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Soon, the Soviet authorities have conducted "repatriation operations" for the Roma of Romania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. Two million Roma were relocated to the future Romani state in 1947, and the majority of the original Romanian and Hungarian population were expelled to their respective countries. Only Maramures and Szekelyland had sizeable non-Roma minorities to this day. | Soon, the Soviet authorities have conducted "repatriation operations" for the Roma of Romania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. Two million Roma were relocated to the future Romani state in 1947, and the majority of the original Romanian and Hungarian population were expelled to their respective countries. Only Maramures and Szekelyland had sizeable non-Roma minorities to this day. | ||
Nevertheless, due to communist policies, dissent was rife; the government put down a strike in Satu Mare in 1958 causing 234 deaths was a notorious example, as well as the government putting down protests in 1968 in sympathy for the Czech reformists. In 1971, the World Romani Congress was formed to represent the Roma diaspora and call for the democratization of the Romani State. | |||
===Romani People's Republic=== | ===Romani People's Republic=== |
Revision as of 22:01, 27 July 2020
Romani Republic Manshutka Romani | |
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Motto: "Opre Roma" | |
Anthem: Gelem, Gelem | |
Location of Romani State, Romanistan | |
Capital | Kolosvar |
Largest city | (largest_city) |
Official languages | Romani (official), Romanian, Hungarian, Ukrainian |
Ethnic groups | (ethnic_groups) |
Government | Unitary Parliamentary Republic |
• (leader_title1) | (leader_name1) |
• (leader_title2) | (leader_name2) |
• (leader_title3) | (leader_name3) |
• (leader_title4) | (leader_name4) |
• (leader_title5) | (leader_name5) |
(sovereignty_type) (sovereignty_note) | |
• (...event1) | (...date1) |
• (...event2) | (...date2) |
• (...event3) | (...date3) |
• (...event4) | (...date4) |
Area | |
• Total | [convert: invalid number] ((...rank)) |
• Water (%) | (percent_water) |
Population | |
• (...year) estimate | (population_estimate) ((...rank)') |
• (...year) census | (population_census) |
• Density | [convert: invalid number] ((...rank)) |
GDP (PPP) | (...year) estimate |
• Total | (GDP_PPP) ((...rank)) |
• Per capita | (...per_capita) (...rank) |
GDP (nominal) | (...year) estimate |
• Total | (GDP_nominal) ((...rank)) |
• Per capita | (...per_capita) ((...rank)) |
HDI ((...year)) | (HDI) Error: Invalid HDI value ((...rank)) |
Currency | Love (RRL) |
Time zone | UTCutc_offset (time_zone) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC(utc_offset_DST) ((time_zone_DST)) |
(DST_note) | |
Calling code | (calling_code) |
Internet TLD | .rr |
(footnotes) |
Romani State (Romanian: Romani Stato /(/ˈrɒməni stəto/), officially the Romani Republic (Manshutka Romani), is a country located in Europe. It shares borders with Ukraine in the North, Hungary in the West, and Romania in the south and East. It's capital is Romanivar.
Romani people arrived to Europe from India on the 12th century and spread throughout the continent. Most of them were enslaved by Europeans, they also were not well viewed by Christians because of the practice of hand-reading and fortune-telling and they were also expelled from different cities and regions. Antiziganist legislations were common in Europe, especially against their nomad lifestyle. Nazi Germany declared Romani along with the Jews as "enemies of the race-based state" and they were almost annihilated in Nazi occupied Europe, the Romani Holocaust is known by Romani people as Porrajmos (devouration) or Samudaripen (mass killing).
After World War II, the Soviets punished both Romania and Hungary which were both Axis Powers due to their anti-Ziganist and anti-Semitic policies. Portions of Romania and Hungary were given to a neutral zone, with most of the prewar population ordered to be "repatriated" to Romania and Hungary. They were replaced in turn by Romani refugees, which were given a state of own provided they become loyal to the Soviet Union. The Romani People's Republic was founded in April 8, 1947 from the transitional Spviet occupation authorities, and ordered to sort the Romani migrants and resettle them into collective farms.
