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Thread: Brand new genetic study on the origins of Huns, Avars and Hungarian Conquerors

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    Quote Originally Posted by Aspirin View Post
    Gypsies are invaders, nobody from Europe brought them here like African Blacks in both Americas. For some reason Europeans are taught to tolerate them and to kiss their feet like they have some obligations towards them.
    Even if Gypsies were invaders 1000 years ago their descendants wouldnt be today - they would be native born. But they were not invaders more like refugees, invader has a different meaning and usually means that they want to subjugate the native population. Or are colonial american still immigrants even if their ancestors moved 500 years ago to the US?
    Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini
    "Nderi nuk shitet, as blihet – ai fitohet me jetën e njeriut."
    ("Honor is neither sold nor bought – it is earned through a man’s life.")

    Jean-Claude (in Taken, 2008):
    “These Albanians… they came from the East one day, and they brought their own rules with them. They’re not people you want to cross.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by Varda View Post
    In the Balkans Gypsies are direct product of Ottoman invasion. Ottomans brought them as own servants, blacksmiths, musicians etc. Vast majority of Gypsies in the Balkans in Ottoman time were Muslims as their Turkish masters. When Ottomans are removed part of Balkan Gypsies converted to Christianity, but still significant part of them are Muslims. In the Balkans sometimes Ottomans used Gypsies for crimes against Christian population as revenge for their uprisings, same as Bashi-bazouk.
    2. Soldiering as Socialization
    The Roma as Serbian combatants were mentioned in
    both of the Serbian uprisings organized in the 19th
    century (in 1804–1813 and in 1815). For example, the
    contemporary Vuk Stefanovic Karadžić wrote that “the
    Gypsies had their own commander during the uprising”
    (Acković, 2009, p. 91). In addition, the famous Serbian
    poet, Sima Milutinović Sarajlija, wrote about the heroism of the Roma combatants. The first Serbian uprising
    brought the Roma civil rights recognition, equality before the courts, freedom of religion, respect for customs
    and traditions as well as land heritage. However, these
    measures disappeared with the collapse of the Serbian
    insurgency. The Roma were offered similar rights after
    the second Serbian uprising, in 1815. However, it appears that this time the reforms did not bring palpable results. The historian Vladimir Stojančević explained
    this as the result of a weaker Roma presence in the
    rebel forces and its leadership than was the case in
    the previous uprising (Jakšić & Bašić, 2005, pp. 20–21).
    The Roma reappeared as Serbian fighters during the
    turbulence of 1848. They were part of the forces sent
    from the Serbian Principality to Serbs living in Southern
    Hungary. Atanasije-Tasa Ivanović from the Serbian town
    of Jagodina, the man responsible for tax collection from
    the Serbian Roma, was ordered to form an exclusively
    Roma outfit:
    With 850 skilful Gypsies, along with zurlas and drums,
    he continued during the freezing cold in December
    1848. There were few of the Jagodina Gypsies, up
    to 300, but others from Kragujevac, Pozarevac joined
    them along the way, following Tasa’s order, which had
    to be executed unconditionally. Sabac, Smederevo
    and other places. There were up to 900 of them near
    Višnjica on the Danube. It was an unusual and very
    colourful army: One group (from Jagodina) wore the
    ordinary clothes, with pistols and holsters, curved
    sabres; others had more beautiful, colourful garbs
    with a scarf around their heads, with large belts, in
    which the guns were kept, together with the sharp
    knives, a whip with a lead top, and with rifles on their
    shoulders; on their feet they wore cavalry boots with
    spurs; their banners had various flags. (Cvetić, 1910,
    pp. 38–43)
    Once across the Danube, fierce fighting ensued with
    the Hungarian army near the town of Arad. It has been
    recorded that 15 of the Serbian Roma soldiers were killed
    in this battle (Cvetić, 1910, pp. 38–43).
    In 1883, a standing army with compulsory military
    service was introduced in the Kingdom of Serbia. This
    was one of many measures aimed at modernizing the
    state which had gained its independence in 1878. How
    did the Roma fit into this system, which was based on
    state bureaucracy and, above all, on the need for accurate addresses and years of birth? At first, the Serbian
    authorities were tolerant and aware that a number of
    Roma were clearly beyond the army’s reach. For the time
    being only those Roma with permanent addresses and
    valid documents were called up. However, the state decided to recruit also the so-called ‘wandering Roma.’ In
    October 1891, the Serbian War Ministry made a decision
    that would significantly affect the way of life of the Roma
    in Serbia. It was a direct and dramatic interference of the
    state in the traditional way of life of native Roma:
    Social Inclusion, 2020, Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 277–285 278
    Many Gypsy vagrants avoid service in the unit and in
    the reserve. The reason is that as wanderers they cannot be processed through the census book in any municipality, so they are not recruited as such. In order
    to stop the waste of such material for the army, I order that all Gypsy vagrants, from 20 to 30 years of age,
    be recruited every year and sent exclusively to the infantry. Recruiting, reviewing and deploying personnel
    should be performed on the fifth day, after the other
    recruits have already been sent to the infantry. During
