Skip to main content

Heed Hammarberg’s Call for Truth Commission for Roma

In a recent article published in the European Voice, Thomas Hammarberg called for a Europe-wide truth commission as a necessary first step to tackle deep-rooted anti-Gypsyism, to increase public awareness “about the past mass atrocities against the Roma people.” The following is my response to Hammarberg’s article; it also appeared in the European Voice.

Thomas Hammarberg’s impassioned call for Europe to recognize the atrocities committed against Roma contrasts sharply with the customary, carefully calibrated policy-speak we hear at the European level on Roma inclusion. He is emphatic that the roots of the problem lie with the attitudes of the majority.

Ignorance, indifference, and ambivalence towards Roma citizens create a vacuum where prejudice can and does thrive. Far-right successes at the ballot box have been followed by fire-bomb and bullet. Toxic hate speech has been taken by extremists as license to commit acts of often deadly violence against Roma.

Who remembered that March 22, the day the European Commission held its "extraordinary" Roma Platform meeting, marked the third anniversary of the murder of Jenő Kóka? The 54-year-old grandfather was gunned down by a neo-Nazi sniper as he left home for his night-shift in a nearby factory in Tiszalök, Hungary. He was the fifth fatality in a killing spree targeting Roma communities in 2008-9. The dead and the wounded included men, women and children.

European citizens need to be made aware that these and other acts of violence against Roma are, as Hammarberg puts it, “a continuation of a brutal and largely unknown history of repression.” For too long, the fate of the Roma who perished in the Holocaust has been relegated to the footnotes and margins of European history. For too long, anti-Roma prejudice has gone unchecked and unchallenged.

“Extraordinary” measures are needed to address this European scandal. A truth commission that gives full account of past atrocities that sheds light on the history of the Roma, a history inseparable from, though not reducible to victimization, could go some way to tackle the deep and rotten roots of anti-Gypsyism. Let us hope Hammarberg’s call does not fall on stony ground.

Read more

Subscribe to updates about Open Society’s work around the world

By entering your email address and clicking “Submit,” you agree to receive updates from the Open Society Foundations about our work. To learn more about how we use and protect your personal data, please view our privacy policy.