Gypsy News

News about the Rom/Roma/Gypsy along with environmental, wildlife and animal news and alerts.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Gypsy leaders accuse Italy of discrimination

WARSAW, Poland: Gypsy leaders attending a ceremony at the former Auschwitz death camp Saturday accused Italy of harassment and discrimination, a news agency reported.

"Over the past year in Italy, we have had to deal with a situation unprecedented in the history of postwar Europe," said Roman Kwiatkowski, the president of the Association of Roma in Poland, according to Poland's PAP news agency.

"For the first time since the end of World War II, the authorities of a state are actively engaged in policies of repression and discrimination against an ethnic or national minority, in this case the Roma."

Kwiatkowski spoke at an event marking the 64th anniversary of the Nazis' gassing of the most of the remaining 2,900 Gypsy inmates at Auschwitz.

In recent weeks, Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi's conservative government has come under fire for plans to fingerprint Roma living in Italy.

(MORE)

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Monday, July 28, 2008

URGENT: Release Dina Babbitt's original Gypsy portraits to her now

Dina Gottliebova Babbitt (aka Dinah), is the artist who was forced to paint and draw the horrible experiments of the Auschwitz doctor known as the Angel of Death, Dr. Josef Mengele. Mengele also commanded her to paint the watercolor portraits of several Gypsies, who were other Auschwitz inmates, in order to capture what he called gypsy skin coloration better than he could do it with his camera and the film of that time. Once the portraits were complete, to Dina's horror, Mengele sent the Gypsies to their death.

According to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum's website, seven of the gypsy portraits were discovered after World War II outside the Auschwitz Death Camp, from which they were removed without legal permission, in the early 1970's and sold to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum by people who apparently did not know that the artist, Dina Babbitt, was still alive and living in California. (If this information has been removed from the Museum's website, I still have the save webpage. Contact me to see it on Museum letterhead.) The Museum asked Dina to come to Auschwitz in 1973 to identify her work. However, after she did, the Museum would not allow her to take her paintings home with her. The Museum's refusal to release the paintings to Dina began her re-incarceration as a spiritual hostage of the Auschwitz Death Camp.

Much disinformation has been spread about Dina's purpose in seeking to reclaim her original artwork. The truth is that she has no desire whatever to hide the Gypsy portraits from history. As a matter of fact, nothing could be further from the truth. Once she is in possession of her Gypsy portraits, she wishes to display them in Holocaust museums in the United States, in which she lives free, and around the world. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum displays only copies for security reasons.

The question has been asked "Why did Dina not take the paintings with her when she left?" The reason is that she was on a death march.

A letter was even sent to Dina once saying that if anyone had a right to the paintings it was Josef Mengele. That suggestion is nauseating. I am looking for the original letter and will post it on her website when I find it.

Dina is legally credited by the Museum as being the rightful owner of her artwork and must sign paperwork for the Museum each time it wants to reproduce her work. She has always accommodated the Museum and has never taken any monetary compensation, to which she is entitled, for the reproduction of her work. She has always asked the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum to give any monies earned through the reproductions of her watercolor portraits to go to causes supporting the Gypsy or Roma people. However, to date, the Museum claims that, because it purchased the paintings from other people, the Museum does not have to return Dina's original Gypsy portraits to her. International law has now established that possessing stolen artwork does not entitle the possessor to keep it. The Museum only displays copies of Dina's paintings for security reasons and could easily represent the tragedy of the Gypsies as it does now, with copies of Dina's portraits.

Not one, but two United States Acts of Congress have been written in support of Dina. One was authored by Congresswoman Shelley Berkley. The other was co-authored by Senators Barbara Boxer and Jesse Helms. Both became part of the Congressional Record in 2003. They passed unanimously.

Dina feels that neither, she nor her Gypsy subjects, will ever have their spiritual freedom from the Auschwitz Death Camp until the portraits are returned to her so she may display them in Holocaust museums in the United States and other free countries around the world.

