Fascinated by the life and
struggle of Babasaheb, he together with his group of Roma activists
interacted with Friends of World Buddhist Order (FWBO), a group that
has been working with Ambedkarite Buddhist in India for quite some time
now.
This interaction led Derdak Tibor and
Janos Orsos (one of the Roma leaders) to visit India and to meet Dalit
activists, particularly in Maharashtra in December 2005. By then both
of them knew about the work of Babasaheb and had been deeply impressed
by what they had read of his work and the suffering of his people. But
after visiting India they felt very deep connections with the Dalits
here and got convinced that Babasaheb’s message of social
transformation is deeply relevant to the Romas as well.
After this visit, both these activists
started introducing Dr. Ambedkar and his philosophy of social
transformation amongst the Romas in Hungary and are making huge efforts
to bond with Indian Dalit movement by creating various linkages through
their platform ‘Jai Bhim Network’.
One of them is to invite young Dalit
activists to Hungary and provide them opportunities to interact with
the Roma community and through this to provide exposure to both the
Indian Dalits and the Hungarian Dalits about each other’s struggle
towards a just and humane society.

Recently held Roma community's protest in Budapest, Hungary, against their 
segregation
I am writing these dispatches from
Hungary being part of one such Indian Dalit delegation that has been
invited by the Jai Bhim Network to visit, interact and stay with the
Roma community living in a small town called Sajókaza in Northeast
Hungary.
In Sajókaza
On 24th September 2009, me and Bharat
reached Budapest, the capital city. Both of us were little nervous
being travelling abroad first time and were much relieved to see one Mr
Saboj from Jai Bhim Network waiting for us at the airport. Within no
time in the company of Mr. Saboj, we felt completely at ease and
started interacting as if we knew each other since decades.
Perhaps our respective movements
created some synergy between us and I immediately felt a fellow
feeling, a bond and a deep relationship between us though we lived
thousands of miles apart and were meeting for the first time. At night
we reached Sajókaza village where we had to stay with the Roma
community. Swati Kamble, our fellow companion from India, had already
arrived there.

Roma Houses are located outside the village
Sajókaza is a village about 30 km north
east of Miskolc and has a population of about 3300 people with half of
them from the Roma community. It is a very beautiful village. Big
fields around the village refreshed my memory of the villages of Punjab.
However, majority of the Romas live in
the outskirts of village in the ghettos. Their life style is totally
different from other Hungarians of the village. Once upon a time, in
1900s, almost all Romas of the village were employed in the nearby
mines but now there are all unemployed and live on monthly benefits,
which they get from the government.
Hungarian people consider Roma people
the most problematic community of Hungary as they are different from
the other Hungarians. Hungarian people hate them just because they need
someone to hate in difficult times and being helpless Romas are the
easy target. Even a local police chief Albert Pasztor said publicly
that, “The perpetrators of all crimes are gypsies”.
The Roma kids are forced to sit in the
separate classroom. The children grow up constantly being dehumanized,
humiliated, persecuted and rejected. I read there were separate cup
plates for their kids around 10 years back.
I also became aware that the Roma kids
are declared mentally challenged and are send to special schools and
now days around 90% of special school students are from this community
only. Even the special schools seems to take more interest in these
students rather than other students, may be because they get higher
grants/money/benefits in the name of these ‘mentally challenged’ kids.
It was very interesting to find that,
during our travel, most of the Hungarian people thought that we were
also Hungarian Romas till the time we spoke English. Then only they
could understand that we are not Romas but from some third world
country.
Our physical similarities with the
Romas are so striking that even many Romas thought that we belong
there. It made us feel like at home, being among our own community and
people and delighted me to no end. It became a bit emotional when old
Roma women, knowing that we have come from India and are from the Dalit
community, said, “You are like my grand children”. Perhaps the Indian
origin of Romas, our physical similarities and similar conditions of
facing prejudices and discrimination from the rest of the society made
us feel that we belong to one community.
During our stay, on the first hand
itself it became very clear that the life of Roma people is not an easy
one and suffer as much discrimination as faced by us Dalits in our
every day lives. There are 3 churches in Sajókaza, but not even a
single Roma visit them. When I asked why it is so? The young Romas
replied, “We are not treated well in the society and are looked down.
Hence we don’t feel like visiting them”. It immediately reminded me of
the Hindu temples in India that actually prohibits our entry.
Later during our stay we were invited
to teach more about India, its culture and the problem of caste at Dr.
Ambedkar High School there. Our students included Roma children and
women from all age group. All of them listened us patiently and were
very curious to know more about our community, its struggle to reclaim
human dignity which they found resonating completely with their own
struggle in Hungary.
I was also pleasantly surprised to know
that due to the regular activities of Jai Bhim Network, most of our
students were aware of the caste virus and the role of Dr Ambedkar. Our
next stop was at nearby place called Hegymeg and we interacted with the
students of Dr Ambedkar High School there also on the same lines.

