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Opinion

Remembering the Roma

Last week Laura Marks travelled to Auschwitz-Birkenau to mark the 75th anniversary of the liquidation of the ‘Gypsy Family Camp’.

August 6, 2019 16:10
Laura Marks with representatives of  GATE Herts, a Gypsy, Roma and Traveller organisation
2 min read


Black and white, grainy photos of families, children, young people laughing, musicians holding their violins; we’ve seen these 1930s photos before. They fill us with dread as we know, with the benefit of hindsight, what happened to most of these happy people when Hitler and his hateful regime came to power.

We know so well that people were rounded up for transportation, selection, starvation and sent to the gas chambers. But the photos I saw at Auschwitz last week were not of Jewish families, rather, Roma and Sinti people (often referred to as Gypsies) facing the same fate, even the same crematoria. And, what struck me, as I attended the start of the commemorations of the 75th anniversary of the liquidation of the ‘Gypsy Family Camp’ at Auschwitz, were the similarities.

Twenty-three thousand men women and children, identified as Roma and Sinti were murdered at Auschwitz alone. The Nazis considered them ‘vermin’ and attempted to remove them from the face of the earth. By the end of their monstrous regime, more than 200,000 Roma and Sinti people had been murdered – although with many undocumented and hidden killings the number may be far higher.

As a Jewish onlooker, the deliberate policy of extermination, the torture, tattoos, round ups, ghettos, selection and the systematic approach felt so similar to the stories often told in my community.