    the recruitment, there should be an interview of the
    Gypsy family in question, regarding the recruit’s most
    frequent residence or place of work. When deployed,
    the district commanders will report to the battalion
    commander concerned, for each recruit, where each
    person will reside after serving. Upon dismissal, the
    battalion commander will report to the regiment in
    question about the trained soldiers, who will now be
    assigned to it as reservists.
    As every year the infantry command issues a special
    call summoning its recruits, the commanders all regiment districts, as soon as they find out that such call
    has been published, will order to the administrative
    authorities in their area that on that day…all municipal authorities are obliged to bring to the headquarters all the Gypsy vagrants who are found in their district. Of these, all able-bodied persons who have not
    yet served in the military and who have not reached
    the age of 30 should be listed and trained.
    The age of each Gypsy will be evaluated by the doctor attached to the district commander in charge—
    unless other documents are to be presented by the
    Gypsies themselves. (“Propisi, naredjenja i objašnjenja,” 1891)
    It is hard to estimate how efficient this measure was. It
    is reasonable to assume that it definitely increased the
    numbers within the Serbian army’s contingent. It also
    brought about changes in the lives of many Roma. The
    long two-year stay in the army acted also as socialization process. Namely, one of the elementary activities in
    the army was the literacy course. On the other hand, the
    state was trying to transform all Roma into more permanent residents. It is important to note that the infantry
    was the only branch of the army reserved for the ‘Roma
    wanderers.’ This type of soldiering did not ask for any
    particular pre-existing skills unlike the artillery or engineering. And unlike the cavalry, no particular property
    (a horse) was needed.
    In 1912 the state summoned its Roma reservists to
    arms. This was the First Balkan War. Among the hundreds of thousands of Serb soldiers ready to cross the
    Serb-Ottoman border, there were many Roma. One of
    them, a soldier named Ahmet Ademović, became part of
    Serbian military legends. Firstly, his performance at war
    shows that many Roma men acted in an exemplary manner in Serbian uniform. His biography also speaks a lot
    about patterns used when depicting Roma heroism, and
    more broadly, it offers insights into the wider trends in
    remembering the actions of Serbian troops during the
    1912–1918 period. It is not clear who was the first to
    write down the story of Ahmet Ademović. In 1989 the military enthusiast Tomislav Vlahović published a book dedicated to the soldiers who had earned the highest Serbian
    military decoration: the Karadjordje Star. Naturally, he
    mentioned Ademović’s story as well. By doing so he secured the preservation of the story for future decades.
    However, he wrote down two versions of the story which
    were circulating at the time.
    The first version of these was that Ademović had a
    crucial role in the Kumanovo battle of October 1912. This
    was the initial and most important clash of the Serbian
    and the Ottoman troops in the First Balkan War. The battle did not begin well for the Serbs who did not anticipate that they would run into the core of the Ottoman
    troops so soon after entering Ottoman territory. Vlahović
    described how, at the most critical moment of the battle,
    Ademović gave a trumpet signal for the assault instead
    of the retreat—as he had been previously ordered by his
    commander. Ademović did so because he estimated, on
    his own initiative, that the moment was ripe for counterattack. Ultimately, his decision reversed the battlefield
    situation. In the second version, Ademović’s action was
    even more audacious. It was claimed that Ademović was
    decorated because he actually disguised himself before
    the battle. Wearing Ottoman uniform, he went into the
    enemy camp where he deceived the enemy by playing
    a false signal—a trumpet sign for withdrawal (Vlahović,
    1989, pp. 85, 421).
    Even with all the shortcomings of the Ottoman
    forces in 1912, something like this seems highly unlikely.
    Moreover, the idea that a battle involving tens of thousands of soldiers could be decided by a single private reveals a highly romanticised pattern of interpreting past.
    There is no doubt that Ademović earned his decoration
    in October 1912, but whatever he did, the post war storytellers transformed his exploits into a powerful myth.
    Within this myth we see certain roles reserved for the
    Serbian Roma. Moreover, these roles corresponded to
    their perceived peacetime characteristics. According to
    that pattern, the Roma were bold, skilful, cunning and
    good in deception. In the eyes of the Serbian storytellers
    it appeared as if the features attributed to the Roma, and
    which were criminalized in peacetime, suddenly became
    desirable at times of war as they provided a critical advantage to the Serbian army.
    There were other Roma who secured high military
    decorations. One of them was Rustem Sejdić. Again, like
    Ademović, he was a unit’s trumpeter. The popular story
    described his deed in similar tone to that of Ademović.
    Namely, his unit had participated in the famous battle
    for the Kajmakcalan heights in 1916, where on his own
    initiative, he gave a signal for the critical attack. He also
    played false trumpet signals in order to spread confusion
    Social Inclusion, 2020, Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 277–285 279
    within the Bulgarian units who were about to launch a