Roma kids playing near their ghettos
Next evening, we went to the local
community centre called Pink House accompanied by two other young Roma
activists Benö and Kubu to teach English to the women and also attended
an awareness programme organised by Roma activists for nourishing
dreams of good life among Roma people. There we also participated in
the drama and singing classes organised by Benö where we danced to our
heart content.
During the proceedings of awareness
programme, I enquired one participant about her dream. She replied, “I
would like my kids to go to school then university and get some good
jobs and earn well”. She was pained with the stigma that gypsies are
lazy and are not interested in education. Her sentiments perfectly
echoed that of any person from our community who also share the same
dream of being free from caste-based stigmas and is able to provide for
education of his/her children. We also visited the nearby kindergarten
in Sajókaza and interacted with the kids and played with them.
English Language and Romas
However, before writing more about my
other experiences here working with Jai Bhim Network, I would like to
write about English language. The local Roma community speaks a dialect
of Romanian language and not many can speak and understand English.

However, the Roma activists understand the significance of English
language in today’s world and are making efforts to promote English
among the community that will open new opportunities for young Romas in
globalised world together with creating an avenue to highlight about
their discrimination and to get support from the international
community.
In this, the Roma activists give
example of the Indian Dalits who due to their struggle for education
and relative access to English language is able to globalise their
struggle. While interacting, I also tried to emphasise on the
importance for English for our emancipation and empowerment and
narrated the struggle of Jotiba Phule and Savitribai Phule for modern
English education and their urgings for Dalits and other marginalised
sections of the society to learn English.
During one of our interactions, I even
recited one poem written by Savitribai Phule known as ‘Mother English’.
I also referred to the appeal of our Babasaheb for Dalits to come out
of their ghettos/villages and march towards cities. In contrast to
Gandhi’s silly romanticism about villages, it was the farsightedness of
Babasaheb that knew that the development of the Dalit community is not
possible till they live in ghettos/villages. Only coming to the urban
centres could get them better access to schools and other facilities. I
feel the same is true with the Romas too.
While interacting with the students of
Dr. Ambedkar High School at Sajókaza, I mentioned about the language
problem that I was facing there and told about my helplessness in
interacting with them with more freedom. I got an interesting reply
from one of the student (Benö’s brother) that “Till recently we were
not given right to study, now we are learning and you come again next
year, we will learn English by them”.
Jai Bhim Network and its work
Not many Europeans are interested in
knowing Roma people and are grossly insensitive towards the problems
faced by them. Jai Bhim Network inspired by Dr B R Ambedkar’s work is
working mostly in the northern part of Hungary, where they have been
running a school named Dr Ambedkar High School in Sajókaza and another
one in the same name in Hegymeg. They are working in the areas where
the chances for Roma kids to get higher education are very low. Hardly
anyone there goes even to secondary schools.
The objective of the Network is to
uplift the living standards of Roma people, to help them come out of
poverty and to achieve equal social & economic status in the
Hungarian society. Moreover the Network is soon going to start
Microfinance Institution on the lines of Grameen Bank from Bangladesh,
which changed millions lives there.






      Add whatever you love to the Yahoo! India homepage. Try now! 
http://in.yahoo.com/trynew
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to