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Gurbeti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Romani people in Cyprus
Not to be confused withGhorbati, an unrelated ethnic group and nation.

Ethnic group
Gurbeti
Languages
Kurbet language,Cypriot Turkish in Cyprus andNorth Cyprus,Vlax Romani language,Albanian language,Serbian language andBalkan Gagauz Turkish in the Balkans, alsoCrimean Tatar language in Crimea.
Religion
Cultural Muslims,Serbian Orthodox Church
Part ofa series on
Romani people
Flag of the Romani people

Gurbeti (alsoKurbet orKurbat or غربتی in Persian) are a sub-group of theRomani people living inTurkey,Albania,Bulgaria,Kosovo,Serbia,Cyprus,[1] and the formerYugoslavia[2][3] whose members areEastern Orthodox and predominantlyMuslim Roma.[4][5] The Gurbeti make up approximately two thirds of the population of Roma inMačva, many of whom work in agriculture.[4] In Kosovo, other Romani groups viewed the Gurbeti negatively.[6]

Muslim Gurbeti at Cyprus

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In the 1960Constitution of Cyprus they were considered as part of theTurkish Cypriot community.[7] Once the Gurbeti lived all over Cyprus. After 1975, with theThird Vienna Agreement they migrated, along with the majority of the Turkish Cypriots toNorthern Cyprus. Immigration to the United Kingdom and Turkey has also taken place. They describe themselves as Turkish in terms of ethnicity and speakKurbet language andCypriot Turkish.[8] In the 17th century, some migrated to Ottoman Rumelia.[9] In the Republic of Cyprus most live in the area ofAgios Antonios in Limassol, and in the villages ofMakounta,Stavrokonnou andPolis-Chrysochou in Paphos.[7] Persons belonging to the Roma community remain social and economically marginalised despite some government efforts.[10]

Gurbeti in the Balkans

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InVuk Stefanović Karadžić's Serbian dictionary, the wordGurbet means "Gypsy foreign workers". The word is derived from Turkishgurbet, meaning "emigrate".[11] The first mentions of nomadic Roma attributed as Gurbeti ancestors, fromOttoman Cyprus, is from the 17th century.[9] In 1941, most of the Yugoslav Roma settled permanently, with the exception of the Gurbeti in Montenegro.[3]

However, other sources about the Gurbeti have said that their Ancestors once came from Moldova and Wallachia, at the end of the 1850s afterSlavery in Romania and settled in the Balkan, and speak a Vlax dialect.[12]

In other parts at the Balkans like in Bulgaria, Albania, North Macedonia, Serbia and Greece, the Gurbet are calledPečalbarstvo.[13]

Anatolia

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Ottoman sources from 16th century mentioned from Gurbet aTurkomanClan clan who lived inDulkadiroğlu, Kahramanmaraş.[14]

Culture

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The Gurbeti in the Balkans share some cultural features with theKalderaš, but also with otherXoraxane, who adopted Turkish culture since the Ottoman time. The majority of Gurbeti areCultural Muslims while others belong to theSerbian Orthodox Church, and partly assimilated into society. They speakKurbet language andCypriot Turkish in Northern Cyprus, andVlax Romani language,Albanian language,Serbian language andRumelian Turkish at the Balkans.

Diaspora

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There is a Gurbeti diaspora, such as in Austria and Germany; these were recent migrants, mostly Gastarbeiter unskilled workers, and have since integrated into Austrian and German society. Some of the Gurbeti men married Austrian and German women. The Host population did not see them as Roma, only as Yugoslavian.[12]

Language

[edit]

TheirKurbet is a variety ofPara-Romani.[15] In Kosovo, the Gurbeti speech have either a dominant Serbian substratum, or Albanian substratum. TheDžambazi (Acrobatics and Horse trading) nomadic Muslim Romani group, speak a sub-dialect ofKurbet. The origin of the Romani loan words in Croatian are most likely from Gurbeti, who settled predominantly from Bosnia and Herzegovina.[16] Rade Uhlik translated theGospel of Luke into Bosnian Gurbeti asO keriben pal e Devleskre bičhade. This was published by the British and Foreign Bible Society in 1938, and published in Belgrade.

Genetic

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While theEarly Romani people traces back to theIndian Subcontinent,[17] alsoGene flow from theOttoman Turks spilled over and established a higher frequency of the Y-haplogroupsJ and E3b in Balkan Roma Groups.[18] The Greek Doctor A. G. Paspati made the statement in his Book, that Turks married often Roma Woman.[19] Greeks and Slavs DNA also influenced the Balkan Roma people.[20] Also, the genetics ofPeoples of the Caucasus influenced the Genetic impact of Roma people.[21]

