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Politics of Memory Under Two Pandemics

This is part of a Roundtable, Ideas of Race, Ideologies of Racism: Roma Rights in Europe during the #BLM moment.

During the first three months of lockdown in 2020, the European Roma Rights Centre (ERCC) identified twelve countries across Europe in which Roma communities faced movement restrictions or disproportionate impacts from emergency measures despite the lack of evidence of higher case counts in those communities (Kay 2020).听 For almost a year now, the entire world has seemed united鈥攐r, at least commonly shaken鈥攂y similar concerns. Throughout this time, the topic monopolizing news channels in Asia, Europe, North and South America, the Caribbean, Africa, and Australia has been the coronavirus, its evolution, treatment, and vaccines. Soon after the outbreak of this latest pandemic, an older yet still ongoing pandemic gained more visibility鈥攔acism. After George Floyd was murdered by a white police officer in Minneapolis in May 2020, the debates around the coronavirus were accordingly met with worldwide protests against racism. Initially organized in solidarity with Black people in the US, these protests soon became denunciations of local racism in different parts of Europe and revived longer-standing anti-racism movements in South Africa and South America, among other places. Statues associated with slavery or colonialism were toppled by protesters in the United States, the UK, Belgium, and New Zealand, while in numerous others countries monuments have been contested, spray-painted, torn down, or placed under watch. From the coronavirus to antiracist demonstrations, there seems to be a domino effect from one corner of the world to the other. But is there a common denominator to these events鈥攐ther than the dizzying speed with which both the virus and the verve of protest have lately spread?

Soon after the coronavirus outbreak in China, Asians were often regarded as 鈥渄efault鈥 virus carriers. The aftermath of these racist attacks and aggressions saw the emergence of such anti-racist slogans as 鈥淚 am not a virus鈥 and 鈥淩acism is the pandemic.鈥 The studies according to which people of color in the United States, Europe, or South Africa, as well as indigenous populations in Brazil or Australia have been more exposed to the coronavirus and have disproportionately contracted COVID-19 also point to a strong link between the pandemic and existing inequality structures. The pandemic has indeed exacerbated preexistent inequalities, especially with respect to access to resources that become important during a health crisis, such as a medical insurance, comfortable living quarters, or the option to work from home (Oxfam 2021). Racialized populations鈥攇roups that have historically experienced racism and exclusion and still do so today鈥 often perform hazardous jobs with no or little health benefits that place them on what, in the war-like terminology of the pandemic, was called the 鈥渇rontline.鈥 They are also more often that the general population subjected to police violence and targeted by strict lockdown measures during health crises such as the current coronavirus pandemic. At the same time, such strict measures are justified using the racialized stereotypes that pinpoint these groups as different from the majority.

It is at the juncture of these two pandemics鈥攃oronavirus and racism鈥攖hat the Roma as 鈥渢he European minority par excellence鈥 (El-Tayeb 2011: xxvii) come into focus. Present in Europe for centuries, but still not considered of Europe, the Roma are not part of Europe鈥檚 reckoning with either racism or enslavement. Not that such consideration happens systematically, or often鈥攂ut when it does, it routinely restricts European racism temporally to the Holocaust, conflating racism with antisemitism; and it relegates enslavement spatially to Africa and the Americas, equating enslavement with the transatlantic trade. The Roma fall through these temporal and spatial cracks in Europe鈥檚 current politics of memory, which remains incomplete without consideration for the history and the present of anti-Roma racism and for the legacies of Romani enslavement in Europe. When Romani history is approached as European labor history, it illuminates both the parallels with the enslavement of Africans in the transatlantic trade and the racializing tropes and attitudes that make both African-Americans and (European) Roma more vulnerable than other groups to the combined effects of two pandemics鈥攖he ongoing racism and the new coronavirus.

Throughout the European East, the enslavement of the Roma started as a practice of enslaving prisoners of war. It took place on the territory of today鈥檚 Romania during more than five hundred years, as part of a labor regime with an elaborate infrastructure (Achim 1998). After the settlement of large numbers of Roma in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in the principalities of Wallachia and Moldova, enslavement became common there (and sometimes also crossed into Transylvania). Legally distinct from serfdom, slavery developed alongside it in these regions and in some cases continued after serfdom ended. As in the Americas, the enslaved in Moldavia and Wallachia resisted the institution of slavery in a range of ways, predominantly by escaping. Also telling are the parallels with the West European trade in enslaved Africans, who were listed as cargo on ships crossing the Atlantic: one category of the Wallachian law regulating enslavement in the nineteenth century listed 鈥渦nmoving things and G*s.鈥[i] The enslaved鈥攐ften considered as part of a labor unit鈥攂elonged to an estate. Like other forms of property, the estate encompassed land, built environments, tools, and animals. In both Wallachia and Moldova, the legal codes of the early nineteenth century regulated the marriage of the enslaved to each other and to free people. Very much like in the case of plantation slavery in American colonies, the law legislated over other aspects of life the enslaved were considered to owe their master: sexuality and reproduction. Detailed accounts of marriage arrangements in both Wallachian and Moldavian law testify to the priorities of enslavers to both manage the reproduction of labor power over time and prevent racial mixing, while explicitly reserving the right to sexually exploit female slaves (Parvulescu and Boatc膬 2020). As with enslaved African women in the Americas, the trope of sexual availability and promiscuity added to the racialization of Roma women as inferior, uncivilized beings and, in a circular logic, was in turn used to justify their enslavement. In neighboring Transylvania, Habsburg policies at the end of the eighteenth century also attempted to regulate marriage and child rearing among the Roma, resulting in segregationist policies. In particular, obligatory schooling meant that Romani children were sometimes taken away from Romani families and placed in foster homes, a common practice of imperial and colonial rule throughout the world, aimed at disrupting ethnic, religious, and family ties of imperial and colonial subjects (Parvulescu and Boatc膬 2020).

