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Book Info

ISBN 1 84659 007 8
Genre: Fiction
Publication: 25 May 2006
Format: 13 x 20 cm
Edition: Paperback
Pages: 210pp
Price: £9.99

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About the Editor
Nancy Hawker is reading Languages and Cultures at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. Raised in France and the Czech Republic, in the course of her studies she has absorbed English, French, Czech, Hebrew and Arabic literature.

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About the Contributors
Berková: Who gave, I ask you, you self-appointed inquisitors, who gave you the right to represent your own shallow interests as the interests of the people of this land? (The pot-bellies nod and exhale mist. The pot-belly with the curly tuft takes notes.)
Not only feminist, not only cynical, not only political, the Czech women writers in this collection re-present some perspectives of some people of their land...

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Milena Hübschmannová was a scholar of Roma studies who helped me in my research to include short stories by Czech Roma writers in Povídky. It is with great sorrow that I add my note to the condolences following her tragic death. Nancy Hawker


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Obituary in The Guardian

Milena Hubschmannova

Czech champion of the Roma, their language and culture

By Tom Gross
Monday September 19, 2005
The Guardian

Milena Hubschmannova, who has died in a car accident aged 72, was professor of Romany studies at Prague's Charles University, and one of the leading experts of her generation, if not of all time, on Roma (Gypsy) culture and language.

Although not of Roma origin herself, Hubschmannova spent most of her life studying and helping the Roma, winning their respect and intense affection through her warmth and sensitivity. "She helped us to find dignity in ourselves, our culture and our history," said Jana Hejkrlikova, a Roma activist.

Roma are a distinct people who have preserved their language and culture since migrating to Europe from India in the 10th century; and, contrary to legend, the vast majority of Europe's six to eight million Roma have not lived a nomadic lifestyle for centuries.

In the former Czechoslovakia, where Hubschmannova lived and worked, hostility towards the 750,000 Roma remains acute. During communist times, when the authorities broke up Roma communities, tried to ban the Romani language and even forcibly sterilised some Roma women, Hubschmannova was one of a tiny number of non-Roma who tried to keep Roma culture alive.

Born into a middle-class family in Prague, she first became interested in the Romani language after she had graduated from Charles University, where she studied Urdu, Hindi and Bengali.

When the communist authorities sent her on students' working brigades in Moravia, she came into contact with Roma communities and found that she could understand much of their language. "I was astonished that I was able to recognise words extremely similar to Hindi," she said.

"I had studied Hindi, but the communist regime made it difficult to travel to India, so instead I discovered India here in Czechoslovakia."

Hubschmannova began a lifelong quest to learn about the Roma and to help them promote a better understanding of their culture in the outside world. Since it was forbidden to learn Romani in those times, she mastered it through conversations with native speakers with whom she became close friends.

She spent periods living in poor communities in eastern Slovakia and northern Bohemia, recording Romani speech, songs, proverbs, folklore and tales, in notebooks and on tape. She mastered many dialects of Romani, not only Czech and Slovak, until she was able to speak to Roma friends from as far afield as Albania, Spain and Argentina.

In the more liberal atmosphere after the Prague spring, she helped establish the Union of Gypsy-Roma in 1968, and (until it was banned by the communists in 1973) co-edited their Romani language journal - a rarity for a people who until then had been largely illiterate.

Following the fall of communism in 1989, there was a flowering of Roma culture and of expressions of Roma identity throughout much of eastern Europe. Hubschmannova played an important role in encouraging these developments.

She was the driving force behind the opening in 1991 of a Romany studies department at Charles University, which she chaired until her death. The department offered the first undergraduate university course specifically devoted to Romany studies anywhere in the world.

Hubschmannova invited ordinary Roma who had been unable to enter university because of discrimination in the Czech school system to take part in her classes, to learn about their own history and share their experiences and stories.

She fought to overcome the prejudice, which is still widespread. "Be careful, they're quick with their knives," one humanities professor warned her.

She published extensively, writing essays, contributing to books, and helping to compile the first Czech-Romani dictionary.

Hubschmannova was an exceptionally good-natured woman, generous, modest, energetic, loving and much loved. She is survived by her daughter.

Milena Hubschmannova, linguist, Romologist and folklorist, born July 10 1933; died September 8 2005

Read more about Milena Hübschmannová in an article from Czech Radio


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Reviews
'"What is the selling-point of post-Communist literature?" If that is indeed the question, then the humour, acuity and inventiveness of many stories in Povidky must be part of the answer."
- Maya Jaggi, The Guardian

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Excerpts
Until now Jakub had gone to great lengths in order to get into heaven. He did not take God's name in vain, he did not indulge in sinful thoughts and he almost never stole anything. Suddenly that seemed easy, or at least a lot easier than what was ahead of him. For from this day on he must live in sin.

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