Roma and the Question of Ethnic Origin in Romania during the Holocaust Cover Image

Roma and the Question of Ethnic Origin in Romania during the Holocaust
Roma and the Question of Ethnic Origin in Romania during the Holocaust

Author(s): Marius Turda
Subject(s): History of the Holocaust
Published by: Romani Studies Program Central European University
Keywords: Biopolitics; Eugenics; Holocaust; Nationalism; Roma

Summary/Abstract: This article suggests that the arguments used to justify the deportation of Roma to Transnistria in 1942 were racial and eugenic. As a selfstyled scientific theory of human betterment, eugenics aimed to sanitize Romania’s population, proposing a new vision of the national community, one biologically purged of those individuals believed to be “defective”, “unfit”, and “unworthy” of reproduction. Based on new archival material we suggest that the racial definition of Romanianness that prevailed at the time aimed to remove not just Jews but alsoRoma from the dominant ethnic nation (“neamul românesc”). To define Romanianness according to blood, ethnic origin, and cultural affiliation had been an essential component of Romania’s biopolitical programme since the 1920s. During the early 1940s, it served as the political foundation upon which the transformation of Romania into an ethnically homogeneous state was carried out. At the time, the “Roma problem”, similar to the “Jewish Question”, was undeniably premised on eugenics and racism.

  • Issue Year: 4/2021
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 8-33
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English
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