Homel: human rights defenders ask Education Minister to include works of Roma in the school curriculum
Homel human rights
defenders Maryia Klimovich and Ales Yauseyenka filed a letter to the Education
Minister Siarhei Maskevich, asking him to include in the school curriculum
poems and novels.
“We, ethnic Belarusians, who have friends and relatives among representatives
of the Roma nationality, cannot stay indifferent facing numerous manifestations
of Roma-phobia in the Belarusian society... We think that anti-Roma moods in
the educational establishments have a negative influence on the educational
process. Can Roma children consider school as their second home when their
Slavic contemporaries have a biased attitude to them?” write the human rights
defenders.
They think that the widespread opinion that Roma cannot create anything
outstanding could be shattered by a lecture on the contemporary Roma poetry.
Schoolchildren of various nationalities could expand their outlook and Roma
children would gain worthy role models as a result.
The applicants remind about such literateurs as the Soviet Roma poet Nikolay
Vasilevskiy. Lilit Mazikina and Valeria Yanysheva write their poems in two
languages, Roma and Russian. The text of the Holy Bible has been translated
into Roma language. There’s also a number of articles about the influence of
the Roma culture on the Russian classical writers and poets.
“The Roma underclass (and a considerable part of the families of Belarusian
Roma below to the lower social strata) has no access to the achievements of the
national intellectual circles. If workers of the educational establishments set
the aim to improve the situation, they can doubtlessly do much good to the Roma
Diaspora and gain a deep gratitude of its best representatives. The hundreds of
non-Roma schoolchildren, having familiarized with the Roma musical culture will
feel friendliness to the people who is its author. We ask you to introduce the
proposed changes in the school curriculum. The aim of the school is not only to
give the necessary knowledge to the new generation, but also to bring up real
citizens. Let us remind that xenophobia is a stain on the civil conscience,”
stated Maryia Klimovich and Ales Yauseyenka.