The enslaved in Wallachia and Moldavia were freed in 1855-1856 in the name of Enlightenment policies. A rhetoric of 鈥渇orgiveness鈥 was deployed throughout the emancipation period, leading to the enslaved being 鈥渇orgiven鈥 what they owed. As with the abolition of slavery in the Americas, the two principalities offered compensation to owners for their economic loss; no compensation however, was granted to the enslaved. The translation of Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin into Romanian in 1853 from the French edition of the same year was published with an introduction by one of the leaders of the emancipation movement, Mihail Kog膬lniceanu, albeit his text was censored by the authorities. Nevertheless, he used that opportunity to place the enslavement of Roms in a world-historical framework, where it indeed belonged (Stowe 1853), and to advocate for both the abolition of slavery and the emancipation of peasants from serfdom (R膬dulescu 1955).[ii] Two years later, in 1855, the writer and politician V.A. Urechia published in the abolitionist journal Foiletonul Zimbrului several installments of his unfinished novel Coliba M膬riuc膬i (M膬riuca鈥檚 Cabin), which drew inspiration from Harriet Beecher Stowe鈥檚 novel in depicting Roma enslavement and advocating for its abolition.

Such awareness about the structural similarities of African-American and Roma enslavement has since faded from public discussions and collective memory. Roma history is not part of the school curriculum in Romania or of the self-definition of 鈥淩omanianness.鈥 Quite the contrary. In an effort to be included in the notion of proper Europeanness鈥攁ssociated with whiteness, Christianity, and Occidentality鈥昺any Romanians routinely mobilize anti-Roma racism in forms that range from denouncing the association of Roma with Romanians as false etymology (Tudor 2018) to violent invectives and behavior towards the Roma and active promotion of school segregation as a way of 鈥減rotecting鈥 Romanian schoolchildren (Costache 2020, Matache and Bhabha 2020).The coronavirus pandemic acted as a magnifying glass that made anti-Roma racism both more visible and more easily mobilized in the name of safeguarding the health of the 鈥渘ation.鈥 The first reports of discriminatory restrictions on the mobility of the Roma in the European East made headlines during the first month of various European lockdowns in March 2020 (Krasimirov and Tsolova 2020). Officially, the measures amounting to the de facto building of enclaves and ghettos were legitimized as additional yet necessary steps to reduce the spread of the virus from communities lacking in hygiene and unwilling to respect social distancing. As the service industries throughout Europe closed down in March and April, forcing tens of thousands of migrant laborers from the European East to travel back home, hate speech and racist attacks stigmatizing them as virus carriers by association with the Roma, whether or not they actually belonged to that ethnic group, became rampant (Costache 2020). The racializing trope of contagion runs through all of these instances of exclusion. Whether it is contagion of the European or national body with the 鈥渦ndesirable鈥 Romani ethnicity or that of any healthy body with the virus, the Roma are under constant suspicion. Echoing long-standing racial stereotypes, the perceived threat and constructed fear of contagion connects such exclusions both to the history of enslavement in the region and to the racialization and enslavement of Africans in the Americas.

 

Towards an equal distribution of the right to remember

During the Black Lives Matter protests directed against the statues of enslavers such as Edward Colston in the UK, the practice of tearing down statues was denounced by critics as a purge of collective memory and as an inadequate means to change the unequal structures or racist attitudes in today鈥檚 society. Conversely, supporters of the protest movement and historians commenting the events insisted that collective memory could not only be preserved through monuments, but that tearing them down or removing them did not amount to erasing history. Rather, it meant learning from that history (Blain 2020, Traverso 2020). History鈥檚 lessons are first and foremost preserved through written documents, curated exhibitions, and civic education about the political consequences of historical events. Yet, as bitter US-American confederates remarked after the Civil War, history is written by the winners. Written history is power privilege. Today, perspectives and voices making up global history are multiplying, helping to counter, for many regional contexts and phenomena, what Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie (2009) has dubbed听鈥渢he danger of a single story.鈥 It is high time for Roma history, as well as Roma voices in sociology, political science, and art to join in. It is urgent for a school curriculum that acknowledges Roma enslavement as Romanian history and as a lasting European legacy to become compulsory.听The recent publication of the collective volume 鈥淭he Romanian Problem. An Analysis of Romanian Racism鈥 (Dorobanu and Gheorghe 2019), with contributions by Roma and non-Roma authors, is a significant step in this direction, as is the production of the first movies, short films, and theater plays on the topic of Roma enslavement and sexual exploitation鈥攕ome of them from a Roma perspective (Jude, Aferim 2015; 葮别谤产补苍, Marea Rusine; 葮别谤产补苍, Bilet de iertare).

