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I Met Lucky People, by Yaron Matras

Shattering stereotypes starts with sharing everyday experiences, suggests Annabel Tremlett

Published on
March 6, 2014
Last updated
May 22, 2015

We are in sore need of alternative images of Roma, Gypsy and Traveller people. Unreconstructed and well-rehearsed public discourse tends to waver between extreme denigration (they are all thieves and chancers) and veneration (they are a fascinating, secretive people who live wild and free). Yaron Matras鈥 book I Met Lucky People aims to provide some respite from such stereotypes, and for that reason alone it is welcome. But it is questionable whether simply pushing back against stereotypes is enough to really challenge and change essentialist views.

Matras begins by arguing that it is the labelling we need to sort out. Many people become confused by the plethora of terms 鈥撀燝ypsies, Travellers, Romani and so on 鈥 and the issue of which should be used, when and for whom. Matras suggests that 鈥淩om鈥, which has long been used by some communities as self-appellation, is a solution. I Met Lucky People provides the reader with an overview of the Roms, a people Matras shows are connected by history, language and culture and who, he says, should be differentiated from public constructions of 鈥渢he Gypsy鈥. He is therefore speaking to 鈥渦s鈥 (the non-Roma public) to describe 鈥渢hem鈥 (a certain minority community). This approach prompts two questions that bothered me as I read the rest of the book.

First, what about the people who don鈥檛 speak a Romani language and/or who don鈥檛 follow all the traditions he details? By not fitting into the society Matras describes, might such people be seen as 鈥渋nauthentic Gypsies鈥? And second, who are the 鈥渨e鈥 he is addressing? In his description, 鈥渨e鈥 become the homogeneous, unreconstructed lot who are markedly different from 鈥渢hem鈥. Moreover, his conflation of public discourse and the public itself overlooks all the cross-community relationships, families, friendships, neighbours, co-workers and others with whom experiences are shared. The matter of labelling is an extremely important debate, of course, but it is not one that can be resolved by reinforcing a simple us-and-them dichotomy.

The us-and-them approach is further underscored by Matras鈥 statements on the Roms鈥 society, language and customs. While he bases his knowledge on friendships with Romani families over the years and extols their society鈥檚 diversity, the way he describes their practices is frustratingly simplistic. Observations such as 鈥渢he Roms are experienced in making use of a variety of income-generating opportunities鈥 or 鈥渟chool attendance beyond puberty is difficult for girls鈥 are written in a stilted, old-fashioned anthropological style. Such descriptions serve to fix these people in stagnant social, cultural and gendered relationships, as if they are universal truths embodied in the souls of the Roms, rather than practices potentially dependent on differing political, economic or social circumstances.

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Where Matras鈥 book succeeds is in his ability to convey a wealth of knowledge about the archival and linguistic evidence of different groups of people across Europe associated with Rom, Gypsy or other ethnonyms. A chapter on the Romani language provides evidence of how an investigation into language can reveal certain historic migration routes, while elsewhere a focus on the constructions of the Gypsy stereotype across Europe gives a useful overview of how art and literature play their role in continually circulating the imagined Gypsy.

But where I Met Lucky People does not succeed is in moving from the expert鈥檚 view to the experiences of people in their everyday lives. We shouldn鈥檛 forget that Gypsy, Roma and Traveller people have ordinary, common experiences alongside the struggles and successes of life. Public discourses do need alternative images, but these images need to be rooted in people鈥檚 real, everyday social experiences and interactions. Through this we may see that there are more similarities than differences between majority society and the Romani people; acknowledging this would truly bring a shift in perception.

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I Met Lucky People: The Story of the Romani Gypsies

By Yaron Matras
Allen Lane, 288pp, 拢20.00 and 拢11.99
ISBN 9781846144813 and 97801419701
Published 6 February 2014

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