Niches of Agency: Romani Voices and Romani Allies in Compensation Procedures after 1945
Niches of Agency: Romani Voices and Romani Allies in Compensation Procedures after 1945
Author(s): Joey RauschenbergerSubject(s): Post-War period (1950 - 1989), Fascism, Nazism and WW II, History of the Holocaust
Published by: Romani Studies Program Central European University
Keywords: Compensation for Nazi injustices; German history; Romani agency; Romani history; transitional justice;
Summary/Abstract: The article explores the underrepresentation of Romani perspectives and self-perceptions in historical research. It offers a methodological reflection on the role of petitions in Romani history before unearthing the contents of Germany’s compensation files. These state administrative files contain numerous acts of Romani selfassertion in the face of a rigid bureaucratic system. German Sinti and Roma countered majority society’s practices of de-individualization through deliberate subjective action that challenged the authorities long before collective action in the late 1970s. The study reveals strategies that Roma developed to be entitled to the compensation due to Nazi victims. For example, they tried to provoke reaction through rhetorical stridency; organized help from third parties, professionals, and laypersons; or escalated to superiors. In doing so, the article reveals the complexity of the administrative practice of compensation for Nazi injustice, including actors such as the lawyers hired by Roma. Their ambivalent role and interests, which are sometimes supportive, sometimes less altruistic, hold potential for further research.
Journal: Critical Romani Studies
- Issue Year: 5/2022
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 4-26
- Page Count: 23
- Language: English