Project

Separate and Unequal: The Struggle to Desegregate Roma Students in Eastern Europe

Throughout Central and Eastern Europe, Roma students have long been segregated in substandard schools and classrooms—one of the most damaging facets of systemic discrimination in that it helps condemn them to a life of poverty.

In recent years, Roma Rights groups have won several court cases demanding the closure of Roma-only schools and the integration of Roma students into mainstream facilities. But in most countries, national desegregation policies have yet to be established. And so far, meaningful change has been slow to come.

Schools closed through judicial decision are often reopened with changing political tides. Meanwhile, some Roma students are shunted into programs for the mentally disabled through tests that critics say are biased, while others are incorporated into mainstream schools only to remain segregated within Roma-only classrooms.

Roma activists blame racism—both blatant and institutional—for the lack of progress: They say average middle-class families resist Roma acculturation based on a misperception that the Roma themselves are not capable of or interested in mainstream education. Teachers, politicians and elected officials carry those same prejudices into their work. And progressive action is frequently undermined by anti-Roma violence.

How can such longstanding, deeply held biases be dismantled? Can any desegregation campaign succeed without first changing the way non-Roma citizens see their Roma countrymen? Journalist Jeneen Interlandi travels to Hungary to report on desegregation efforts there, and to look at, among other things, the potential role for psychological interventions.

Roma Project: Gyongyospata

Before you can talk about anything here — the recent election, the recent court case — you need to talk about what happened in 2011.

Roma Project: The Mothers of Keleti

The barriers separating the Roma residents of Keleti from the city that surrounds them are not physical. They are barriers of absence: absence of education, absence of gainful employment.

Roma Project: Backstory

This story started over coffee, late last spring, somewhere between SoHo and the Bowery, where I was catching up with my friend and fellow Nieman alum Karim Ben Khelifa.