History
General
The region has a varied history. It was once part of the Kingdom of Dacia (82 BC–106 AD). In 106 AD the Roman Empire conquered the territory, systematically exploiting its resources. After the Roman legions withdrew in 271 AD, it was overrun by a succession of various tribes, bringing it under the control of the Carpi, Visigoths, Huns, Gepids, Avars and Slavs. From 9th to 11th century Bulgarians ruled Transylvania, including the future Romani state.
The Magyars conquered much of Central Europe at the end of the 9th century and for almost six hundred years, Transylvania had been a voivodeship in the Kingdom of Hungary. After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, and the Hungarian defeat by the Ottomans, Transylvania became a semi-independent principality (Principality of Transylvania) under local Hungarian nobility rule but owing suzerainty to the Ottoman empire, then a province (Principality/Grand Principality of Transylvania) of the Habsburg Monarchy/Austrian Empire as being Land of the Hungarian Crown, and after 1848, again from 1867 to 1918 incorporated to the Kingdom of Hungary within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The dual monarchy dissolved after World War I.
The ethnic Romanians, who formed the majority population of Transylvania, elected representatives who proclaimed the Union with Romania, on 1 December 1918. The Proclamation of Union of Alba Iulia was adopted by the Deputies of the Romanians from Transylvania, supported one month later by the vote of the Deputies of the Saxons from Transylvania. Eventually in 1920 the Treaty of Trianon assigned Transylvania to the Kingdom of Romania.
Romani Settlement
It is assumed that the first Roma arrived on Romanian territory around 1241, in correspondence with the invasion of the Mongols of Eastern Europe. Jonathan Fox claims that historical sources trace this event back to the 11th century. Another researcher, Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu, traced back to a document by Mircea the Elder that suggest migration from the 12th century.
In a document of 1385 the voivoda Dan I of Wallachia donates the possessions of the Tismana monastery to the Vodița monastery of Drobeta-Turnu Severin , owned by his uncle Vladislav I of Wallachia , and which had 40 "ațigani" inside.
After coming to Romania, they were soon enslaved by local boyars and Orthodox monasteries. Slave conditions were often inhumane, and many times Roma could not leave the property of their masters. Traditional Roma customs were banned in many places. For example in Transylvania, if a Roma spoke the Romani language he was punished with twenty-five lashes. Most of the Roma were woodcutters, horse breeders and musicians.
During the 14th and 15th centuries there were very few slaves in the cities. Only from the beginning of the 16th century, when monasteries began to open in cities, did the monks bring the Roma with them and soon even the bourgeois citizens began to use them for various tasks. The Roma lived in settlements consisting of sălaşe,rudimentary dwellings, established in some suburbs, which were then called țigănie (from țigan which in Romanian means Romani) and soon, in almost all cities, Roma can be found.
Emancipation Movement
Romani were officially emancipated from slavery in Transylvania in 1700 and in the neighboring Romanian Principalities in 1866. However, they are still treated as an unwanted minority and forced to manual labor.
Founding of the Romani State
During 1944, the Soviets encountered heavier Romanian and Hungarian resistance against their occupation. In a meeting with the Politburo, Lavrentiy Beria toyed with the idea of establishing a Transylvanian buffer state between Hungary and Romania with a third group. He noted that the Romani are the only other people who don't have an equivalent ethnic homeland to be deported, and he said that "with proper guidance, the Romani will be a proper proletarian state, not rootless." Although Stalin repressed Romani intellectuals in the 1930s, he then approved of the plan, seeing a way to ingratiate himself with the Western Allies and elicit goodwill by establishing a homeland for a persecuted people. Stalin then released some Romani intellectuals and assigned Soviet Romani officials to Northern Transylvania.
Stalin then convinced the Western Allies that Northern Transylvania would be a state for the Roma, instead of being returned to Romania or Hungary. The Soviets then chose Juraj Miker, a Slovak Communist Romani partisan leader, as interim leader, a position that became permanent for him.
Soon, the Soviet authorities have conducted "repatriation operations" for the Roma of Romania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. Two million Roma were relocated to the future Romani state in 1947, and the majority of the original Romanian and Hungarian population were expelled to their respective countries. Only Maramures and Szekelyland had sizeable non-Roma minorities to this day.
