ANTI-DEFAMATION, Major Group

Information

ANTI-DEFAMATION, Major Group

ANTI-DEFAMATION (formerly IRADL, International Romani Anti Defamation League) respectfully advocates human rights for Roma across the globe by identifying abuses and redirecting offenders with relevant Khetanes resources.

Proposed projects:

a. Collaborates with all MAJOR GROUPS to maintain current menu of Khetanes resources to present as needed to members, the public, even offenders;

b. Gathers and shares with members best practices and research for conflict resolution and non-violent communication;

c. Identifies current human rights abuses (e.g. MBFGW, American Gypsies, column Zsolt Bayer) and applies non-violent communication to confront the offenders.

COORDINATORS: Ciuin Ferrin, Valery Novoselsky, Tina Carr, Annemarie Schoene, Els de Groen, Viola Hinz-Hassan Pour Razavi

Members: 50
Latest Activity: Jun 17, 2016

Discussion Forum

United Methodist Women Church Study

Started by Ciuin Ferrin. Last reply by Kristina Burbank Jul 15, 2014. 1 Reply

Dear All, The United Methodist Women of the United Methodist church are involved in a two year study of the condition of the Romani with an emphasis on Eastern Europe. They are putting a great deal of effort and funding into building churches and…Continue

DOSTA! 8 April International Romani Day

Started by Qristina Zavačková Cummings. Last reply by Glenda Bailey-Mershon Mar 8, 2013. 2 Replies

CALL TO ACTION FOR INTERNATIONAL ROMA DAY!TELL HUNGARY “DOSTA!”F.R.E.E. The Foundation for Romani Education and EqualityClick on the link for…Continue

Pre-launch of RomaReact.org – mapping online platform challenging stereotypes and prejudices Roma people face in today´s Europe

Started by Gabriela Hrabanova. Last reply by Stoimen Oct 26, 2012. 1 Reply

ERGO Network pre-launched unique website RomaReact.org at the occasion of the Day of Europe on May 9, 2012. RomaReact.org is an interactive multimedia mapping platform building a global online community seeking social change and justice by engaging…Continue

French Socialist Party presidential candidate calls for internment camps for the Roma

Started by Qristina Zavačková Cummings. Last reply by Hans Wahler May 10, 2012. 8 Replies

In a February 12 interview on Canal Plus TV, François Hollande, Socialist Party candidate for president in the upcoming elections, proposed as a “solution” to the presence in France of Roma European Union (EU) citizens “the creation of camps … to…Continue

Tags: racism, Roma, France, anti-ziganism

Comment Wall

Comment by Stoimen on December 30, 2011 at 23:55

Thank you, Glenda!

Happy New Year, baxtalo Nevo Bersh!

Els

Comment by Ciuin Ferrin on January 31, 2012 at 10:47

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Service for the Victims of O Baro Porrajmos

