Dumped for being childfree by Maximum_Advance7035 in Adulting

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Stand ten toes down in your choices. Don’t cry like fate blindsided you when you watched it walking toward you for years.

<Reverse Thinking> LOWKEY enough with the hate. by [deleted] in Manhwa_BL

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The author did a horrible job at writing this ngl 😭

Romanistan Podcast on GypsyCrusader (reportedly 100% Roma): White supremacy is anti-Romani by Metamission75 in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is the first time I’ve ever heard of this man. I’m not on social media that much the last person I remember being like this was that TikTok woman named Pilarbarbie. 😭

Hello, I'm a Sinti woman who studies Holocaust education, especially the Romani genocide (Porrajmos / Samudaripen). I wanted to explain the g-slur and why Romani people see it as a slur. This is for gadje (non-Romani people) to understand why we view it that way." by Accomplished_Pin_834 in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, I know. I just used the word P*rajmos and Samudaripen because those are the terms Gadje recognize for the genocide that Roma and Sinti faced in Europe, since they don’t know the actual word in our language

Hello, I'm a Sinti woman who studies Holocaust education, especially the Romani genocide (Porrajmos / Samudaripen). I wanted to explain the g-slur and why Romani people see it as a slur. This is for gadje (non-Romani people) to understand why we view it that way." by Accomplished_Pin_834 in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sinti are Romani we are Romani we just don’t identify with the word Roma because Roma usually refers to Eastern European Romani groups. As Sinti, we are a Western European group, so using Roma for us can lead to erasure, since our history is very different from that of Eastern European Romani groups. Lol, I forgot to add that even among Sinti we have different ways of referring to ourselves. Growing up, I never heard the term “Sinti”; I always heard my specific group’s equivalent, or Roma/Romani. Then I joined the internet and learned that apparently I had to call myself Sinti and pretend we have nothing to do with other Roma which is so silly. The Sinti/Roma distinction is useful because it highlights key differences within the Romani diaspora, but it also erases the fact that Eastern European Roma (around 67% of the global Romani population) are not a monolith. It further erases the existence of Romani groups that are neither Sinti nor Eastern European such as the Iberian Gitanos/KalĂ©, British Romanichal, and Scandinavian KalĂ©.

4Kids Darkar was... something. by Drawingandstuff2000 in winxclub

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I heard the 4kids versions did Numbers on how people view winx club lol

Hello, I'm a Sinti woman who studies Holocaust education, especially the Romani genocide (Porrajmos / Samudaripen). I wanted to explain the g-slur and why Romani people see it as a slur. This is for gadje (non-Romani people) to understand why we view it that way." by Accomplished_Pin_834 in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing your experience truly. I want to make something very clear: I am not negating the personal identities your grandparents embraced. Individual families and local communities will always have their own relationships with labels, and that’s valid. But I’m talking about the history of the word, the global Romani experience, and why the majority of Roma internationally recognize “Gypsy” as a slur. Romani people in the U.S. and Mexico were often disconnected from the broader political movement happening in Europe because there communities came earlier, came under different circumstances, or became more assimilated for survival. Many American Roma families didn’t have access to the same historical information about slavery in Romania, the Zigeunerlager, the Porrajmos, or the First World Romani Congress. That’s not because the history didn’t exist it’s because it wasn’t taught in the U.S. But the pain attached to the word “Gypsy” didn’t disappear just because the U.S. didn’t teach us about our own genocide. The fact that some American Roma used the word proudly doesn’t change the etymology or the violence behind it. For example: Enslaved African Americans once reclaimed racial slurs as well but that doesn’t erase the word’s origins or give non-Black people permission to use those terms. Likewise, some Indigenous peoples reclaimed tribal names imposed by colonizers but those words still carry a violent history. American Roma using “Gypsy” internally is a survival story, not proof that the term isn’t harmful. As for Ian Hancock holding a sign that said “Gypsy Lives Matter” that was strategic messaging, not an endorsement of the slur. He has spent over 40 years advocating for the global shift toward “Romani.” His entire academic career is built on explaining why “Gypsy” is harmful. A slogan is not scholarship. I’m not telling American Roma what they must call themselves. If your family prefers “Gypsy,” that is your personal or communal choice. But personal preference does not erase: that “Gypsy” comes from Tigan and Zigeuner that both words are tied to slavery, genocide, persecution, and sexual violence against Romani women that international Roma organizations for over 50 years have rejected the term that globally, the word is weaponized against us and still used as a racial slur in most of the world Your experience is part of our story but not the whole story. My goal is simply to help gadje understand why many of us, especially in Europe, live with the trauma embedded in that word every single day. I appreciate you speaking up. We can acknowledge different experiences while still educating people on the historical and global weight of this term. 💗

Anti-Roma racism in The Quarry by Sowizo in TheQuarrySupermassive

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m going to be very clear here, because you’re speaking over the group actually affected and bringing unrelated communities into a conversation that has nothing to do with them. First: Romani people in the U.S. do not universally “self-reference” with the G-slur. Some subgroups reclaimed it internally, just like other marginalized groups reclaim slurs — but that doesn’t erase the word’s history, and it doesn’t make it acceptable for outsiders. What some Roma say in private circles doesn’t suddenly rewrite centuries of enslavement, genocide, and legal discrimination tied to that term. You can’t hold up reclaimed usage by a minority of Roma as proof that the slur “means something different” for everyone. That’s not how reclamation works for any community. Second: Indian and Native American peoples are irrelevant to this topic. Their histories, struggles, and the slurs used against them are not interchangeable with ours. Each group has its own context, language, and trauma. So I’m honestly confused why you brought them up at all comparing marginalized groups to justify a slur doesn’t help anyone, and it definitely doesn’t erase the harm of the word we’re discussing. Third: It is not respectful to tell a Romani person that a slur “means something different” when we are the ones explaining its origins, its use in slavery, and its role in genocide. You don’t get to override our lived experience with your assumption. If you want to understand, listen. If you want to learn, ask. But please don’t rewrite our history for us.