Our mother and we, her family, have been trying to get these paintings returned to her since 1973. Dina, who is now 85, has just been diagnosed with an aggressive form of abdominal cancer and will have surgery on Wednesday, July 23, 2008. The surgery takes six hours and is very risky under the best of circumstances.

We pray to the Museum to return Dina's artwork to her now. We further implore the Museum to not prolong this struggle for years to come after Dina passes from this earth. In addition, we welcome the understanding and support of the Roma people, Dina's friends, in securing the spiritual release of the Roma victims of Auschwitz.

We implore anyone who reads this to support the efforts to get her paintings back now by signing in to her Facebook page and sending an e-mail of support for Dina to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum through the link on that page. In addition, please forward a link to http://www.dinababbitt.com or Dina's Facebook page to every good person that you know.

Thank you for your kindness, empathy, and support.

Michele Kane and Karin Babbitt
Dina's daughters
michele@dinababbitt.com

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Nebraska Debut Author, Christine Harris, Publishes The Gypsy in My Soul

LINCOLN, Neb.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The dark history of WWII provides a riveting backdrop for the story of a young Gypsy woman’s fight for life.

In her debut novel, The Gypsy in My Soul, Lincoln NE’s Christine Harris brings to life the persecution of the Gypsies (now known as Roma or Romani) through the eyes of a woman desperately seeking the truth about her grandmother against the backdrop of Cold-War Eastern Europe.

“As many as half a million Roma were displaced and murdered by the Nazis and their allies during World War II,” Harris said. “I’ve tried to make the narrative real and compelling by focusing on the story of one woman’s struggle to survive and another woman’s quest to learn the truth.”

In 1943 Warsaw, Sasha Karmazin is wrenched from her family by the Gestapo and sent to Auschwitz, Europe’s largest Nazi concentration camp. In 1984 Nebraska, her granddaughter, Beth Karmazin learns that her grandmother, presumed dead, is accused of having taken a Nazi lover and collaborated with the Nazi’s while at Auschwitz. Beth’s commitment to prove her grandmother’s innocence takes her on a three-year quest deep into Communist-controlled Eastern Europe at the height of the Cold War, a journey that changes not only her life, but also the course of history.

Seamlessly moving from the turbulent 1940s to the 1980s, The Gypsy in My Soul creates a riveting portrait of one woman’s devotion to family—and to uncovering the truth.

Author Christine Harris was born in Norfolk, NE, but spent several years in Germany as the daughter of U.S. army officer and traveled extensively throughout Europe and Asia during her business career as vice president of human resource for Harris Laboratories. She has received numerous professional and civic awards, as well as three gubernatorial appointments. Ms. Harris is active on community boards and committees, including Cedars Youth Services, the University of Nebraska Foundation, the Humanities Council and the State of Nebraska Nominating Commission for Juvenile Judges.

Ms. Harris has a degree in secondary education and history from the University of Nebraska and lives with her husband, Ron, in Lincoln, Nebraska.

The Gypsy in My Soul, a historical fiction novel, is published by iUniverse and is available for $17.95 at www.authorchristineharris.com or Barnes & Noble online. The Gypsy in My Soul is 274 pages. It was released in March 2008, ISBN # 0-595-47434-9.

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Saturday, August 4, 2007

Hundreds gather at Auschwitz to remember Gypsy Holocaust victims

Aug 02 2007, 17:20

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Several hundred people gathered at Auschwitz-Birkenau on August 2 to remember the Roma, or Gypsy, victims of the Holocaust 63 years after the last of them were gassed in the camp.

A letter from Interior Minister Janusz Kaczmarek read out to the crowd stressed the importance of remembering the suffering inflicted by Nazi Germany on the Gypsies, the PAP news agency reported.

"We must remember the Holocaust of the Roma," Kaczmarek said. "It is the concern of the Polish government that this memory not disappear, and that the next generation of residents of this republic know how tragic was the fate of our Roma citizens."

