thumb|Sinti people in [[Rhine Province, Germany, 1935]]

The Sinti (masc. sing. Sinto; fem. sing. Sintetsa, Sinta) are a subgroup of the Romani people. They were traditionally itinerant, but today only a small percentage of Sinti remain unsettled. In earlier times, they frequently lived on the outskirts of communities.

Within the Sinti Community are various tribes such as the Manouche in France. They speak the Sinti-Manouche variety of Romani, which exhibits strong German influence. A 2012 study by Estonian and Indian researchers found genetic similarities between European Romani men and Indian men in their sample.

While people from the western Indian subcontinent's Sindh region were mentioned in 1100 by Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Maydani, it is unclear whether the Sindhi people were the ancestors of modern Sinti, though it is clear that Sinti and other Romani people originated in the northern Indian subcontinent. Romani Historian Ian Hancock states that the connection between Sinti and Sindhi is not tenable on linguistic grounds and that in the earliest samples of Sinte Romani, the endonym of Kale was used instead.

History

The Sinti arrived in Austria and Germany in the Late Middle Ages as part of the emigration from the Indian subcontinent, eventually splitting into two groups: Eftavagarja ("the Seven Caravans") and Estraxarja ("from Austria"). They arrived in Germany before 1540. The two groups expanded, the Eftavagarja into France and Portugal, where they are called "Manouches", and to the Balkans, where they are called "Ciganos" (from Byzantine Greek "τσιγγάνος" and "Ἀτσίγγανος", deriving from Ancient Greek "ἀθίγγανος", meaning "untouchable"); and the Estraxarja into Italy and Central Europe, mainly what are now Croatia, Slovenia, Hungary, Romania, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, eventually adopting various regional names.

The Holocaust

The Sinti migrated to Germany in the early 15th century. Despite their long presence, they were still generally regarded as beggars and thieves, and, by 1899, the police kept a central register on Sinti, Roma, and Yenish peoples. Nazi Germany considered them racially inferior (see Nazism and race), and persecuted them throughout Germany during the Nazi periodthe Nuremberg Laws of 1935 often being interpreted to apply to them as well as the Jews.

Adolf Eichmann recommended that Nazi Germany solve the "Gypsy Question" simultaneously with the Jewish Question, resulting in the deportation of the Sinti to clear room to build homes for ethnic Germans. Some were sent to the territory of Poland, or elsewhere, including some deported to the territory of Yugoslavia by the Hamburg Police in 1939. Others were confined to designated areas, and many were eventually murdered in gas chambers. Many Sinti and Roma were taken to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where they were put in a special section, called the "gypsy camp". Josef Mengele often performed some of his infamous experiments on Sinti and Roma. On 2 August 1944, the "gypsy camp" was closed, and approximately 4,000 Sinti and Roma were gassed during the night of 2–3 August and burnt in the crematoria. The date 2 August is commemorated as Roma and Sinti Holocaust Remembrance Day.

In the concentration camps, the Sinti were forced to wear either a black triangle, indicating their classification as "asocial", or a brown triangle, specifically reserved for Sinti, Roma, and Yenish peoples.

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File:Sinti-und-Roma-Gedenkstätte beim Färbertor in Nürnberg.jpg|Memorial in Nuremberg opposite Frauentorgraben 49, where on 15 September 1935 the Nuremberg Laws were adopted in the ballroom of the Industrial & Cultural Association clubhouse

File:Bundesarchiv R 165 Bild-244-52, Asperg, Deportation von Sinti und Roma.jpg|Deportation of Sinti and Roma in Asperg, 22 May 1940

File:Düsseldorf-Lierenfeld Gedenktafel.JPG|Memorial for murdered Sinti in Düsseldorf-Lierenfeld

File:Ravensburg Mahnmal Sinti.jpg|Ravensburg, Memorial for Sinti murdered in Auschwitz

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Notable people

thumb|upright|[[Johann Trollmann, a German Sinti boxer, 1928]]

  • Anita Awosusi (born 1956), writer, musician, activist
  • Tayo Awosusi-Onutor (born 1978), singer-songwriter, author, activist
  • Ayo (born 1980), singer, songwriter and actress
  • Wawau Adler (born 1967), jazz guitarist
  • Jakob Bamberger (1913–1989), boxer and activist
  • Drafi Deutscher (1946–2006), singer and songwriter
  • Lily Franz (1924–2011), writer and Holocaust survivor
  • Philomena Franz (1922–2022), writer and Holocaust survivor
  • Raymond Gurême (1925–2020), acrobat, activist, and holocaust survivor
  • Elisabeth Guttenberger (1926–2024), activist and Holocaust survivor
  • Hugo Höllenreiner (1933–2015), Holocaust survivor and public speaker
  • Mario Mettbach (1952–2021/22), politician
  • Oto Pestner (born 1956), singer, songwriter and politician
  • Schnuckenack Reinhardt (1921–2006), jazz musician
  • Marianne Rosenberg (born 1955), singer and daughter of Otto Rosenberg
  • Otto Rosenberg (1927–2001), writer, activist and Holocaust survivor
  • Sido (born 1980), rapper
  • Chrissy Teigen (b. 1985), model
  • Johann Trollmann (1907–1944), boxer and victim of forced sterilisation
  • Häns'che Weiss (1951–2016), jazz musician

See also

  • Antiziganism
  • History of the Romani people
  • Romani people by country
  • Romani people in Austria
  • Romani people in Belgium
  • Romani people in Germany
  • Romani people in the Netherlands
  • Sindhi diaspora
  • Sinte Romani (language)

Notes

References

Sources

Further reading

  • Also