Service for the Victims of O Baro Porrajmos
by Ciuin Ferrin on Sunday, January 29, 2012
Last night The People's Church in Cedar Rapids held a wonderful candle lighting ceremony for Rromani victims of the Holocaust. I wanted to share with you some of the beauty we shared.
Reverend Tom Capo opened with a call to join us. Here is his text.
"Good evening and welcome to People's Church Unitarian Universalist. I an the Reverend Tom Capo, minister here at People's. Last week I heard about the Romani people. I held certain misconceptions and prejudices that I was not even completely aware of. Much of what I knew of the Romani people was based on movies or television shows- broad strokes about a people I really knew little about. Generalizations that painted a picture of a people who stole and cheated anyone they could and put curses on others. But as we all know, prejudices and oppressions are based on these generalizations. I did not know that the United Nations had excluded the Romani people from the annual Holocaust Memorial services. I did not know how many Romani were killed during the Holocaust. I did not know that the Romani people were being oppressed throughout Europe. I did not know that some Romani in the United States were afraid to embrace and express their Romani heritage because they would be oppressed here or their business would lose customers if they expressed their heritage. I did not know, but now I do. I am awakened to this injustice, and I feel a need to support this community and to open this church to a remembrance for this people. I have learned that there are some Romani people believe that when they die, their soul will remain alive so long as they are remembered. As we worship tonight, let us keep the souls of the Romani people who suffered during the Holocaust and who are suffering throughout the world in our thoughts and prayers. Let us remember them."
This statement from Els de Groen, President of the World Artist Initiative Khetanes, was read aloud.
"Imagine a world with plenty of jobs, proper housing, health care, clean water, and proper nutrition for every human being. It would be a world without discrimination; a world where human diversity would be a source of inspiration for arts and education; a world where mankind would appreciate one another for their beauty and uniqueness as we do flora and fauna of the world. Now, take a look around our world: unemployment, homelessness, disease, and hunger. It's a world of booms and slumps, and of wealth and suffering. In this world, human variety is not perceived as richness but as a threat or potential for corruption.
Seventy years ago, Hitler's racial doctrines convinced people that once Jews and Roma were removed from existence, the Third Reich would be a paradise for the Aryan race. Approximately 6 million Jews and 1-3 million Roma perished in the darkest period in Europe's history. Though over seven decades have passed, survivors of the Holocaust must be shocked at how many of today's social attitudes parallel with those of the 1930s. Once again, in the face of many ills plaguing the world, the human race is resorting to populism, calling for scapegoats. Once more, Europe leads the way in this modern day witch hunt, and once more, the Romani people are being victimized. Fingerprinted and registered like common criminals, murdered in arson attacks, collectively deported, and defamed by the social media, the Romani people once again face the crimes they endured in the Holocaust and the situation worsens with each passing day.
Using our imagination and intellect is not a luxury only to be engaged in during times of prosperity, but more so as an absolute necessity in times of recession. We must use our ability to reason to keep racism from spreading. After all, history does not repeat itself. It is us that repeats history. We are once more allowing the senseless deaths of the Nazi victims, and only the sense to be had is in the words "Never Again". "Never Again" should these crimes be endured by the human race. Use your imagination! Imagine that we are capable of creating a world that exposes the fairy tale lies of racial superiority. This one act of mental power won't alone create the ideal, prosperous world, but it will be a far better one and the best memorial for millions murdered in the Porrajmos and the Shoah."
This was the call to meditation and prayer.
"Let us join together in prayer or meditation. Spirit of love, God of many names, be with us and honor the Romani people. A human life is sacred. It is sacred in its living and it is sacred in its dying. We grieve at the loss of so many Romani people; people who lost their lives for no other reason than the culture they were born in and that they cherished in their hearts. We also grieve for those Romani people who are oppressed; oppressed for no other reason than the culture they were born in and that they cherish in their hearts. We will remember those who have passed on, but we know in our hearts there is more that needs to be done for those alive today. We must reach out with our hands to help those in need, we must let them know that they are not alone, and there are those of us who will walk with them, who see them as people who deserve the universal human rights that all people deserve, who see them not as caricatures or as objects, or as the "Other", but as real people, with feelings of love, and hope, and sorrow, just like we have, with the same human frailties and pain that we all carry. They are no different than us, but they need us because there are some people in this world who treat them as the "Other" - to be shunned and banished and oppressed. Let is remember that nothing can take the place of outstretched hands of human sympathy and understanding, the spoken and silent assurance given by friends - let us remember we have all walked the way of sorrow, of pain, of hopelessness in times past and felt loss. Let us assure them that when they find themselves feeling sorrow or loss, pain or oppression, that they do not walk alone."
And Dr. Ian Hancock sent these words to be read as the votive candles, placed on the circle of our flag, were being lit.
"For us in the United States, the horror of the Holocaust resonates so harshly in our memory because of the enormity of the loss of life it caused, because it occurred in the West and because it happened in living memory. Hitler's attempt to create his Master Race and to dominate all the lands around him, involved both military action and genocide. The two populations targeted for annihilation following the directive of the Final Solution were the Jews and the Roma, both people's losing between a half and three-quarters of their respective populations in Nazi-occupied Europe. We commemorate those tragic losses each year in ceremonies such as the one we are attending today. But we must also be fiercely aware that unless we continue to remember and examine such genocides, history can repeat itself. There have been other genocides since 1945. The Romani people have been subjected to the very same treatment in post Holocaust Europe that Hitler imposed upon them in his Third Reich: there have been forced arrests and incarcerations; there have been sterilizations, there have been neo-Nazi murders, all recorded in this the twenty-first century. We must be ever vigilant, ever alert to the early warning signs of another impending genocide. God bless the memories of those lost in the past, and God protect those who are being targeted in the present time."
O Porrajmos Education Society would like to thank the People's Church for their kindness and generosity in this beautiful ceremony, a ceremony the UN was unwilling to give us.
Comment by Viola Hinz-Hassan Pour Razavi on January 31, 2012 at 11:22

Thank you, Ciuin, for sharing this, it is overwhelming, very touching.

Comment by Glenda Bailey-Mershon on January 31, 2012 at 14:36
Wonderful worl, Ciuin. It is because the Unitarian-Universalists are open to such learning that I have suggested we include them in any cultural tours we might organize. They can be strong allies, because they believe in acting on their religion.
Comment by Stoimen on January 31, 2012 at 14:50

It is also one more proof of the extremely big power of prejudice and of those who spread it. The positive message is that this power can be broken. Reverend Tom Capo sincerely admitted his misconceptions and prejudices and then openly acted according his new understanding and knowledge. That will empower you too.

Comment by Glenda Bailey-Mershon on January 31, 2012 at 18:44
Yes, it is great to share these successes, because it gives us hope. Really, a very wonderful thing you did, Ciuin. Maybe spread it even more widely? And I would like to thank Rev. Capo. Could we send him a note?
Comment by Ciuin Ferrin on January 31, 2012 at 20:02

I plan to send him a note today from O Porrajmos, but a second note from Khetanes would be even better. Here is the address: The People's Church  4980 Gordon Avenue NW  ·  Cedar Rapids, IA 52405.

