They were originally refugees fleeing from India. That is why their language and style of dress is reminiscent of Indian culture. Over the centuries they have inter-married and their culture has changed, similar to European Jews. But the Roma are still highly stigmatized all over Europe and many never found a permanent home. Many countries never allowed Roma to settle permanently (or own land). From a Marxist point of view, they are basically considered part of the "reserve army of labor" by capitalists, as many Roma can't afford to invest in real estate, stocks, or other capitalist instruments, so they have to work for wages. Today, most employed Roma are low-paid service workers, working in the "gig economy" or other jobs in the informal sector. They are often super-exploited (like illegal immigrants in America). But there is also a very high rate of unemployment among the Roma, due to discrimination that is similar to how homeless people and ex-prisoners are discriminated against in the United States.
TL;DR: the all he negative stereotypes that Americans have about homeless people, Europeans have about Roma. And the solutions are similar: free public housing, jobs programs, and fighting discrimination.
Statistics on Roma employment: http://www.errc.org/roma-rights-journal/systemic-exclusion-of-roma-from-employment
Short video on Roma employment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0m70pLQAtc4
I don't exactly get what you're trying to say. In communist Czechoslovakia Roma where forcefully housed and tried to be assimilated into the larger society, so not exactly a good take
Irish travellers descend from Irish who took off for in reason or the other in the seventeenth century. Before genetic sequencing a popular theory was that they were a remnant of an indigenous population.
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They were originally refugees fleeing from India. That is why their language and style of dress is reminiscent of Indian culture. Over the centuries they have inter-married and their culture has changed, similar to European Jews. But the Roma are still highly stigmatized all over Europe and many never found a permanent home. Many countries never allowed Roma to settle permanently (or own land). From a Marxist point of view, they are basically considered part of the "reserve army of labor" by capitalists, as many Roma can't afford to invest in real estate, stocks, or other capitalist instruments, so they have to work for wages. Today, most employed Roma are low-paid service workers, working in the "gig economy" or other jobs in the informal sector. They are often super-exploited (like illegal immigrants in America). But there is also a very high rate of unemployment among the Roma, due to discrimination that is similar to how homeless people and ex-prisoners are discriminated against in the United States.
TL;DR: the all he negative stereotypes that Americans have about homeless people, Europeans have about Roma. And the solutions are similar: free public housing, jobs programs, and fighting discrimination.
Statistics on Roma employment: http://www.errc.org/roma-rights-journal/systemic-exclusion-of-roma-from-employment
Short video on Roma employment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0m70pLQAtc4
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Now now, the English hate Roma as well. Irish travellers aren't the only travellers in the UK.
Tbh doubt most here know the difference between Roma and Irish travellers they're all just g**** and pi*** to them
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Roma would be considered the Lumpenprols that Marx hated so much.
Uhhh
I don't exactly get what you're trying to say. In communist Czechoslovakia Roma where forcefully housed and tried to be assimilated into the larger society, so not exactly a good take
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They're not?
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Irish travellers descend from Irish who took off for in reason or the other in the seventeenth century. Before genetic sequencing a popular theory was that they were a remnant of an indigenous population.
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Under Stalin, I think, itinerancy was banned, some Roma were given apartments and some were pushed to start collective farms but didn't really stick.