PAP said the hundreds gathered included Roma from Poland and abroad, survivors of the camp and a deputy speaker of the Polish senate, Maciej Plazynski.

The Nazis liquidated the Gypsy family camp - the so-called Zigeunerfamilienlager - at the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex on August 2, 1944, sending most of the last 2,900 of them to the gas chambers, including many women, children and elderly people. Others were sent to German factories as forced laborers.

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Sunday, December 3, 2006

Auschwitz artwork, and Gypsy victims

Latimes.com
December 3, 2006
Print Edition - Opinion

Re "Art or a part of history?"
Column One, Nov. 29

Thank you for an informative and emotional article, which still haunts me. Valuable paintings of museum quality were taken from my mother's home in Krakow, Poland, at the beginning of World War II, but without proof of provenance, she has no power to claim them. It is not the worth of the art, but the principle that they belonged to her and were stolen goods, along with stolen lives and stolen futures.Dina Gottliebova Babbitt deserves to keep her paintings because they represent a part of her, of what she had to go through to survive — they are a symbol of her struggle. As an illustrator, I have found that high-quality laser prints are quite wonderful inventions. I would suggest that the Auschwitz museum invest a few zloty, make some copies for its exhibition and return the heart-wrenching but important pieces of art to their rightful owner.

MONA SHAFER EDWARDS
Los Angeles

Once again, no thoughts for the Gypsy victims. Their massacre during the Nazi Holocaust was as significant relatively as the Jewish losses and the Armenian Holocaust, and yet nobody seems to consider them victims to be remembered and memorialized. Are the Gypsies to be forgotten? Since the models and their families — who paid with their lives just because they were Gypsies after their portraits were made — are all dead, may I suggest that the true home for this art is in a museum dedicated to Gypsy victims.

GREGORY T. PARKOS
Venice

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Saturday, December 2, 2006

Museum’s position on issue of portraits, made in Auschwitz Concentration Camp by Dinah Gottliebova-Babbitt on orders of SS doctor Josef Mengele

(Visit Site)

Dinah Gottliebova, born in Brno, as a Jewish Czech was deported to Auschwitz Concentration Camp with the transport of Jews from Theresienstadt. Together with her mother she was placed in one of the sections of the Auschwitz II-Birkenau camp, the so-called Terezin Family Camp. Prior to the war she studied at the Academy of Fine Arts and her skills of painting mastered there most probably saved her life. After her painting skills had been discovered in the camp (amongst others she painted on the walls of one of the camp barracks several scenes from Disney movies), Dr. Mengele - at that time the Chief Doctor of the so-called "Gypsy Family Camp," assigned her the task of painting the water-colors.

They showed Gypsies from various European countries. These portraits were supposed to be to Mengele a help and documentation of the criminal experiments and research on the Nazis’ theory of race, conducted by himself in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Dinah Gottliebova and her mother managed to survive.

After nearly thirty years since the end of the war she got to know about the fact that some of the water-colors she painted had not been destroyed. Just like in many similar situations these works survived by chance. In January 1945, three days after the liberation of Auschwitz Concentration Camp, one of inhabitants of the town Oświęcim, a teenager, came to the camp to take with him a bereaved Jewish girl from Hungarian transports, who got adopted by the boy’s parents. One of the survivors, touched by the boy’s behavior gave him as a sign of appreciation a roll of pictures.

They were six water-colors signed „Dinah 1944." The foster family loved and cared about the girl. Ewa graduated from a secondary school and then the Medical Academy in Cracow. Afterwards she started to work as a dentist.

In 1963 the Museum bought from Ewa six water-colors, the seventh was purchased in 1977 from another former prisoner. In the official record of the Museum Artifacts Purchase Committee from December 1963 it reads among others that: „The Committee members bought on purpose all paintings for the Museum collections as the portraits of Gypsies are closely connected with the camp history (Gypsy camp). (...) It has been determined that the portraits of Gypsies were probably painted in the concentration camp at the time of its existence, in all likelihood by a prisoner...."

