[Congressional Record Volume 153, Number 56 (Friday, March 30, 2007)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E721-E722]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMISSION ON SLAVERY ESTABLISHED IN ROMANIA
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HON. ALCEE L. HASTINGS
of florida
in the house of representatives
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Mr. HASTINGS of Florida. Madam Speaker, 200 years ago, the movement
for the abolition of slavery achieved a major victory with the passage
of a British law banning the trade in slaves--an anniversary that is
getting heightened attention with the release of a new movie
chronicling those events. Ending the trade in slaves was not the same
as actually ending slavery, but it was a critical beginning to the end.
Other developments have also caused us to revisit the legacy of
slavery in our own country. This includes the decision by the
legislature of the Commonwealth of Virginia to apologize for that
state's role in the slave trade, and reports that Maryland and Missouri
are considering similar steps.
With a view to our own country's painful and complicated history of
slavery, and as the first African-American Chairman of the Helsinki
Commission, I was particularly interested to learn about commemorations
held on February 20th in Romania, marking the beginning of the end of
slavery in that country. In the case of Romania, however, slaves were
not kidnapped and transported from a faraway land. Instead, those
enslaved were Roma, a people that had settled in Romania by the 14th
century.
This ethnic group--somewhere around 1,000 years ago--migrated to
Europe from what is now India. Today, Roma make up the largest ethnic
minority in the European Union, conservatively estimated at 10 million
people.
Romania, with an estimated 2 million Roma, has the largest Romani
minority on the continent. And in that country, beginning in the 14th
century and ending with the establishment of the modern Romanian state
in 1864, slavery to the crown, to nobility, and to the monasteries was
the exclusive status of Roma.
To be clear, Roma were not serfs; they were slaves, bought and sold
like chattel. In 1837, the great Romanian historian and statesman
Mihail Kogalniceanu described their situation as follows:
On the streets of the lasi of my youth, I saw human beings wearing
chains on their arms and legs, others with iron clamps around their
foreheads, and still others with metal collars about their necks. Cruel
beatings, and other punishments such as starvation, being hung over
smoking fires, solitary imprisonment and being thrown naked into the
snow or the frozen rivers, such was the fate of the wretched Tsigan
[Rom]. The sacred institution of the family was likewise made a
mockery: women were wrested from their men, and daughters from their
parents. Children were torn from the breasts of those who brought them
into this world, separated from their mothers and fathers and from each
other, and sold to different buyers from the four corners of Romania,
like cattle. Neither humanity nor religious sentiment, nor even civil
law, offered protection for these beings. It was a terrible sight, and
one which cried out to Heaven.
Unfortunately, it appears that the history of slavery in Romania--and
the impact of slavery on the lives of Roma--has received little
scholarly attention. As a corollary, little is taught in Romanian
schools about this important chapter in the nation's history.
I was very heartened, therefore, to learn that Romanian Prime
Minister Calin Popescu-Tariceanu announced on February 20 that the
Romanian Government will establish a commission to study the
enslavement of Roma. The National Agency for Roma will play a central
role in setting up this commission, and the
[[Page E722]]
commission will produce recommendations for the teaching of Romani
history and promoting Romani culture.
Madam Speaker, there is an awful lot of hand wringing about the
deplorable situation of Roma today. Across the OSCE region, they face
profound discrimination, sometimes manifested in the worst forms of
racially motivated violence. Moreover, in 2003, the United Nations
Development Program issued a report on the situation in five Central
European countries, concluding that, ``by measures ranging from
literacy to infant mortality to basic nutrition, most of the region's
Roma endure living conditions closer to those of Sub-Saharan Africa
than to Europe. ``
But if you want to know where you're going, you have to know where
you came from; if we want to change this status quo, we have to
understand the past, which makes this new commission vital for Roma.
With respect to Roma, that means three things. First, it means
understanding the history of Roma before World War II, and in the case
of Romania and Moldova, that requires teaching, studying, and
acknowledging the enslavement of Roma. Second, the genocide of Roma
during World War II must also be remembered, and more must be done to
study and understand the diverse experiences of Roma during the war in
different European countries. Finally, we must put an end to the
pernicious, dangerous myth that communism was ``good'' for Roma.
With all this in mind, Prime Minister Tariceanu's initiative is
really an extremely important step in addressing so many of the
problems that Roma face today. I commend him for his leadership and I
look forward to following closely the work of this body.
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