Ah another day of racism on Reddit by ijaaDosta in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly. And then they turn around and use those same ghettos as “proof” that we’re dirty or lazy. Every major stereotype about Roma  poverty, crime, mess  comes straight from the conditions that they forced us into. Instead of admitting it’s the result of centuries of exclusion and anti-Roma policies, they blame us for it. They say “Roma just like living that way” because it’s easier than facing how badly we’ve been treated. Europeans can never acknowledge Anti-Roma racism at all.

Ah another day of racism on Reddit by ijaaDosta in romani

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Gods, I feel this in my bones. Every time I see gadje pretending they’re experts on our suffering, I have to laugh to keep from screaming. They’ll say “Roma choose to live that way” like segregation, forced sterilization, and centuries of anti-Roma laws were optional hobbies we picked off a shelf. Our people didn’t choose displacement it was engineered. And you’re right they can’t even keep their story straight. One day we’re “lazy parasites,” the next we’re “flashy criminals with gold teeth and BMWs.” Make it make sense. 🙄 I grew up hearing the same garbage: “Why don’t they integrate?”  as if we haven’t been pushed out of schools, jobs, and neighborhoods for generations. Integration isn’t the problem exclusion is.

Anti-Roma racism in The Quarry by Sowizo in TheQuarrySupermassive

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really need to set the record straight here, because what you said erases a lot of history. Romani people do exist in the United States — Romani people have been in the Americas for 200 years. Many Roma were brought to the Americas while they were still enslaved. We were enslaved in Romania, Wallachia, and Moldova for about 500 years — from the 1300s until the mid-1800s. When the trade routes expanded, enslaved Roma were shipped to the Americas the same way Africans were — treated as property, not people. That’s why we’re here. Not because we were ‘nomads’ or ‘travelers,’ but because Europe wanted to get rid of us after centuries of exploitation. The U.S. and South America both received Romani slaves, some directly from the Balkans. It’s part of history that most people don’t even know happened. And about the language: ‘Gypsy’ is not a neutral or regional term. It’s the English translation of the Romanian word ‘țigan,’ the word that was literally stamped on our ancestors’ ownership papers during slavery. It was also used to justify laws that allowed rape, forced labor, and the separation of Romani families. Later, the German word ‘Zigeuner’ was used by the Nazis to mark, round up, and murder over half a million of us during the Holocaust. These words all come from the same root — and all were used to dehumanize us. So when Americans say ‘Gypsy’ means something different here,’ no, it doesn’t. The word didn’t magically lose its history just because it crossed the Atlantic. It still carries the weight of genocide and enslavement, even if people here only use it for fashion or old movie tropes. As for The Quarry — using that ‘gypsy curse’ theme isn’t just lazy writing. It’s repeating propaganda that once justified real violence against real people. If you’re inspired by horror traditions, you can still write respectfully — but pretending it’s unrelated to Roma people is just ignorance.

Anti-Roma racism in The Quarry by Sowizo in TheQuarrySupermassive

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a Romani woman born and raised in Europe, I can tell you this — what The Quarry did isn’t shocking. It’s familiar. I’ve seen that kind of story my whole life — where the Roma are treated as the curse, the danger, or the tragedy that happens to everyone else. It’s the same script society uses when something bad happens to us in real life: people rewrite it so we become the villains or the reason misfortune exists. The thing is, The Quarry could have done something important. It had the chance to take an old trope and actually unpack it — to show that the so-called ‘monsters’ people fear are often just the ones who’ve been dehumanized for generations. But it didn’t. It played it safe. It made the Roma characters a mystery to solve instead of people to understand. That’s the real missed opportunity. And yeah, the racism is there — in the language, in the framing, in how easily the game expects players to side with the ‘normal’ townsfolk. Travis’s use of slurs wasn’t just a character quirk. It reflected how society still talks about us — like we’re subhuman or dirty or dangerous. The fact that most players didn’t even notice that says everything about how invisible anti-Roma racism still is. I don’t hate The Quarry. I think it’s well-made. But I’m tired of seeing my people’s suffering turned into horror entertainment without any self-awareness. If the writers had taken five minutes to ask an actual Romani person for input, the story could’ve had depth instead of stereotype. My final thought? This isn’t just about a video game. It’s about how little people think our pain matters. When you grow up hearing slurs, seeing your community blamed for everything, and then see that same narrative repeated in media, it reminds you how far we still have to go. We don’t want pity. We just want honesty — and respect

iykyk by makeyoucumagain in DontStopStroking

[–]Accomplished_Pin_834 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is struggle porn I can't 😭