76: Gypsy Holocaust
Today is Gypsy Holocaust Memorial
Day (called "Porajmos" or "Destruction" in the Romani
language.) It is also the 76th Anniversary since the end of the Porajmos.
(Gypsy Prisoners at the Belzec Death Camp, Occupied Poland.)
Gypsies (also called Roma and
Sinti) were treated at the same level as the Jews under the 1935 Nuremberg Laws
by the Germans and sent to different Ghettos (Warsaw and Lodz) and then sent to
the Death Camps (Treblinka, Auschwitz, Belzec and Sobibor) where an estimated
500,000 to 1.5 million Gypsy men, women and children were murdered.
The Gypsies actively resisted the
Nazis as best they could. In Auschwitz whole Gypsy families were kept in
barracks together (not separated like the majority of the other victims at the
Death Camp.) In May 1944 SS guards tried to liquidate the Gypsy Family Camp in
the Gas Chambers. When ordered to come out, the Gypsies refused, having been
warned beforehand and arming themselves with crude weapons – iron pipes,
shovels, and other tools used for labor.
The SS chose not to confront the
Gypsies directly and withdrew for several months. After transferring as many as
3,000 Gypsies who were capable of forced labor to Auschwitz I and other
Concentration Camps, the SS moved against the remaining 2,898 inmates on August
2nd. The SS killed nearly all of the remaining inmates — most of them ill,
elderly men, women, or children, in the Gas Chambers of Birkenau. At least
19,000 of the 23,000 Gypsies sent to Auschwitz perished there.
West Germany recognized the
Porajmos in 1982 and in 2012 the Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of
National Socialism was unveiled in Berlin. In 2011, Poland officially adopted
August 2nd as a day of commemoration of the Romani Genocide.
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