MAYA DAVIES
SPRING
2017 RACE AND CULTURE - A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: ANNODATED
BILIOGRAPHY
What Does
the Oppressor-Oppressed Dilemma of the Roma Teach us about Reified
Consciousness?
Oppressor and Oppressed: Logical Dialectical
Categories? Tribute to Paulo Freire
By Carlos Alberto
Torres
Revista
Electrica Sintica, n. 45, julio-diciembre, 2015, pp. 1-5
Torres states that practically everyone has
experienced injustice or maltreatment in some way and one need only
extend this from the individual case to a collective case. He argues
that one cannot denote
Freire's definition of the oppressed and
oppressed as being Manichean. Instead, they are dialectic in nature
and both incorporated in the same being at the same time, as one
fluidly changes into the other, which
Torres refers to as the 'dual consciousness.'
They are simply used as "'markers to identify the actual
normativity involved in the analysis" that Freire made. Torres also
states that Freire used his literacy, great observation and intuition
to delve into the difficult topic on what an authoritarian
personality is and
"provide[d] categories of analysis, an
epistemology of curiosity and a spiritual goad to struggle." Thus,
it is still a very important book to read.
Torres builds his arguments up on first defining
what one considers to be the truth, namely what is reasonable and has
not yet been able to be disproven. He goes on to explain what the
categories used in an analysis should be: reasonably logical,
distinct, probable and non-contradictory among themselves. To label
the categories of the oppressor and oppressed as Manichean is
incorrect, though easy to do, seeing as they co-exist in the same
individuals. Instead, if one uses them as 'markers' instead, then
one being can carry one market at one point and the other at another
point in time. His example for this is that the Jews, who were
persecuted and oppressed for hundreds of years, now have turned
around and in turn oppressed the Palestinians and Lebanese. He firmly
believes that, due to human rights being a "cosmopolitan
international moral coda" that one can no longer live by the
ideology of "an eye for an eye." Instead, based on what Freire
stated, one should avoid the course of oppressing, exploiting,
dominating or discriminating against other people - even if one is
not always aware that one is doing so, due to it being subconscious -
and will try to justify it in some way or another.
This article directly ties in to Freire, being mainly focused on his
book, the Pedagogy of the Oppressed.
It also has ties to King, seeing as Torres also
brings up the way that people tend to "forget" the uncomfortable
things (as Torres puts it "historical amnesia"). In Torres
analogy, he challenges the scale of injustice and oppression,
bringing it to the collective scale, which is then goes from a hate
crime to the
Holocaust and thus the Porajmos (the historical
"ethnic cleansing" of the Roma by the Nazis). This inevitably
links it to the guiding question, connecting the Roma with the
terminology of the oppressed and potentially with the oppressors as
well.
Just as Freire and Adorno state, the act of
oppression shows a lack of love and compassion, while putting one's
own self-interests above conviviality and basic human decency. The
movement against this, according to Torres, began with the act of
human rights, which are still being added on to today - even if
they only try to guarantee a basal level of needs. It opens up
several topics to debate, for instance at what point someone becomes
an oppressor or an oppressed, as well as what to do when those basic
human rights - that moral coda - fails and is violated, which
leads to the next article.
Conflict Between Declared Roma Minority Rights
and European Practice: Why the Legal Framework Doesn't Work in
Really
Alenka Kuhelj
36 Loy. L.A.
Int'l & Comp. L. Revvv. 65 (2014)
Kuhelj argues that there are multiple things
leading to the worsening conditions of the Roma in Europe. One of
these reasons is that Europe has been becoming more right-wing - or
even extreme right-wing - since the economic crisis in 2008. The
extreme right have been pinning the blame for their issues on the
Roma, using them as a type of scapegoat, leaving the people happier
with the government, but increasing the negativity directed at the
Roma. Due to the Roma being unwanted wherever they go, they are faced
with poor living conditions, poor schooling (often from being placed
in segregated schools) and are usually forced to live on the
outskirts of society. They cannot get jobs due to racism and thus
cannot escape these conditions. While the EU talks a lot, it has not
been able to enforce the Roma's human rights in the European Union,
as violations go unsanctioned and the media backlash eventually dies
down. The most liberal legislation does not mean anything if it is
not enforced. The countries make big promises concerning increasing
the Roma's state of living, but do not follow through on it,
despite the EU having budgeted money for the cause, which mainly goes
untouched. Kuhelj goes on to state that the way to counteract these
issues is through education, which will help them rise out of
impoverishment and thus also eradicate the stigma placed on them that
causes them to pass themselves off as non-Roma (such as
Turks). Furthermore, derogative words such as
"Gypsy" and "Tsigani" should be eradicated from our
vocabulary or we should start using them to mean "travelers"
instead of being an insult.
