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The French government has introduced a law on access to public transport and public institutions based on the application of a vaccine against Covid 19

The French government has introduced a law in parliament that allows those vaccinated to have access to public transport, restaurants, cultural institutions and other public places.
Prime Minister Jean-Castec on Monday introduced a law establishing a long-term emergency management system in a parliamentary procedure, also known as the "green vaccine-passport", as it contains provisions requiring access to certain activities and places based on vaccination. . Under the law, the prime minister has the right to authorize the movement of people, their access to public transport or certain places based on a test that determines that a person is not infected or after preventive treatment, which includes vaccination against coronavirus, Tanjug reported, citing are of the Anatolia agency. The debate over the bill began last week when members of the Liberal and centrist parties proposed the introduction of a so-called "green passport" for people who have been vaccinated. The law is in response to several surveys that have shown that the French are very skeptical about vaccination and that only about 40 percent of citizens are ready to be vaccinated.

What lies behind the new training of the Bulgarian police called; ′ ′ Psychological and ethno-religious aspects in the processes of radicalization in Roma communities "funded by the European Social Fund

It would be good for all Roma and pro-Roma activists, human rights defenders and friends to know the truth about this great news from Bulgaria! It seems that the New Year will be even ре. Happier ′ ′ for the Bulgarian Roma than the old one. The Ministry of Interior announced on its website that from 2021 Bulgarian police officers will be offered a completely new training called "Psychological and ethno-religious aspects in the processes of radicalization in Roma communities."
This is a result of a project funded by the European Social Fund that has just been completed. Now ′ брите good practices ′ ′ will become part of the official catalog of trainings offered by the Institute of Psychology at the Ministry of Interior. So, we can expect special treatment by law enforcement agencies in 2021. Most likely, this is happening not only in Bulgaria but also in other EU member states, but people do not know. In fact, it may be part of the EU's new Roma policy, as we doubt that the Bulgarian authorities will dare to carry out such openly racist anti-Roma measures without the knowledge and approval of the Commission or some other senior officials in Brussels. As some of us probably know, a civic coalition has been formed in Bulgaria to counter the authorities' attempts to stigmatize all Roma in the country as "vulnerable to radicalization" and dangerous to national security. However, leading Roma and pro-Roma NGOs in Bulgaria are strangely silent on the issue. So it would be good to appeal to all of you for advice that can be done because this is an absurd situation. Time flows relentlessly.

Memories and destinies: Karl Stojkas from Austria survived the Auschwitz death camp with fake years!

Carl Stojka was born into a family of Roma Roman Catholics in the village of Vampersdorf in eastern Austria. The Stojka family belonged to the Roma community who lived as horse traders. They lived in a traveling family wagon and spent their winters in the Austrian capital, Vienna. Carl's ancestors lived in Austria for more than 200 years. In 1933, the Nazi regime, building on long-standing prejudices, launched a rigorous campaign against the Roma. They were targeted as racially "undesirable" and people labeled "criminal."
Carl grew up in freedom, travel and hard work. But in March 1938, just before his seventh birthday, Germany annexed Austria. Their wagon was parked for the winter in a camp in Vienna. Instead of prolonging their lives in travel, they were forced to stay put.
By 1943, Karl's family, as well as thousands of other Roma, were deported to the so-called ′ ′ Gypsy Family Camp ′ ′ in Auschwitz-Birkenau. Transportation of more than 900 Roma was sent to Buchenwald for forced labor. Although Carl was fourteen years old, his family convinced the SS guards that he was much younger. So Carl avoided being sent to Birkenau's gas chambers.
On the night of August 2, 1944, between 4,200 and 4,300 Roma were killed in the camp that night.
Carl was later deported to the Flossenberg concentration camp. He was liberated by US troops near Roetz, Germany in April 1945. After the war, he returned to Vienna with his surviving family. Of the 23,000 Roma men, women and children imprisoned in the so-called "Gypsy family camp" in Auschwitz, about 19,000 dead.

History: When did the Roma arrive in the territory of today's Balkans?

The first Roma arrived in the Balkans in the middle of the 11th century, when they left Armenia and went to Anatolia, then to Greece and further north.
Later in the 14th century, towards the middle of the 14th century, archival materials for the Roma were found in both Zagreb and Ljubljana. A larger group of Roma arrived in the territory of present-day Serbia during the reign of King Stefan Decanski, while his son Stefan Dusan (1348) passed a special tax law for Roma who were engaged in blacksmithing. The Roma before the Ottomans were in large numbers on the territory of the Balkan Peninsula, and this is confirmed by the fact that there was a mass appearance of Slavic names among the Roma in the first half of the 16th century. During the Ottoman Empire, the Roma had their own territory - Sandzak, better known as the Roma Sandzak, first in Anadolia, and then in the Balkans. At the time of their arrival in the Balkans, the Roma belonged to the group of the Christian religion, and with the arrival of the Turks, they converted to Islam en masse. At the beginning of the 16th century (1522) the first census was made where the Roma in Rumelia concluded that in that period the Roma lived on the territory of present-day Serbia in the region of Resava, Pirot, Novo Brdo, Novi Pazar, Smederevo, Vranje and Kosovo (Pristina, Prizren and Pec) In Belgrade the first census of Roma was made in 1536.

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Од 5 Ноември 2022 достапен документарниот филм на СП БТР „Небо, Точак, Земја„ на Max TV и Max TV GO со пребарување –Видеотека

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6-to Romano Čhavorikanoo muzikakoro festivali 
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6-ти Ромски Детски музички фестивал
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