Six years later the head (at that time) of the Collections Department of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum browsing through a book published by Otto Kraus and Erich Kulka entitled „Tovarna na Smrt" noticed a picture. It was signed the same way as the water-colours owned by the Museum. This way it was possible to determine the full name of the author: Dinah Gottliebova. At that time she was already living in the United States.

The moment the Museum found Mrs. Gottliebova’s address it made contact with her, informing on the existence of the works created by her in the camp. In January 1973, using the opportunity of being in Paris, Mrs. Gottliebova came to Poland and gave the Museum a testimony concerning her stay in the camp and the Gypsy portraits painted there. At the conclusion she said: "I am happy having survived the camp and I am happy to be alive. I would be grateful if I could obtain photographs of the Gypsy portraits, originals of which are in possession of the Museum and which I painted in the camp."

It was the first and the only Mrs. Gottliebova’s contact with the Museum until the second half of the nineties. In December 1973 a written copy of the recorded testimony was sent to the author and - according to her wish - two sets of photographs of the Gypsy portraits. Because the letter had not been answered and the package had not been returned either, during the next few years the Museum tried to get in touch with Mrs. Gottliebova by sending other letters. Also those letters remained unanswered and not returned by post. The Museum concluded then that Mrs. Gottliebova, in regard to tragic memories connected with the camp, did not want to stay in touch with the institution and recall the tragic past.

However the truth appeared to be different. For some time Ms. Gottliebova has been claiming back pictures painted by her, currently held at the Museum. In the light of law, the rightful owner of the seven Gypsy portraits is the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. In what regards the author property rights, they belong to Ms. Gottliebova. The Museum being the rightful owner, but without the property rights, is allowed to use them within the limits of permissible public use of protected artifacts, determined in regulation regarding author rights and relative rights.

The Museum fully understands the emotional attitude of Ms. Gottliebova to the works made in the past in conditions which undoubtedly influenced her life. However, realizing its statutory tasks the Museum is profoundly convinced that the water-colors should remain in Oświęcim. From the moment of its establishment, this institution has been – with great effort – collecting and preserving most various post-camp remains, doing everything for them to survive and certify about the crimes committed by the Nazis in the place they are most closely connected with. Both death certificates, prisoner cards, etc., produced in large number by scrupulous Nazi camp bureaucracy and works of art created in the camp, either made by prisoners on orders of the SS or illegally, are a unique document and piece of evidence, having the biggest meaning, significance and impact in the place of their creation.

Throughout the period of the camp existence hundreds of thousands of documents had been created. The majority of them is the creation of Nazi bureaucratic machine keeping registers of prisoners, and companies co-operating with the SS during construction works on both the camp and gas chambers.

Prisoners were forced to work in particular offices and camp departments and therefore a part of the documentation is signed. These are works of art as well as for instance technical plans of buildings or expansion of the camp, signed by prisoners who made them on the SS orders. These are also photographic portraits made by still living former prisoners employed in "Lagererkennungsdienst (camp identification service)." Part of the preserved suitcases, brought by the Jews who came to meet their death, is marked with the names and other data of their owners.

All these objects are closely connected with the place of extermination of Jews, Poles, Gypsies, Russians and others. They are integral part of former Auschwitz Concentration Camp, which twenty years ago was included in the UNESCO list of the World Heritage. Every lost piece of this tragic world' s heritage is a tremendous loss to all the people who come here to commemorate the victims and to conduct historical research.

A theoretical question might be asked: what will happen if other former prisoners or their heirs start coming here and claiming back – which would be rightful in their opinion – works of art, pictures, suitcases, plans drawn in the camp or other objects belonging to them or to their relatives? An example would be the gate „Arbeit macht frei" which was made in the camp’s forge by the master of artistic smithing, then an Auschwitz prisoner Jan Liwacz.