The way that Kuhelj goes about arguing her point
is through bringing up multiple cases and examples of where the
Roma's human rights were ignored as well as how the EU (European
Union), European Council and the ECHR (European Court of Human
Rights) have responded to these infringements. In her analysis of the
anti-discrimination laws, she focuses on France, Italy, Hungary and
Slovakia. In France, the Roma without French citizenship have
regularly been evicted from their lands and sent back to whence they
came, which has turned into a vicious cycle of them constantly
returning again. In Italy, the government took the fingerprints of
the Roma - regardless of age - and evicted them from their
settlements or putting them into segregated camps off in the middle
of nowhere without basic sources for food or medicine. In Hungary
they are put to work for wages that are far below the minimum wage,
expected to steal goods and fined more heavily for petty crimes, like
jaywalking. Meanwhile extremists and police attack the Roma, while
people just watch and look away. In Slovakia, a new reform for the
social care system that was supposed to help people get normal paying
jobs turned into a type of unofficial slavery: in order to receive
social aid, they have to participate in these working programs, but
their pay is below the minimum wage and thus some companies will lay
off workers and have their work done by this working program, because
it cuts their costs.
This article ties into a lot of material covered
in class, but I believe that the closest ties it has are actually to
King Jr., as it brings the poverty of the Roma into context with the
diminishing fertility rates in Europe. If Europe wants to survive its
aging population and be able to pay the social security for its
retirees, then it will need a workforce that is earning enough to pay
for the social security and retirement funds. This goes hand in hand
with King stating that all of a community has to be well of in order
for them to be well off. Additionally, it keeps on stating that the
Europeans have to remember what they have forgotten. With the rise of
the extreme right parties, they are falling into the same traps that
led to the Holocaust and Porajmos, with growing Antisemitism and
Antiziganism. They should remember the lessons they learned from that
and not deny that it even happened. Another aspect that ties it in
with King is the fact that it shows that legislation alone is not
enough - it is only the first step. The next step is getting rid of
the associated stigma through education.
In the article, Kuhelj speaks of a certain lack of
progression. The laws move forward, but do not really change
anything. The non-Roma citizens are generally for getting rid of the
Roma (up to eighty percent agreed with their persecution in Italy)
and people just look the other way. A stark example of this was
illustrated by the tourists enjoying the sun on a beach on Italy,
sitting near the corpse of a Roma girl. This coldness, the lack of
forward momentum and the freezing of legislation, when the supreme
courts rule against these discriminatory laws (or rule against an
anti-discrimination law, as the case may be), are indicative of the
reified consciousness. It also states that one of the issues is that
the Roma do not have a civil rights movement and thus they are not
moving forward either. The only country that was spoken of in which
the Roma protested for their rights was in Slovakia and while the
protests were mostly peaceful, they were labeled "Gypsy unrest"
and "Roma riots," causing Slovakia to mobilize the police and
military to "monitor the Roma community and establish public
order." When fearing for one's life, it is difficult to engage in
creative protest.
If Torres is correct and human rights are the
first basic step to leaving the oppressor-oppressed dilemma, then
this article indicates we are still a long way from implementing it.
While the media gets all up in arms about it, the countries know that
there will be something else that comes up soon enough that will take
the attention away from them again. The governments try and disguise
their stance against minorities, citing that they are just trying to
eliminate crime, human trafficking, prostitution, unemployment, etc.
by relocating the Roma.
The aspect of the reified consciousness ties into
my question, as it illustrates the coldness and lack of empathy that
is prevalent in reified consciousness. Additionally, it proves that
the Roma are definitely being oppressed and the non-Roma feel that
the Roma are taking all the social care benefits they can without
giving anything back due to being "lazy." Thus, the non-Roma feel
that they are being unjustly treated by the government. This leads to
the oppressors feeling like they are also the oppressed.
Meanwhile, the Roma try to scrape by and that
sometimes means stealing from the non-Roma. (Roma law prohibits them
from stealing from other Roma, but not from non-Roma.) They cannot
find work because they are discriminated against and thus they cannot
get food, but if they steal the stigma and prejudice against them
increases and is reaffirmed. Thus, they are not working at
re-educating the oppressor and are, to a much lesser extent,
oppressing the oppressor.
However, the question on how the education of the
Roma should look like is still open, which is what the next article
will focus on.