    fresh attack (Dimitrijević, 2015). Again, this is the stuff of
    legend. One man had shown initiative and had resolved
    the colossal carnage. As in the previous case, the Roma
    soldier was depicted as bold, artful but manipulative.
    The last known Roma who won the Karadjordje Star
    was also, like Ademović, from the southern Serbian town
    of Leskovac. His name was Amet Ametović. In the popular version of events, he was an expert in throwing
    hand grenades (Ivanović, 2016). However, his case study
    shows how huge were the differences between facts
    and popular accounts that spread after the battle. What
    differentiated Ametović’s case from the two previously
    mentioned biographies was the fact that Ametović gave
    two interviews to the Yugoslav press, providing a sober
    account of his fighting days and his accomplishments.
    Firstly, he provided details lacking in the previous case
    studies—such as the name of his unit, and his commanders ranging from the regimental down to the unit level.
    He also explained his specific duties as well the actions
    which had earned him the decoration.
    Explaining his exploit Ametović did not provide any
    breath-taking story. He was a corporal and was responsible for leading patrols on scouting missions. This happened in Western Serbia in the autumn of 1914, near the
    border town of Krupanj. Ametović’s unit was involved in
    heavy fighting near one notorious position, the Captain’s
    Fountain (Kapetanova cesma) close to the Drina River. He
    said the following:
    We go at night and then we stumble upon the body
    of an enemy soldier. I stab him. The stiff human body
    does not move….I whisper to my men: Don’t be afraid,
    it’s only a corpse. And that was our job during the days
    and during the nights….I fought for the King and for
    the Fatherland. We all fought heroically….However,
    the commander in June 1915 gathered our company
    together and read out: Amet Ametović is decorated
    with the Karadjordje Star; he then gave me this decoration. (“Jedini Ciganin nosilac Karadjordjeve zvezde
    zivi u Leskovcu,” 1936; italics added)
    He received his decoration during a pause on the Serbian
    front in summer 1915. His story, without any spectacular
    actions sounds realistic, underlying war’s brutality. As he
    described it, it was a prosaic and merciless business while
    the very decoration was the result of continuous activity
    by the entire squad.
    Roma civilians had often been mentioned in the
    memories of contemporaries but their presence in soldiers’ diaries was almost exclusively linked with the darkest sides of the war. Survival for many Roma was extremely difficult even in peacetime, but in wartime it became very precarious. The most vulnerable category of
    the population saw the battleground as a place where
    its limited survival resources could be replenished.
    Journalists following the operations of the Serbian
    army near Shkoder recorded the following scene where
    the Roma ‘cleaned up’ the battle ground. It took place in
    February 1913:
    The Serbs had around one thousand dead after their
    attack on the Brdica positions. They all remained on
    the field bellow the hill and they were still not able
    to bury them. Gypsies are usually used for this work,
    they gladly do so in the hope of booty. Turkish soldiers
    have already deprived the dead of their weapons, but
    there are still some left and the Gypsies are back with
    shoes, belts, caps, handkerchiefs and underwear. In
    their camp, near the bazaar, they later share the loot.
    Tonight, four Gypsy women left their camp to wait for
    their husbands, and when they spotted them, they
    went to meet them. At that moment, a shrapnel, coming over from Shkoder, burst over their heads killing
    them all. (“Iz Skadarske epopeje,” 1913)
    3. As Soldiers in World War I
    In 1914, the Roma were called up again. The Swiss
    criminologist who came to Serbia, Rudolph Archibald
    Reiss, described a scene he witnessed in the autumn
    of 1914 which faithfully exemplifies shared patriotism
    and tragedy. It also however illustrates the naivety with
    which some Roma approached modern warfare, expecting it to be an extremely brief encounter between two
    armies after which things would quickly go back to normal. This happened in the town of Valjevo:
    The streets in front of the Sekulić Hotel, which
    is on the corner, are full of people and wagons.
    Everywhere, next to the walls, sit the middle-aged
    peasants who come to report to their units belonging
    to the third levy. Waiting to come before the control
    commission, they eat and take a sunbathe. Among
    them, there are also Gypsies with their bronze faces
    like Indians. They are surrounded by their family members, women and children, who carry supplies. One
    very old Gypsy woman, with a pipe in her mouth
    which is almost solely composed of the tobacco chamber, sits on the doorstep of a house. They tell me
    she accompanied her son three days ago, he left with
    his regiment, and she is waiting for him to return.
    Poor grandmother, you will probably wait in vain! This
    world is silent, serious, but in the bright eyes of this
    people I see that they are determined to defend their
    country’s independence and are not afraid to sacrifice
    their lives for this. (Reiss, 1928/1991, p. 11)
    There are numerous mentions of the Roma as part of
    military music too. The Gypsy band is mentioned as a
    standard feature in celebrating military victory. Here, by
    focusing on the Roma minority it is also possible to see
    various elements of combat culture. One officer, Mladen
    Zujović, wrote about the atmosphere after the Battle
    of Kolubara, when in 1914 Austro-Hungarian troops had
    been expelled from Serbia for the second time.


