Gypsy band sings to sleepy Marseille

Roma give final touches to Europe’s Cultural Capital for 2013

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From the Old Port, le Vieux Port, to a web of narrow streets – the districts of Noailles and Belsunce – with its markets full of beautiful fresh fruits, vegetables and spices from all over the world; this is the pulsating intercultural heart of France.

With its street markets full of colours and fragrances of both sides of the Mediterranean course, Marseille is crowned with European Capital of Culture for 2013.

“I have never seen such a mix of different people with diverse backgrounds, all living side-by-side, creating a wonderful synergy so unique to Marseille,” says Mohammed Abdullah from Morocco, who initially came here as a student.

In such a cosmopolitan environment, exclusion still exists.

During the last summer, an administrative order specifically sought expulsion of the Roma (i.e. the gypsy) population from the French territory. The legend has that that the community had left the north of Indian subcontinent around the 14th century passing through Turkey, Eastern Europe, even moving to Egypt and then adapting Maghreb.

A North African Muslim migrant sells fresh vegetables on a Marseille street in France. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Aurelien with the members of Gypsy band Fanfare Vagabontu poses for a photo with Mediterranean backdrop. - Photo by Paolo Goglia
Though burqa-clad Muslim women can be seen on the streets, the future may be different. The Mediterranean gateway is set to face a grave challenge after disputed ban on dress covering female faces. – Supplied Photo
African immigrant women line up to enter a hall ahead of a cultural event. – Supplied Photo
Sitting by the seaside is a favourite pastime of tourists and residents of Marseille, one of many reasons for fun-loving people to throng the French Mediterranean coast. – Supplied Photo
A scene from street concert by the Fanfare Vagabontu. Such performance not only earns the Roma artists living but also much-needed social space for integration. – Supplied Photo
Express yourself freely whether you see a wall or closed shutter of a shop. Welcome to Marseille. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Magnificent skyline of magical Marseille. – Supplied Photo
The French may not like spicy food but immigrants surely do, thus such sacks attract passing shoppers with their colour as well as aroma alike. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Another scene of free concert that may win some more French hearts and mind for the Roma people. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
A North African Muslim migrant sells fresh vegetables on a Marseille street in France. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Aurelien with the members of Gypsy band Fanfare Vagabontu poses for a photo with Mediterranean backdrop. - Photo by Paolo Goglia
Though burqa-clad Muslim women can be seen on the streets, the future may be different. The Mediterranean gateway is set to face a grave challenge after disputed ban on dress covering female faces. – Supplied Photo
African immigrant women line up to enter a hall ahead of a cultural event. – Supplied Photo
Sitting by the seaside is a favourite pastime of tourists and residents of Marseille, one of many reasons for fun-loving people to throng the French Mediterranean coast. – Supplied Photo
A scene from street concert by the Fanfare Vagabontu. Such performance not only earns the Roma artists living but also much-needed social space for integration. – Supplied Photo
Express yourself freely whether you see a wall or closed shutter of a shop. Welcome to Marseille. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Magnificent skyline of magical Marseille. – Supplied Photo
The French may not like spicy food but immigrants surely do, thus such sacks attract passing shoppers with their colour as well as aroma alike. – Photo by Paolo Goglia
Another scene of free concert that may win some more French hearts and mind for the Roma people. – Photo by Paolo Goglia

Most of the Roma people in France have been French citizens for two or three centuries, and just a few of them migrated mostly from Romania and Bulgaria to reach in France only recently. There are about 2,000 ‘migrant Roma’ in Marseille and 13,000 in entire France.

“Gypsies are often subject to prejudice or indifference, when in fact they have so much to offer. Fanfare Vagabontu is a good example of it, showing, through music, their roots, their culture and their extraordinary joy of life,” Roberto Carlos, a hair dresser by profession from Italy.

The Roma are certainly one of the most discriminated ethnic minorities in Europe, racism against whom is ‘legitimate’ and often backed by political and governmental authorities.

Here in Marseille, Aurelien, a Frenchman, and the Fanfare Vagabontu, a Gypsy band of eight musicians, two from the Roma community in Marseille and six from Moldavia, are spreading knowledge about the Gypsy culture in the south of France and in Europe.

While Marseille has been and still is strongly marked by migration, remaining a gateway Mediterranean port into Europe, the sole explanation for stigmatisation of Roma people can be nothing but ignorance.

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