People Library

Whose are yous?

Overcoming 900 years of segregation to find a home and belonging in Bradford.

Belonging is a fundamental building block to life, as it allows you to build a home, feel safe and flourish in life.  Imagine the impact on your mindset if you were born into a people group that for 900 years have not had a land to call their own – a race that’s always seen as ‘the outsider’ or ‘lower class citizens’. Could you ever feel like you belonged anywhere?

In 2000, at only 10 years old, Daniel fled to the UK with his mother and brother in fear for their lives. Speaking about the reasons why, he says “I’m from a well known political family in the Czech Republic. My dad was a minister in the ROJKA party, my grandfather founded it as a means to give Roma community a voice… at that time, there was a lot of hate crime towards our people from neo-nazi groups. Adults and children were being killed.” Daniel recalls it being a really frightening time, especially at his age, “I remember hiding in our home for several days, and one day I snuck a peek out of the window – there must have been around 100, maybe 200 skinheads outside our home.”

Speaking of his first impressions of the UK, he says “We arrived with very little and didn’t speak English. I slept in the airport for the first 48 hours and then my brother got separated from us – to be honest it felt hostile!” He recalls, “before we arrived in Bradford, our refugee accommodation felt more like a prison than a place of safety.”

However not long after, his family were relocated to Bolton Woods in Bradford and Daniel soon began to find his feet. “On the way to England I used to imagine what it would be like to have an English friend,” he recalls, “I joined a local youth group here and soon made friends with a really diverse group of lads.” He fondly remembers his youth in Bradford as a ‘time of adventure’.

Growing up, his family moved around in Bradford “we always lived in the poorer areas because that’s all my mum could afford,” he explains, “I naturally came across gangs, drug dealers and experienced some racism.” However, none of those experiences dampened Daniel’s resolve to integrate within the city “I’ve never felt uncomfortable or threatened in Bradford, I’ve always felt I could be myself here.”

Over the next twenty years Daniel has made Bradford his home, and describes himself as a ‘true Bradfordian’ now, but there’s something very unusual about this statement, it’s not commonplace amongst the Roma community. The abuse and trauma their race has suffered for generations from segregation have left many with a deeply ingrained mindset of distrust towards anyone outside their own community.

With Daniel there’s a genuine warmth as you speak with him. He comes across as someone who always seeks the positive and has a deep desire to unite rather than divide. “My Grandfather is my hero,” he explains, “He moved from Slovakia to the Czech Republic when he was 21 as a crane operator and worked really hard to integrate with the people there. He built a name for his family and the Balaz name is still respected to this day.  Everyone loved my Grandfather, he became a spokesperson for the Roma community and that’s why he started the political party.” There’s a pride in Daniel’s voice as he continues, “Roma people have this phrase ‘Whose are yous?’ which basically means ‘Where are you from?’ and my Grandfather showed everyone that a gypsy man could belong in a wider community.”

Hearing of someone’s lineage often explains a lot about who they are and what they do with their life and it’s certainly true of Daniel. “When I was growing up I became a point of contact for new families because I spoke English really well and I knew a lot of locals,” he recalls.  As a young lad Daniel spent many years helping people connect with services and find their way around the city.

As Daniel began to build his life, he wanted to show others the amazing opportunities and possibilities the city had to offer. “The English system provided me with schooling, friendships, housing, benefits when I needed them and an apprenticeship through City Training,” he continues, with a sense of joy, “I even married an English girl that I met at college!”

He built a trusted reputation for himself, which eventually led him to forming a business working alongside organisations like the Police, the NHS and Social services as an interpreter for the Roma community.  It’s within this sphere of influence that he helped a wide range of people: from cancer patients to victims of human trafficking, from mental health patients to young mothers learning the benefits of nutrition for their children. In all cases he’s found a real fulfillment in being able to help both sides interact and understand each other.

His experiences, empathy and understanding of what it takes to integrate into the UK as a Roma individual has led to him forming a CIC (Community Interest Company) called ‘Connecting Roma’. His vision for it is to help the Roma community across Yorkshire overcome the many challenges involved in building a home in a foreign land.

There’s a sense of great gratitude from Daniel in how he speaks about life,“I class myself as a British-Roma and it’s something that’s taken a lot of patience and work but I now feel that I belong and that’s allowed me to build my life here.” However he also realises there’s still a lot of work to be done ahead.

