blockquote, div.yahoo_quoted { margin-left: 0 !important; border-left:1px #715FFA solid
!important; padding-left:1ex !important; background-color:white !important; } Janet,
just saying. I found your post fascinating. I stopped following / reading the g posts.
Laurie
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPad
On Friday, January 22, 2016, 10:23 PM, Janet Bertog via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
So, it has occurred to me that I, myself, have left some groups because this discussion
has gotten me very worked up, and here I am again, commenting on it. I apologize, I know
I have been um ... out of sorts ... recently and have reasons that I suppose I should not
share publicly. Anyway, unless someone specifically wants a reply from me, I will no
longer post on the subject to save my health.
Ja et
On Fri, Jan 22, 2016 at 9:20 PM, Janet Bertog via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Prelude: This post is tangential to the gypsy discussion and likely controversial. If
you are not interested, delete now. Moderators, if you feel it is not an appropriate
topic for this list tell me and I will cease any future posts on the matter.
So, let's pretend for a moment that gypsy has been proven to originate from the term
used to refer to the Roma (we all know that I do not believe this), or that it doesn't
matter what it's origin is, the fact that it does have one meaning that refers to the
Roma people is all that matters (we all know that I also do not believe this). Let us
also pretend for a minute that it doesn't matter that in American English the term has
come to mean a free-spirited traveler. We are going to pretend that gypsy only is a
racial slur against Romani.
First I will point out that Romani (Roma, I have seen both used, not sure which is
"most correct"), and Romani advocates, who feel that the word Gypsy is a slur,
always capitalize the word to enforce that it is a reference to the ethnicity. So, first
of all, if it not capitalized, does that not mean that it does not refer to the ethnicity
(I asked Carol this, she did not respond). But that is not really what this post is
about.
So, this discussion about removing gypsy from our dance lexicon is due to the fact that
the Roma are holding on to their heritage and the use of the word as a slur against them
(yes, I recognize that in some places, the Roma are still persecuted today). When I have
asked Roma or Romani advocates about the word, the response I usually get is something
along the lines of "well, what if the move was called the jew instead"? Well,
I'm not jew, so I don't really relate to that either. In fact, I one of the least
racially persecuted groups in existence it would seem, although I am female and blond.
But, I digress. Among the discussions, I have been informed that Gypsy refers to the
ethnicity, not the lifestyle and that the practice of the Romani people to travel was
forced upon them. However, I have read that, in fact, many of the persecutions were just
the opposite - forcing them to settle
(
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_people#Persecutions).
Conversely, the ethnic term can be used as a slur. For example:
jew - someone who is stingypolish - a stupid person
So, every single person in North America is an immigrant (yes, even the "Native
Americans, although much earlier than others). Every single person's ancestor who
moved to America came to America for a reason. Some were forced (such as slaves) but many
came here to escape what they were leaving behind and to hopefully provide a better life
for their families and themselves. So, why is it then that so many racial groups who move
to America to escape their history, choose to also hold on to their history? This is not
just Roma, and it is, oddly enough, not all races. Very few Germans or English in America
refer to themselves as Germans or English (in Cincinnati we have an Oktoberfest every
year, owing to the large number of people of German descent, but for 360 days of the year,
these people are American). If these people moved to America, why are they not just
Americans? Why are they holding on to an ethnic past? When I ask a Roma why they use the
word Gypsy to refer to themselves, the most common answer I get is "people know the
word Gypsy, but do not know what a Roma is". So, if people do not even know what a
Roma is, how can they be persecuting them? If people who move to America want to be
American, why do they hold on to their ethnicity and continue to be offended by words that
refer to that ethnicity (this is a genuine question, I cannot at all relate to this and so
it makes no sense to me). This is not just the Roma, any group of people who come to
America and yet hold on to their ethnic traditions do not make a lot of sense to me,
especially if they are 2nd, 3rd, 4th or more generation Americans who have never even
been to the place of origin for their ethnicity.
