Roma in Bulgaria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pan-handling Roma family in front of the Russian Church in Sofia
Pan-handling Roma family in front of the Russian Church in Sofia

Roma people constitute the second largest minority and third largest ethnic group (after Bulgarians and Turks) in Bulgaria. According to the 2001 census, there were 370,908 Roma in Bulgaria, equivalent to 4.7% of the country's total population.[1]

Roma are commonly referred to as tsigani (цигани, pronounced /'ʦiɡəni/), an exonym that some Roma resent, but others embrace. The form of the endonym Roma in Bulgarian is romi (роми).

Bulgaria participates in the Decade of Roma Inclusion, an initiative of European countries to better integrate Roma in the society. The rights of the Roma people in the country are also represented by various political parties and cultural organizations, most notably the Civil Union "Roma".

Noted Roma from Bulgaria include musicians Azis, Sofi Marinova and Ivo Papazov, surgeon Aleksandar Chirkov, politician Toma Tomov, footballer Marian Ognyanov, 1988 Olympic boxing champion Ismail Mustafov, poet and composer of Romania's national anthem Anton Pann.

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Roma in Bulgaria are not a unified community in terms of culture and lifestyle. The most widespread subgroup of the Roma in the country are the yerlii or the 'local Roma', which are in turn divided into Bulgarian Gypsies (daskane roma) and Turkish Gypsies (horahane roma). The former are mostly Eastern Orthodox and to a smaller extent Protestant, while the latter are Muslim.

Other Roma subgroups include the conservative wandering Kalderash (sometimes referred to by the exonym Serbian Gypsies) that are Eastern Orthodox and the Rudari (or Ludari) who speak a dialect of Romanian and are known as Vlach Gypsies or Romanian Gypsies. They are further subdivided into three groups by their traditional craft: the Ursari or Mechkari ('bear trainers'), the Lingurari or Kopanari ('carpenters', primarily associated with wooden bowls) and the Lautari ('musicians').

Additionally, the offsprings of a Bulgarian and a Roma are referred to as dzhorevtsi (джоревци) or zhorevtsi (жоревци).[2]

Between the 2001 census and the one 1992 the number of Roma in the country has increased by 57,512, or 18.4%. Constituting 4.7% of the total population in 2001, the Roma were only 2.8% in 1910 and 2.0% in 1920.

The Roma are present in all provinces of Bulgaria, but they represent the highest portion of the population in Montana Province (12.5%) and Sliven Province (12.3%), with their share being smallest in Smolyan Province, where they are only 686, a negligible part of the population.

There is no city, town or village in the country where Roma are the only ethnic group. The number of places where Roma dominate (i.e. constitute more than 50% of the population) has risen from the 1992 to the 2001 census.

Province Roma Total population
Blagoevgrad Province 12,405 341,173
Burgas Province 19,439 423,547
Dobrich Province 18,649 215,217
Gabrovo Province 1,611 144,125
Haskovo Province 17,089 277,478
Kardzhali Province 1,264 164,019
Kyustendil Province 8,294 162,534
Lovech Province 6,316 169,951
Montana Province 22,784 182,258
Pazardzhik Province 23,970 310,723
Pernik Province 3,035 149,832
Pleven Province 9,777 311,985
Plovdiv Province 30,196 715,816
Razgrad Province 8,733 152,417
Ruse Province 9,703 266,157
Shumen Province 16,457 204,378
Silistra Province 6,478 142,000
Sliven Province 26,777 218,474
Smolyan Province 686 140,066
Sofia 17,885 1,170,842
Sofia Province 16,748 273,240
Stara Zagora Province 16,748 370,615
Targovishte Province 9,868 137,689
Varna Province 15,462 462,013
Veliko Tarnovo Province 6,064 293,172
Vidin Province 9,786 130,074
Vratsa Province 14,899 243,036
Yambol Province 9,729 156,070
Total 370,908 7,928,901

  1. ^ Population as of 1 March 2001 divided by provinces and ethnic group (Bulgarian). National Statistical Institute (2001). Retrieved on June 18, 2006.
  2. ^ The Capital Roma: Zhelev is to be Blamed for the Gypsy Stuff (Bulgarian). Sega Newspaper. Retrieved on June 18, 2006.

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