Madonna booed in Bucharest for defending Gypsies and Homosexuals
U.S.
singer Madonna, center, performs during her concert in Bucharest,
Romania, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2009. The concert is part of Madonna's
Sticky and Sweet Tour. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)Associated Press
BUCHAREST, Romania - At first, fans politely applauded the Roma
performers sharing a stage with
Madonna.
Then the pop
star condemned widespread discrimination against Roma, or Gypsies — and
the cheers gave way to jeers.
The sharp mood change that swept the crowd of 60,000, who had packed a
park for Wednesday night's concert,
underscores how prejudice against
Gypsies remains deeply entrenched across Eastern Europe.
Despite long-standing efforts to stamp out rampant bias, human rights
advocates say Roma probably suffer more humiliation
and endure more
discrimination than any other people group on the continent.
Sometimes, it can be deadly:
In neighboring Hungary, six Roma have been
killed and several wounded in a recent series of apparently racially
motivated attacks
targeting small countryside villages predominantly
settled by Gypsies.
"There is generally widespread resentment against Gypsies in Eastern
Europe.
They have historically been the underdog," Radu Motoc, an official
with the Soros Foundation Romania, said Thursday.
Roma, or Gypsies, are a nomadic ethnic group believed to have their
roots in the Indian subcontinent.
They live mostly in southern and eastern
Europe, but hundreds of thousands have migrated west over the past few
decades in search of jobs and better living conditions.
Romania has the largest number of Roma in the region. Some say the
population could be as high as 2 million, although official data put it at
500,000.
Until the 19th century, Romanian Gypsies were slaves, and they've
gotten a mixed response ever since:
While discrimination is widespread,
many East Europeans are enthusiastic about Gypsy music and dance,
which
they embrace as part of the region's cultural heritage.
That explains why the Roma musicians and a dancer who had briefly
joined Madonna
onstage got enthusiastic applause.
And it also may explain why some in the
crowd turned on Madonna
when she paused during the two-hour show — a stop on her worldwide
"Sticky
and Sweet" tour — to touch on their plight.
"It has been brought to my attention ... t
hat there is a lot of
discrimination against Romanies and Gypsies in general in Eastern Europe,"
she said.
"It made me feel very sad."
Thousands booed and jeered her.
A few cheered when she added: "We don't believe in discrimination ...
we believe in freedom and equal rights for everyone."
But she got more
boos when she mentioned discrimination against homosexuals and others.
"I jeered her because it seemed false what she was telling us. What
business does she have telling us these things?" said Ionut Dinu, 23.
Madonna did not
react and carried on with her concert, held near the hulking palace of the
late communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.
Her publicist, Liz Rosenberg, said
Madonna and other had
told her there were cheers as well as jeers.
"Madonna has been
touring with a phenomenal troupe of Roma musicians who made her aware of
the discrimination toward them
in several countries so she felt compelled
to make a brief statement," Rosenberg said in an e-mail. "She will not be
issuing a further statement."
One Roma musician said the attitude toward Gypsies is contradictory.
"Romanians watch Gypsy soap operas, they like Gypsy music and go to
Gypsy concerts,"
said Damian Draghici, a Grammy Award-winner who has
performed with
James
Brown and Joe Cocker.
"But there has been a wave of aggression against Roma people in Italy,
Hungary and Romania, which shows me something is not OK," he
told the AP in an interview.
"The politicians have to do something about
it. People have to be educated not to be prejudiced. All people are equal,
and that is the message politicians must give."
Nearly one in two of Europe's estimated 12 million Roma claimed to have
suffered an act of discrimination over the past 12 months,
according to a
recent report by the Vienna-based EU Fundamental Rights Agency.
The group
says Roma face "overt discrimination" in housing, health care and
education.
Many do not have official identification, which means they cannot get
social benefits, are undereducated and struggle to find decent jobs.
Roma children are more likely to drop out of school than their peers
from other ethnic groups.
Many Romanians label Gypsies as thieves, and
many are outraged by those who beg or commit petty crimes in Western
Europe,
believing they spoil Romania's image abroad.
In May 2007, Romanian President Traian Basescu was heard to call a
Romanian journalist a "stinky Gypsy" during a conversation with his wife.
Romania's anti-discrimination board criticized Basescu, who later
apologized.
Human rights activists say the attacks in Hungary, which began in July
2008, may be tied to that country's economic crisis
and the rising
popularity of far-right vigilantes angered by a rash of petty thefts and
other so-called "Gypsy crime."
Last week, police arrested four suspects in
a nightclub in the eastern city of Debrecen.
Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and Slovakia also have been
criticized for widespread bias against Roma.
Madonna's outrage
touched a nerve in Romania, but it seems doubtful it will change anything,
said the Soros Foundation's Motoc.
"Madonna is a pop
star. She is not an expert on interethnic relations," he said.
___
AP Writers Alison Mutler in Bucharest, William J. Kole in Vienna
and Nekesa Mumbi Moody in New York contributed to this report.