According to the US Census, for the first time in 2000 a significant number of people
responded to the question about ancestry by stating that they were American jumped from
12.4 million in 1990 to 20.2 million in 2000
(
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_ethnicity). In the most recent census report on
the census page
(
http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtm…)
the top groups of identified ancestry in the United States was:
American 20 millionGerman 15 million (slurs include boche due to the stereotype of germans
being hard-headed, Fritz, Huns meaning savage and ruthless, Jerry, Kraut from saurkraut,
squarehead from the stereotype of the shape of their heads)English 9 million (slurs
include Gringo, Pom, Pommie, etc)Irish 9 million (bog irish refrerring to a low class
Irish, Dogan possibly from Dugan - an Irish surname, Mick, Paddy - which has been embraced
by Irish even though it was meant to be derogatory, Pikey - an irish travel like gypsy,
tinker - an irish traveler like a gypsy, wigger - also used to refer to people who might
be called "white trash" or "rednecks") Italian 7 million (slurs
include dago, eyetie, greaseball, Guido - an American Italian, Guinea - referring to the
color of their skin, Swamp Guinea)European 3 millionPolish 3 million (slurs include Polak,
and in fact referring to someone as polish is often a slur in itself)Subsaharan African
2.4 million (lots, most of you know)West Indian 2 million (this is a lot of different
nations, so it is hard to look up)Scottish 1.7 million (jock - most of us do not consider
jocks derogatory, Sawny or Sandy, Teuchter, and Tinker is also used in Scotland)Norwegian
1.5 million (surprisingly none were listed)Scotch-Irish 1.4 million (this is a mixed
ancestry, so slurs of both Scottish and Irish origin could refer to them)Dutch 1 million
(cheesehead, frog - as a stereotype of being marsh dwellers, Yankee originally referred to
Dutch settlers in America,
Russian 1 million (katsap, Moskal, russian pig)Swedish almost 1 million (reference for
ethnic slurs:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ethnic_slurs). It is true that most
of these words are not used in the English language, but who is going to stop have kraut
on their sausage because it is an ethnic slur?)
Romani are not reported, likely grouped as "other", but other sources indicate
there are approximately 1 million Romani in America today. I provide this list to point
out that, with one exception, almost no one on this list is offended by people calling
them by their ethnicity, or terms referring to their ethnicity and, in fact, more and more
people are leaving their ancestry in the past and accepting that they are just American.
So, why should Roma people be allowed to claim the word gypsy and declare it a slur
against them, when it is very clear that, especially in America, it is rarely intended to
be a slur, since most people just think Roma are Americans and do not use the word to
refer to the Roma people?
And in regards to "how would you feel if ...", if a move was called a blond
because you walked around in a silly, disoriented fashion, I would laugh and wonder why we
have such a chaotic dance move in contra dance - oh right, those are mixers. If I ever
called mixers, I would start saying "blond with your partner around the room and find
another couple", but I don't, because I hate mixers).
Janet
On Fri, Jan 22, 2016 at 12:49 PM, Lindsay Morris via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I'm about to leave this list because I'm so appalled at the amount of time spent
on this discussion. So many smart, good people: surely we all have something better to
do?
On Friday, January 22, 2016, via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Honestly, it will be next December when I sing Christmas carols again :-)
On Jan 22, 2016, at 12:34, Aahz Maruch via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
On Fri, Jan 22, 2016, via Callers wrote:
I disagree. If it is fair to condemn a word despite widespread
ignorance of its racist etymology (such as the very real problem
with the verb "gyp"), then the inverse must be true: it is fair to
exonerate a word despite widespread ignorance of its non-racist
etymology (e.g., niggardly). That a word falsely gets attributed to
a category in which it doesn't belong is irrelevant. If two separate
meanings/derivations converge to an identically spelled modern word,
I don't believe the innocent word (when used in its original context)
deserves to be written off. Let us truly abide by what you claim to
support: its current use *is* relevant.
Let me know the next time you use "gay" to mean something roughly similar
to "happy" or "joyful", but for which there is no direct substitute.
Despite my support for queer rights (given that two of my partners are
bisexual, among other reasons), that's the one real loss I still feel.
--
Hugs and backrubs -- I break Rule 6
http://rule6.info/
<*> <*> <*>
Help a hearing-impaired person:
http://rule6.info/hearing.html
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--------------------
Lindsay Morris
CEO, TSMworks
Tel. 1-859-539-9900
lindsay(a)tsmworks.com
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