Roma as Homines Educandi: a collective subject
between educational provision, social control and humanism
Trubeta, Sevasti.
w: Maja Miskovic (red.), Roma education in Europe, London: Routledge
2013, pp.15-28
Sevasti notes that in the modern neoliberal
understanding of humanism, peoples' living conditions are often
examined out of context. This leads to issues as the group in
question becomes essentialized and their systemic conditions, poor
education and marginalization remain underexposed. Instead, the Roma
are shown as the "foster child" of Europe that resists all
efforts to be integrated, which in turn facilitates the revival of
the Roma stereotype and its "unchangeable essence." All Roma and
considered to be part of a unit, completely ignoring the fact that
the term "Roma" is merely an umbrella term.
The Roma's traditional way of life, of nomadism
and of being extremely marginalized, were disturbing to the
Europeans, as they were trying to create internal social cohesion and
development. The Roma just did not fit in to their plans. She points
out that positive discrimination, when targeted at a single group
rather than those of a certain economical status is ambivalent and
only helps to reinforce the unequal power distribution. She argues
that it is the threat to social cohesion that turns inequality into a
concern, and thus one should shift the focus from the social and
educational care of Roma to the conditions that cause inequality and
the "crucial role [that] racist prejudices and practices play"
therein.
Trubeta's argumentation is based on laying out
the various steps taken throughout history in the effort to educate
the Roma. She starts with the Age of Enlightenment, where the concept
of educating the Roma to turn them into useful citizens instead of
prosecuting them came up. Indeed, they found that persecution did not
work at all and that one needed to reeducate them instead.
She then makes a leap into the 1960s during which
the Roma picked up the concept of education as a means of
emancipating themselves. Parents came to realize the importance of
education in order to function in the modern working world. However,
that also led to the idea of segregated schools coming up, which
would "protect the Roma children" because normal classes might
cause "psychological problems for children who were socialized in
their own community." Ideally these classes would be taught by
other Roma. The education of the Roma was founded upon human rights.
When Europe opened up again as the iron curtain
fell, the Roma in Eastern Europe fell into poverty as they were
excluded from the labor market, which caused a perpetuation of
poverty, poor education and exclusion. Education was seen as a way to
integrate the Roma into the labor market, but people found that
school attendance was not enough to do so - the quality of
education was equally important. Thus, Europe began to realize that
segregated schools were perhaps not the best idea. However, according
to the UNICEF, the disadvantages that the Roma children face in
schooling has not gone away - in fact it has exacerbated over the
past two decades.
Positive discrimination, one could state, is "a
difference that doesn't make a difference" as Stewart Hall would
put it. The idea that the Roma could be reeducated came out of the
so-called high literature and while it is better than the former
zero-sum game, in which the Roma cannot be reeducated as it is part
of his or her inherent nature and thus cannot be changed. Thus a type
of reified consciousness was ascribed to the Roma in their
"unwillingness to change" and "adherence to their own culture."
However, the article shows that once this ascribed reified
consciousness was set aside, researchers found that this was not
true. The Roma did care about their children's education, knowing
that it was the only way out of poverty.
Similarly to Torres, Trubeta stresses the
importance that human rights have played in the education of the
Roma, due to the Roma emancipation movement tying human rights and
education together in people's minds. Trubeta is also much more
optimistic about their involvement than Kuhelj is. However, similarly
to Kuhelj, she sees the potential threat that poor education causes
of trapping the Roma in their social margins and unemployability.
Thus, both agree that education is the way to exit the Roma's
dilemma. In my understanding, both articles somewhat contradict each
other, as Trubeta writes about the Roma emancipation movement that is
based on their education, while Kuhelj states that there is no Roma
civil rights movement. If there is, in fact a movement then this
would mean that the Roma are not as immobile as Kuhelj's report
would lead to believe.
Additionally, pertaining to the
oppressor-oppressed dilemma, the article points out several articles
in which the author went into the study with one idea and came out of
it with another idea - such as the transformation of the idea that
the Roma children are naturally bad at school to the acknowledgement
that at least some Roma children had improved scholastically. Thus,
one could argue that the Roma were educating the non-Roma on
themselves through these reports - especially as the reports turned
towards understanding the Roma's point of view on things.
As this article points out, the idea of segregated
education did not pan out and the attempts thus far to educate the
Roma have fallen flat, despite the Roma's awareness that education
is the only way to escape their perpetual poverty due to
marginalization and exclusion from the labor pool. Thus, education
cannot stand on its own in integrating the Roma. The next article
will focus on the inclusion of the Roma by splitting them up and
spreading them out in order to try and force them to assimilate to
the country's culture.
Los
Gitanos (Gypsies) in La Coru, Spain: Neither socially included nor
integrated?
