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Sinti and Roma during WW2
A group of Romani
prisoners, awaiting instructions from their German
captors, sit in an open area near the fence in the Belzec
concentration camp.
Photo credit:
Archives of Mechanical Documentation, courtesy of USHMM
Photo Archives
Romani
(commonly but incorrectly called Gypsies) were considered by
the Nazis to be social outcasts. Under the Weimar
Republic--the German government from 1918 to 1933--anti-Romani
laws became widespread. These laws required them to register
with officials, prohibited them from traveling freely, and
sent them to forced-labor camps. When the Nazis came to power,
those laws remained in effect--and were expanded. Under the
July 1933 sterilization law, many Romani were sterilized
against their will.
In November 1933,
the "Law Against Dangerous Habitual Criminals" was passed.
Under this law, the police began arresting Romani along with
others labeled "asocial." Beggars, vagrants, the homeless,
and alcoholics were arrested and sent to concentration
camps.
The Nuremberg racial
laws of September 15, 1935, did not specifically mention
Romani, but they were included along with Jews and "Negroes"
as "racially distinctive" minorities with "alien blood." As
such, their marriage to "Aryans" was prohibited. They were
also deprived of their civil rights.
By the summer of
1938, large numbers of German and Austrian Romani were
rounded up and sent to concentration camps. There they wore
black triangular patches (the symbol for "asocials") or
green patches (the symbol for professional criminals) and
sometimes the letter "Z."
As was the case for
the Jews, the outbreak of war in September 1939 radicalized
the Nazi regime's policies towards the Romani. Their
"resettlement to the East" and their mass murder closely
parallel the systematic deportations and killings of the
Jews. It is difficult to determine exactly how many Romani
were murdered. The estimates range from 220,000 to 500,000.
Source: Dr. William
L. Shulman, A State of Terror: Germany 1933-1939.
Bayside, New York: Holocaust Resource Center and Archives.
Sinti and Roma: Victims
of the Nazi Era provides additional information about
this victim group, including an historical background and
information on Robert Ritter, a Nazi racial scientist.
Bibliography of sources
related to the Sinti and Roma in the Holocaust.
Extensive article about the
fate of the Romani peoples in Germany and German-occupied
countries.
An article about genocide of
the Roma in the Holocaust.
A history of Roma
persecution in Europe from 1589 to the present by Harold
Tanner.
An article about the Romani
victims of Nazi terror by Myriam Novitch.
Photographs of Roma during
the Third Reich.
A short history of the Roma
and their fate under the Third Reich from the Mining
Company.
News release by Richard
Murphy about the commemoration of Romani victims at
Buchenwald.
A glossary of Roma terms.
Information on the evolution
of Nazi policy toward the Roma by Ben Austin.
More information on the
treatment and murder of the Roma.
Notes on the Nazi
extermination of the Roma.
Notes on the legal status of
the Roma in the Third Reich.
Sinti and Roma bibliography
from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
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