    Serbian Roma Soldiers, 1912–1918 - Cogitatio Presshttps://www.cogitatiopress.com › article › download
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    von D Šarenac · 2020 · Zitiert von: 3 — Gypsies had their own commander during the uprising”. (Acković, 2009, p. 91). In addition, the famous Serbian.
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    Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini
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    ("Honor is neither sold nor bought – it is earned through a man’s life.")

    Jean-Claude (in Taken, 2008):
    “These Albanians… they came from the East one day, and they brought their own rules with them. They’re not people you want to cross.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by Varda View Post
    In the Balkans Gypsies are direct product of Ottoman invasion. Ottomans brought them as own servants, blacksmiths, musicians etc. Vast majority of Gypsies in the Balkans in Ottoman time were Muslims as their Turkish masters. When Ottomans are removed part of Balkan Gypsies converted to Christianity, but still significant part of them are Muslims. In the Balkans sometimes Ottomans used Gypsies for crimes against Christian population as revenge for their uprisings, same as Bashi-bazouk.
    Where did Serbian Gypsies come from?
    The first reference to gypsies in Serbia is found in a 1348 document, by which Serbian emperor Stefan Dušan donated some gypsy slaves to a monastery in Prizren. In the 15th century, Romani migrations from Hungary are mentioned. In 1927, a Serbian-Romani humanitarian organization was founded.
    Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini
    "Nderi nuk shitet, as blihet – ai fitohet me jetën e njeriut."
    ("Honor is neither sold nor bought – it is earned through a man’s life.")

    Jean-Claude (in Taken, 2008):
    “These Albanians… they came from the East one day, and they brought their own rules with them. They’re not people you want to cross.”