How should behave the inhabitants of Brzezinka who even nowadays are able to recognize in the camp barracks doors and windows of their pre-war houses or posts of their fences with inscribed initials and dates of their creation? The Museum fully understands individual rights but it was established to serve all – as a place of memory and the only of a kind research center – and therefore, fully respecting the rights of people who created part of documents being held here, we believe that every piece lost from the collections of this memorial will be an irreparable loss.
Seven water-colors painted by Ms. Gottliebova is only a small fraction of the rich collections of the Museum. There are a few thousand artifacts – works of art – in the Museum’s Collections Department. About two thousand of them were made in the camp by the prisoners. They are both works made on the orders of the SS (the case of Dinah Gottliebova) and created at the real risk of one’s life (e.g. illegal works of art representing drastic scenes from the camp life).

Hundreds of thousands of other documents can be seen in the archives. The Museum is not, as a rule, an art gallery. Still, its statutory obligation is to gather all evidence of crime as well as all items related with the history of Auschwitz, including artwork. In this context the portraits of the Roma people are, regardless of any interpretation, a document. The Museum has also a duty to render all documents accessible to persons researching the history of the camp. And it does, making the documents available in its every day work. It goes both for the archives as the collections.

Original works of Dinah Gottliebova are on display in the first permanent exhibition of this kind in Poland and the second in Europe on the Destruction of the Roma, which opened in 2001 at the Museum. Apart from that one can see, for dozens of years now, copies of two portraits by Ms Gottliebova, placed in the section of the exhibition dedicated to experiments on the Roma people, carried out by dr. Mengele. Her works were also exhibited in Poland and abroad in temporary exhibitions, including Israel. The statements that her artwork in not available to public view and therefore this unique and important body of work is essentially lost to history are therefore simply not true.

The fact of the inclusion of the Museum along with its post-camp documentation, artifacts and other remains in the List of the World's Heritage by UNESCO confirms our conviction that objects and documents found in the area of the liberated camp should remain in the Museum for ever and should be protected there.

It should be also stressed that our institution is not just a "regular" museum. The Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum is unique of its kind. Every square yard of it is covered with blood of the victims of the Nazis: Jews, Poles, Gypsies, Russians and other people murdered here. The main objective of this site is to make it available to hundreds of thousands of pilgrims as well as researchers, and to document as widely as possible the crimes committed here.

The latter activity obliges us morally to preserve all evidence dating back to the wartime and related with the Auschwitz concentration and death camp and to prevent this evidence from being dispersed in any way. Once again we want to stress: every single loss of even the smallest part of the documentation will be an irreparable loss and a shadow on the memory of Auschwitz Concentration Camp victims. The water-colors are scarce surviving documents on the Holocaust committed on the Roma people. Both those Roma people who survived the mass murder and the representatives of European Roma organizations share our viewpoint that the portraits should remain in Oświęcim.

Everything that remained from Auschwitz Concentration Camp belongs to all people and is the evidence of crimes committed here. It is also a warning for the future generations. Neither documents nor proofs of Nazi criminal achievements based on the theory of destruction and extermination should and can be removed from here or placed somewhere else. Only here, in Oświęcim, they do serve the science, history and hundreds of thousands of pilgrims visiting this place every year.

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Auschwitz Prisoner Fights to Recover Her Paintings

NPR (www.npr.org)
by Robert Siegel

All Things Considered, November 30, 2006 ·

In 1944, the notorious Nazi doctor Josef Mengele ordered Dina Gottliebova Babbitt to paint portraits of Gypsy prisoners at Poland's Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.

Mengele, known as the "Angel of Death," wanted portraits of Gypsies, or Roma people, to document what the Nazis saw as their "degenerate" racial characteristics. Photographs, which he had used previously, lacked color.

Now 83, Babbitt is trying to recover seven of the original works, which are in the museum at the site of the camp.

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