 

Baxt,

C

 

Comment by Yvonne Slee on May 4, 2012 at 23:33

I wrote a letter of protest to an Australian author called Julie Harris who wrote a book, and the title was Gypsy. She wrote absolute rubbish quite upsetting it was, so I sent the letter of protest from our Romani org to her after Ian exposed this gadje writer.
This is what I wrote to her in my letter of protest
----------------------------------------------------------
Julie,
Such racist writing is what we ask our fellow human beings Not to do. Would you write like that in a book about the Jewish community? And come across like some kind of discriminative racist? Our main monitor, mentor and adviser on Romani issues has spotted your discriminating book titled 'Gypsy'.
Stop it right here and write nothing of the sort again! Leave our culture alone and stop using our name Gypsy. We don't go out and write some rubbish about your culture as then you would complain I'm sure.
It's not Australian behavior what you have shown. It's against the Australian constitution to write or treat other cultures without regard for their feelings use them for your own gain, put them down spin lies to make money, it's illegal to write such a book in such a manner.

Yes we are here watching out so people don't do us wrong. The Romani community is here too in Australia. We want you to put this book on your back shelf and let it collect dust.
We are Real People. A Real Culture. Read before you hurt a culture, before you do wrong!
Message from the
http://www.sintiromanicommunity.org/
http://rromaniconnect.org/

This is what she did... Read below. How horrid and damaging she wrote for one reason only to make a buck on the back of our culture which she knows nothing about. These people make me sick they are hurting our children. A gadje writer without any morals.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Read all of the below please:

Julie Harris is the Australian author of The Longest Winter,

Julie lives with her husband in a small country town on the Darling Downs in Queensland, Australia. Go to http://www.julieh.com.au for more information.
This biography was provided by the author or their representative.

April 2012

NEW ON THE BANDVARDO!

STEALING! FORTUNE TELLING! SHIFTLESS DAD! YOU GET IT ALL, IN

 GYPSY

by

Julie Harris

 


Kizzy is 15, outwardly angelic, pretty, manipulative and when it suits, deliberately malicious. She's a devil in disguise and too many people have let her innocence fool them.

The product of a botched abortion, Kizzy is raised by her grandmother in a small, tight community of travelers ­ a Gypsy community.

Ignored by her mother and not knowing who her father is, the only male influences in her life are her horse-thieving grandpa and her cousin, Albie, who distrusts everybody.

Kizzy inherited her mother's beauty as well as The Gift. She, too, is a fortune teller but she only wants to be loved and what Kizzy wants, Kizzy gets, usually without thinking of the consequences.

Yes, Kizzy has a gift to die for.  And some unfortunate people do.

Comment by Stoimen on May 5, 2012 at 1:16

Thank you for posting this, Yvonne! I will contact Ciuin Ferrin and Glenda Bailey-Mershon. We have to react on behalf of Khetanes!

Els

Comment by Ciuin Ferrin on May 5, 2012 at 3:18

I have already contacted the author on behalf of Khetanes. I am waiting for her reply.

C

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Discussion Forum

United Methodist Women Church Study

Started by Ciuin Ferrin. Last reply by Kristina Burbank Jul 15, 2014. 1 Reply

Dear All, The United Methodist Women of the United Methodist church are involved in a two year study of the condition of the Romani with an emphasis on Eastern Europe. They are putting a great deal of effort and funding into building churches and…Continue

DOSTA! 8 April International Romani Day

Started by Qristina Zavačková Cummings. Last reply by Glenda Bailey-Mershon Mar 8, 2013. 2 Replies

CALL TO ACTION FOR INTERNATIONAL ROMA DAY!TELL HUNGARY “DOSTA!”F.R.E.E. The Foundation for Romani Education and EqualityClick on the link for…Continue

Pre-launch of RomaReact.org – mapping online platform challenging stereotypes and prejudices Roma people face in today´s Europe

Started by Gabriela Hrabanova. Last reply by Stoimen Oct 26, 2012. 1 Reply

ERGO Network pre-launched unique website RomaReact.org at the occasion of the Day of Europe on May 9, 2012. RomaReact.org is an interactive multimedia mapping platform building a global online community seeking social change and justice by engaging…Continue

French Socialist Party presidential candidate calls for internment camps for the Roma

Started by Qristina Zavačková Cummings. Last reply by Hans Wahler May 10, 2012. 8 Replies

In a February 12 interview on Canal Plus TV, François Hollande, Socialist Party candidate for president in the upcoming elections, proposed as a “solution” to the presence in France of Roma European Union (EU) citizens “the creation of camps … to…Continue

Tags: racism, Roma, France, anti-ziganism

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