Oral Interviews on Roma deportations in Romania

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/ro-006592-01 an entity of type: Record

Oral Interviews on Roma deportations in Romania 
Oral history – Centrul de Resurse pentru Comunitate 
Oral Interviews on Roma deportations in Romania 
Oral history – Centrul de Resurse pentru Comunitate 
The oral archive contains 280 recorded on various formats: initially audio and video tapes and later digital recordings, both audio and video.  
The collection includes 280 oral interviews. Most of these interviews were conducted with Roma who survived the deportations in Transnistria. Seven interviews were conducted with Romanian or Roma witnesses of the deportations (Romanians who prevented the deportation of certain Roma, or Roma who managed to escape deportation). Centrul de Resurse pentru Comunitate (The Center for Community Resources) was founded in 2009 in Cluj and generally carried out projects to help physically impaired or socially disadvantaged people through projects and volunteer work in the fields of social work and education. In 2014 and 2015, CRC conducted the project"Roma survivors of deportations in Transnistria. Social services, combating inequalities, promoting tolerance and multicultural understandin". Since few Roma survivors benefitted from their pensions as victims of WWII ethnic persecutions, the project proposed to identify the last surviving Roma and help them obtain their rights according to Romanian and German laws by establishing the link between claimants, archives, pension offices in Romania and Germany, etc. Besides, another long-term objective of the project was to create an archive of oral history interviews which could be later used for educational purposes (to raise awareness of the fate of the Roma during the Second World War) and thus promote tolerance for the Roma in the majority society. Since many survivors received their legal rights, team members were able to access very easily numerous Roma communities from different regions. Most Roma were interviewed in 2014-2015 (funding allowed long-distance travel), but they continued to be interviewed thereafter, albeit in smaller numbers and mainly near Bucharest. 273 Roma survivors born between 1905 and 1940 were interviewed. 

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