References

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  1. ^"Roma flee Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus; anti-Gypsyism breaks out in the South".European Roma Rights Centre.
  2. ^Guy, Will (2001).Between Past and Future.University of Hertfordshire Press. p. 52.ISBN 978-1-902806-07-5.
  3. ^abRamet, Sabrina P.; Vjeran Pavlaković (2005).Serbia Since 1989.University of Washington Press. p. 383.ISBN 978-0-295-98538-1.
  4. ^abCvorovic, Jelena (May–August 2006)."Gypsies Drown in Shallow Water: Oral Narratives among Macva Gypsies".Journal of Folklore Research.43 (2):129–148.doi:10.2979/JFR.2006.43.2.129.JSTOR 3814870.S2CID 144395001. Retrieved1 March 2022.
  5. ^Rushton, J. Philippe; Jelena Čvorović; Trudy Ann Bons (January–February 2007). "General mental ability in South Asians: Data from three Roma (Gypsy) communities in Serbia".Intelligence.35 (1):1–12.doi:10.1016/j.intell.2006.09.002.
  6. ^Etnološki pregled: Revue d'etnologie. Vol. 10–12. 1972. p. 30.
  7. ^abEuropean Commission, Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers; Symeou, Loizos; Pelekani, Chryso (2019).Civil society monitoring report on implementation of the national Roma integration strategies in Cyprus: focusing on structural and horizontal preconditions for successful implementation of the strategy. Brussels: Publications Office of the European Union. p. 13.doi:10.2838/209345.ISBN 978-92-79-90574-2.
  8. ^"KIBRIS'TAKİ GURBETLERİN GİZLİ DİLİ"(PDF). Rıdvan Öztürk. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 8 July 2017.
  9. ^abHelena Kanyar-Becker 2003: "In addition, in the XVIIth century, one begins to find mentions of nomadic Rroma, who were from Ottoman Cyprus - the ancestors of the present-day Gurbeti in Yugoslavia."
  10. ^Advisory Committee on the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (2020)."Fifth Opinion on Cyprus".Council of Europe. Strasbourg: Secretariat of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities Council of Europe. p. 4.
  11. ^Đura Daničić, Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti 1891: "U Vukovu rječniku. GUBBET, m. Ciganin skitač, arap. tur. ghurbet, ise\avane. — isporedi gurbetaš, gurbetin."
  12. ^ab"Gurbet [Rombase]". Archived fromthe original on 9 September 2019. Retrieved30 August 2021.
  13. ^Hristov Petko (January 2015)."The Balkan gurbet/pecalbarstvo - past and present".Glasnik Etnografskog instituta.63 (3):551–563.doi:10.2298/GEI1503551H.S2CID 188243396.
  14. ^Yılgür, Egemen (January 2021)."Turcoman Gypsies in the Balkans: Just a Preferred Identity or More?".Romani History and Culture Festschrift in Honour of Prof. Dr. Veselin Popov / Hristo Kyuchukov, Sofiya Zahova, Ian Duminica.
  15. ^Sabine Hornberg; Christian Brüggemann (2013).Die Bildungssituation von Roma in Europa. Waxmann Verlag. pp. 58–.ISBN 978-3-8309-7841-1.
  16. ^Schrammel-Ambrosch-Halwachs 2005, p. 85
  17. ^Melegh, Bela I.; Banfai, Zsolt; Hadzsiev, Kinga; Miseta, Attila; Melegh, Bela (2017)."Refining the South Asian Origin of the Romani people".BMC Genetics.18 (1): 82.doi:10.1186/s12863-017-0547-x.PMC 5580230.PMID 28859608 – viaResearchGate.
  18. ^Bánfai, Zsolt; Melegh, Béla I.; Sümegi, Katalin; Hadzsiev, Kinga; Miseta, Attila; Kásler, Miklós; Melegh, Béla (13 June 2019)."Revealing the Genetic Impact of the Ottoman Occupation on Ethnic Groups of East-Central Europe and on the Roma Population of the Area".Frontiers in Genetics.10: 558.doi:10.3389/fgene.2019.00558.PMC 6585392.PMID 31263480.
  19. ^Paspati, A. G.; Hamlin, C. (1860)."Memoir on the Language of the Gypsies, as Now Used in the Turkish Empire".Journal of the American Oriental Society.7:143–270.doi:10.2307/592158.JSTOR 592158.
  20. ^Martínez-Cruz, Begoña; Mendizabal, Isabel; Harmant, Christine; De Pablo, Rosario; Ioana, Mihai; Angelicheva, Dora; Kouvatsi, Anastasia; Makukh, Halyna; Netea, Mihai G.; Pamjav, Horolma; Zalán, Andrea; Tournev, Ivailo; Marushiakova, Elena; Popov, Vesselin; Bertranpetit, Jaume; Kalaydjieva, Luba; Quintana-Murci, Lluis; Comas, David (2016)."Origins, admixture and founder lineages in European Roma".European Journal of Human Genetics.24 (6):937–943.doi:10.1038/ejhg.2015.201.PMC 4867443.PMID 26374132 – viaResearchGate.
  21. ^Bánfai, Zsolt; Ádám, Valerián; Pöstyéni, Etelka; Büki, Gergely; Czakó, Márta; Miseta, Attila; Melegh, Béla (2018)."Revealing the impact of the Caucasus region on the genetic legacy of Romani people from genome-wide data".PLOS ONE.13 (9): e0202890.Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1302890B.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0202890.PMC 6130880.PMID 30199533 – viaResearchGate.
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