Daniel Briggs
International
Journal of Iberian Studies, Volume 23, Number 2, 2010
Briggs main argument is that, while some of the
Roma do participate in drug trafficking, this was practically forced
upon them due to there being few other sources of income for them in
order to support their families. Furthermore, TV reports, which are
the main source of information for the non-Roma, due to the Roma
being invisible in most people's daily life, focus on connecting
the Roma with the drug trade and failed integration programs.
Additionally, Briggs discovered there to be a discrepancy in what the
Roma and non-Roma perceived as integration. The non-Roma consider it
to be about "retaining a quality of life and equilibrium in the
class status quo" and not about equality or diversity. The Roma, on
the other hand, think of it in terms of how they have been kept from
mainstream life: equality, access to opportunity, recognition and
respect.
Briggs formulates his arguments by first covering
the history of the Roma in Span and in La Coru, which is
interlaced with excerpts from interviews he's done with social
workers and residents, both Roma and non-Roma. The Roma that have
been successfully integrated are still looked at with much skepticism
and mistrust, even as they are tolerated by the non-Roma.
Additionally, the government's attempts at integrating Roma
families by moving them into areas shared with non-Roma are often met
with protests, due to the non-Roma's fear of the Roma's criminal
and anti-social behavior. There seems to be a certain lack of trust
in the government coming from the Roma, due to them not keeping their
promises in the past. This goes as far as leading some Roma families
to refuse financial aid and better housing in order to stay where
they are (something that the non-Roma meet with indignation).
The article points out a lack of communication
between the government and the Roma agencies. This coupled with the
TV broadcasts that merely enforce the prejudice that is already
inherent and the lack of dialogue between the Roma and non-Roma
citizens shows that there is a lack of genuine dialogue. The non-Roma
want to keep the status quo of being the oppressor and get upset when
the Roma get treated preferentially when it comes to new housing, if
they are in one of the reallocation programs.
Meanwhile, the Roma blame the non-Roma on their
plight, stating that if the non-Roma were willing to hire them to
perform honest labor, they would be able to exit their plight. They
will also point out that, while many Roma distribute the dugs, the
police do not find huge caches of it on them. They always find the
caches on non-Roma, the drugs are brought into the country by
non-Roma and yet the non-Roma blame drugs on the Roma. Having been
disappointed by the government far too often, the Roma do not trust
them and their promises.
One of the ways to eliminate the issues with the
marginalization of the other, as was covered in class and reiterated
in various forms throughout our literature, is through genuine
dialogue. The non-Roma are distantly aware of the Roma's plight,
but habitually forget about it whenever there is a TV report,
replacing this awareness with racism. The article also reveals a
non-Roma ethnocentrism of "why wouldn't you want to be like us?"
thus going back to Stewart Hall's description of high culture and
low culture.
One thing that all of the articles agree on is
that education and finding jobs is the only way possible to eradicate
the plight of the Roma. However, this article, more than any of the
others I covered in here, shows the importance of genuine dialogue.
As long as the oppressors and the oppressed do not meet and talk to
each other, there will not be any change happening. The Roma will not
truly become integrated nor will they be socially included. Thus,
they will always have to return to their own communities to find a
social system that they can fall back on.
If the information is only flowing on one side and
not being interchanged, then there is a lack of movement and a lack
of interest in the "other." People become set in their ways and
find it difficult to dispose of these prejudices - even when faced
with proof of the opposite. These people have to remember what they
have conveniently forgotten and ignored.
I would venture to say that the non-Roma have to
be educated according to Freire. All of these articles have shown the
perils of non-Roma trying to cultivate and educate the Roma and none
of these have led to viable solutions to the oppressed-oppressor
dilemma. Additionally, the genuine dialogue invoked through educating
the non-Roma on the Roma, will lead to people changing their opinions
and thus movement and breaking out of static prejudice, which will
lead to people questioning what they see on the media instead of
taking it at face value. The invisibility of the Roma in this city
merely perpetuates the problem, rather than solving it.
Additionally, the fact that some of the Roma
families would rather live in squalor than be relocated and
integrated shows a potential loss of hope and the belief that the
system always wins (to use Hall's words). According to Freire and
King, the most important thing to never lose is hope. They have to
transform the situation they are in into a positive one. It is
possible that those who are willing to reallocate in return for
economic opportunities are trying to do this.
Personally, I would welcome it if one day the
education of the Roma has reached far enough that if I were to
research this topic again, I would find articles that are written by
Roma rather than by non-Roma. As Lugones and Spelman stated: one can
the oppressor can never speak for the oppressed, because they can
never truly speak in their voice or in their language.
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