Written history is thus not synonymous with collective memory. Moreover, both can be amended. At stake is an equal distribution of the right to remember in order to learn from a collective past. In the 1990s, the removal of statues and monuments from the public domain marked the transformation of Eastern European state socialist regimes, as well as a claim to recover the region鈥檚 repressed perspective on history. At the same time, several Romanian towns unveiled statues and busts of Marshal Ion Antonescu, who was responsible for the Ia葯i massacre of Jews and the deportation of the Roma population to Transnistria during World War II. The statues were outlawed after international protests, but some still stand on private properties in Bucharest and elsewhere. As long as the violent history that such displays honor is not made an integral part of a critical European politics of memory, there will be no vaccine against the racism pandemic.

 

Manuela Boatc膬 is Professor of Sociology and Head of School of the Global Studies Programme at the University of Freiburg, Germany. Her work听deals with world-systems analysis, postcolonial and decolonial perspectives, gender in modernity/coloniality, and the geopolitics of knowledge production in Eastern Europe, Latin America, and the Caribbean. She is author of听Global Inequalities beyond Occidentalism (Routledge 2016)听and of Laboratoare ale modernit膬葲ii. Europa de Est 葯i America Latin膬 卯n (co)rela葲ie, (IDEA 2020). She is co-editor (with Vilna Treitler) of Dynamics of Inequalities in a Global Perspective (Current Sociology听2016). She is currently finishing a book (with Anca Parvulescu) on inter-imperial and transimperial dynamics in twentieth century Transylvania.

References:

Achim, Viorel. 1998. The Roma in Romanian History. Budapest: C今日看料 Press.

Adichie, Chimamanda. 2009. The Danger of a Single Story, TED-Talk

Blain, Keisha N. 2020. 鈥淒estroying Confederate monuments isn鈥檛 鈥榚rasing鈥 history. It鈥檚 learning from it鈥, The Washington Post, June 19, 2020.

Costache, Ioanida. 2020. 鈥淯ntil we are able to gas them like the Nazis, the Roma will infect the nation:鈥 Roma and the ethnicization of COVID-19 in Romania, DOR, April 22, 2020, (accessed March 15, 2021).

Doroban葲u, Oana and Gheorghe, Carmen, eds. 2019: Problema rom芒neasc膬. O analiz膬 a听 rasismului rom芒nesc.Bucharest: Hecate

El-Tayeb, Fatima. 2011.听European others: Queering ethnicity in postnational Europe. University of Minnesota Press.

Kay, Goldman Jonah. 2020. Coronavirus pushes Bulgaria鈥檚 Roma further into the shadows, politico.eu, available online: (accessed March 15, 2021)

Krasimirov, Angel and听Tsolova, Tsvetelia. 2020.: Bulgaria’s Roma say some coronavirus measures are discriminatory, reuters.com, available online: (accessed March 29, 2021)

Matache, Margareta, and Bhabha, Jacqueline. 2020. 鈥淎nti-Roma Racism is Spiraling during COVID-19 Pandemic.鈥澨Health and human rights,听22, 1 (June): 379鈥382.

Oxfam. 2021. The Inequality Virus. Bringing Together a World Torn Apart by Coronavirus through a Fair, Just and Sustainable Economy, Oxfam Briefing Paper, available online: https://oxfamilibrary.openrepository.com/bitstream/handle/10546/621149/bp-the-inequality-virus-250121-en.pdf (accessed March 31, 2021)

R膬dulescu, Andreiu. 1955. Legiuirea Caragea. Bucharest: Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Rom芒ne.

Stowe, Harriett Beecher. 1853. Coliba lui Mo葯u Toma. Translated by Teodor Codrescu. Ia葯i: Tipografia Buciumul Rom芒n.

Traverso, Enzo. 2020. 鈥淭earing Down Statues Doesn鈥檛 Erase History, It Makes Us See It More Clearly鈥, Jacobin, June 24, 2020, available online: (last accessed March 31, 2021)

Tudor, Alyosxa. 2018. The Desire for Categories.听Feminist Review Blog. (accessed March 15, 2021)

Media productions:

Radu Jude (dir.) (2015), Aferim!,

Alina Serban (dir.) (2020), Bilet de iertare,

Alina Serban (dir.) (2018), Marea rusine,

 

Photo: Reichstag building is reflecting in the water of memorial dedicated to the Sinti and Roma victims murdered during the Second World War | Shutterstock

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