  4. #214
    Блондинка Blondie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Turul Karom View Post
    I have, and that is not the point of the conversation. The "pathetic" was in relation to the size. English threads get several times the interaction of Hungarian-only threads. You keep saying "never," but that is your problem. I have already explained my reasoning. This is an impasse situation. Hence, if you don't want to explain your points further, then I guess that's it.

    Would you like to accuse me of something in particular, as you have in the past?
    Okay so your problem is english is the lingua franca and you dont want to write in hungaria because nobody will understand right? Okay then i have a great idea, we will debate in english and hungarian at same time. Firstly you write your comment in english and after that hungarian, i will do same, so everyone will understand everything, thats okay? Just speak hungarian Turul speak hungarian!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Blondie View Post
    Okay so your problem is english is the lingua franca and you dont want to write in hungaria because nobody will understand right? Okay then i have a great idea, we will debate in english and hungarian at same time. Firstly you write your comment in english and after that hungarian, i will do same, so everyone will understand everything, thats okay? Just speak hungarian Turul speak hungarian!
    Just post in whatever language you want and he will reply if he wants to. But this thread has been seriously derailed with politics, Gypsies, etc.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mortimer View Post
    Where did Serbian Gypsies come from?
    The first reference to gypsies in Serbia is found in a 1348 document, by which Serbian emperor Stefan Dušan donated some gypsy slaves to a monastery in Prizren. In the 15th century, Romani migrations from Hungary are mentioned. In 1927, a Serbian-Romani humanitarian organization was founded.
    That's what I was talking about. Like it or not, but you cannot deport a population that has been in the region for 600+ years. The truth is the Gypsies don't really have a homeland, they are eternal nomads. Indians don't need them either, they have 100s of millions (!) of their own poor and malnourished.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Leto View Post
    That's what I was talking about. Like it or not, but you cannot deport a population that has been in the region for 600+ years. The truth is the Gypsies don't really have a homeland, they are eternal nomads. Indians don't need them either, they have 100s of millions (!) of their own poor and malnourished.
    No one considers even to deport second or third generation immigrants who are native born citizens, but they want to deport gypsies, it was estimated that gypsies are 32 generations in Europe. I read that somewhere.
    Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini
    "Nderi nuk shitet, as blihet – ai fitohet me jetën e njeriut."
    ("Honor is neither sold nor bought – it is earned through a man’s life.")

    Jean-Claude (in Taken, 2008):
    “These Albanians… they came from the East one day, and they brought their own rules with them. They’re not people you want to cross.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mortimer View Post
    No one considers even to deport second or third generation immigrants who are native born citizens, but they want to deport gypsies, it was estimated that gypsies are 32 generations in Europe. I read that somewhere.
    Encouraging remigration of unassimilable foreign non-whites is one of the core ideas of the Identitarians which I would wholeheartedly support but with the Gypsies they really have nowhere to go. Turkish people have Turkey, the Pakistanis have Pakistan, the Africans have Africa and so on.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Leto View Post
    Encouraging remigration of unassimilable foreign non-whites is one of the core ideas of the Identitarians which I would wholeheartedly support but with the Gypsies they really have nowhere to go. Turkish people have Turkey, the Pakistanis have Pakistan, the Africans have Africa and so on.
    I think it is more politically correct and more people do it to say you want to deport gypsies or even kill them, i saw on youtube comments like "hitler did a good job putting the gypos in concentration camps" then about anyone else. But in general you are right about the political ideologies.
    Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini
    "Nderi nuk shitet, as blihet – ai fitohet me jetën e njeriut."
    ("Honor is neither sold nor bought – it is earned through a man’s life.")

    Jean-Claude (in Taken, 2008):
    “These Albanians… they came from the East one day, and they brought their own rules with them. They’re not people you want to cross.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by Leto View Post
    Turkish people have Turkey
    Yes, why do you need to prononunce this? What an eastern bloc ex-kommie have to do with Turkish people of western europe? Do you think you have powers to have a word on them?

    Congratulations, you got me write this post. People like you shouldnt exist. All problems come from low-IQ backwards people like you.

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