Nevertheless, due to communist policies, dissent was rife; the government put down a strike in Satu Mare in 1958 causing 234 deaths was a notorious example, as well as the government putting down protests in 1968 in sympathy for the Czech reformists. In 1971, the World Romani Congress was formed to represent the Roma diaspora and call for the democratization of the Romani State.
Romani People's Republic
Juraj Miker became the first President of the independent Romani People's Republic. Nomadism is banned, and all people are herded into either collective farms or cities. Because the Romani were considered a "victim" nation, the remaining factories there were not removed. The RPR, however, were required by the Soviets to supply them with minerals in exchange of aid. 20,000 people were either executed or imprisoned for collaboration, "parasitism", and refusal to work. Neighboring East European countries forcibly patriated most of their Romani to the Romani State, and an elaborate surveillance system was put into place. The Romani State's economic growth was said to be only matched by fellow Communist country Albania; the Romani state's national income was 23% and 51% higher than the world and European average, respectively. The Romani State received a greater proportion of aid from the Soviet Union than any other East European country.
The Romani People's Republic was general perceived as loyal to the Soviet Union, and it helped put down anti-Soviet uprisings in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. However, it broke with the Soviet line concerning Israel during the Israeli-Arab War, citing historical experience and the need to convert Israel to the Soviet side. Because of ethnic ties, the Romani were also used as intermediaries between the Soviets and the Indians.
Politics
The Romani State operates under a parliamentary system as a presidential and democratic republic with universal suffrage.
There are four branches of government: the Congress, the Parliament, the Executive, and the Kris. The President is the head of the Executive Branch, called the Secretariat, and is considered to be the head of state and government of the Romani State. The President must be of Romani nationality, speaks the Romani language, and at least thirty years of age. The President is elected for a four year term, can be re-elected only once and consecutively. He organizes the Parliament's two sessions.
The Congress and the Parliament, although are technically separate branches of government, are deemed to be the lower and upper houses of the Romani State's legislative. Requirements for both are at lest twenty-five years of age, can read or write, and have no criminal record.
Legal system
The Romani State has a two-tier court system. At the lowest level are magistrate courts, situated in most cities across the country. The highest tier is the Supreme Court (known in Romani as simply the Kris, located in the capital; it serves a dual role as the highest court of appeals and the highest court of justice. In the latter role, the Kris rules as a court of first instance, allowing individuals, both citizens and non-citizens, to petition against the decisions of state authorities.
The Romani State's legal system combines civil law and traditional Romani law (or Rromano zakono). It is based on the principle of stare decisis (precedent) and is an adversarial system, where the parties in the suit bring evidence before the court. Court cases are decided by professional judges rather than juries. The more conservative political parties want to convert to traditional Romani in its entirety, seeing the current law as "unjust" to both prosecutors and defendants and seem to value punishment more than rehabilitation.
Military
The Romani state spends 1.3 percent of its GDP on defense. The Romani Republic Defense Forces is the military of the country, and is headed by its Chief of General Staff, the Vajda, subordinate to the Minister of Defence. The RRDF consist of the army and the air force. It was founded during the 1947 from Romani partisan militias and territorial militias founded by the Soviet civil government.
Romanis are drafted into the military at the age of 18, compulsory for males. Following mandatory service, Romani men join the reserve forces and usually do up to several weeks of reserve duty every year until their forties. Romani women can volunteer provided they meet the same standards as men. If a citizen does not want to do the military service on health and conscientious ground, he or she will be involved in a program of service in hospitals, schools and other social welfare frameworks. The Romani State maintains 30,000 troops and 56,000 reservists.
Most of the weapons, armored vehicles and aircrafts are imported from the former Soviet Union, but a modernization program has seen influx of Western armaments as well.
Administrative divisions
e.g.
Geography
Economy
Demographics
Culture
See also
References
External links
(example of how to list the three major resources)
- Template:CIA World Factbook link
- Romani State at UCB Libraries GovPubs
- Template:Dmoz