“I think Roma people can be racist without realising it. Actually they’re not racist they’re just confused,” he explains, “It takes time and holding up a gentle mirror to dismantle mindsets. I want to show them they have rights too, that being British can be any skin colour.” He says that trust is a huge barrier for the Roma community in accepting help from outside services.

Fortunately Daniel is in a unique position to bridge the gap and he’ll probably spend the rest of his life enabling people to work with each other as fellow human beings, without prejudice or judgement, to facilitate many more finding a place to belong. This is surely something to celebrate in a diverse city such as Bradford.

To find out more about Connecting Roma:

www.facebook.com/connectingroma

Story & photos by Tom Harmer

People Library

Out of sight, out of mind.

“There’s good and bad in us all, but Gypsy Travellers get painted with the one brush…”

A huge part of our identities as human beings is our individual culture and heritage, it shapes what we value and influences our approach to life. As time passes and society evolves these cultural identities are often challenged and threatened, each generation is given the responsibility to protect, teach and uphold them for the future.

Dublin-born Kathleen is full of warmth and strength. A Bradford resident and Irish Traveller, she’s incredibly proud of her heritage and aspires to uphold her culture and traditions, “It’s how I was brought up and how I brought my children up, and now I’m trying to get my grandchildren on the same track,” she says.

She traces her roots back to County Wexford in the Republic of Ireland, but Yorkshire has always been a massive part of her life. “I grew up on the roadside. We’d stay in Yorkshire in the winter, but then we’d move around all over the country in the summertime; the Midlands, Scotland, Wales, but we’d always come back to Leeds or Bradford in October, as long as it was Yorkshire.”

“There were no phones when I was growing up, so when my father decided it was time to shift, we’d just head to somewhere like Birmingham and find someone we knew,” She recalls the excitement of reuniting with friends from previous years and the joy of a community where “everybody mixed.”

Her upbringing was bursting with community, family, culture and food. “My mother always had a fire going, cooking outside in big black pots, hearty food such as bacon and cabbage, bacon ribs and stew,” she continues, “It’s all proper food and everybody would come over when they smelled our food,” she says, with a smile.

To this day, Kathleen carries on this value of generosity and hospitality, always preparing more than enough food to share with her community. “Anyone elderly we feed, I send dinner up and down everywhere. I don’t have a plate left because most of them don’t come back. So now I’ve bought them all plastic plates to send them up.” It’s clear that this camaraderie is a key influence in forming such close-knit Traveller communities.

There’s a deep sense of communal living in both Kathleen’s home and the site she lives on, she explains, “We’re strong on family values, everyone keeps an eye out for everyone’s child and we take care of the older people, we’d never send them to care homes.”

As the youngest of twelve children, with ten brothers and one sister, she speaks fondly of her own childhood. “Day to day it was just nice, you know, we weren’t playing computer games like today. I was like a tomboy and we played out all the time. It was a better way of life and it was a healthier way of life.”

As travelling communities begin to settle more, she feels the children are missing out on experiencing a variety of life, and explains, “It’s not good for children to be cooped up. When you live roadside you mix with different cultures, it helps to teach morals.”

By the age of eighteen, her parents had stopped travelling and chose to settle in London. “They haven’t been on the roadside since. When you’re settled it’s a different way of life but you never forget the traveller’s life. As long as you have food and water, you don’t need nothing else.”

Another cornerstone of the Gypsy Traveller community is the skill of self-reliance and problem solving. “Travellers are self-taught, you know what I mean, they don’t go to colleges. You just do whatever you put your mind to.  I want every traveller to have the chance to provide for themselves.”

She explains how boys begin working like men aged thirteen, and by seventeen they’re ready to go and do their own thing, “so long as they get a licence and a real motor they get up and go.”

For girls though, there were different expectations. “When I was growing up, girls didn’t leave home, they stayed at home to get married.” She reminisces, “When I got up in the morning, my routine was to make a cup of tea for my parents, then wash through the cans (milk churns) and windows outside. It was different to the boys, because I had to do the housework.”

Kathleen moved back to Yorkshire when she was nineteen years old to get married. Sadly, her husband died aged only twenty-eight, leaving her to raise their children on her own. “I’ve never considered getting re-married. I don’t think anyone would have looked down on me or anything because I was young and had young children, but they’ve got more respect for me now.”

Kathleen then explains the importance in the community of keeping loved ones’ memories alive and shares how they value life and death in equal parts. “We mention everyone we’ve lost everyday, so they’re not forgotten about. My brother died forty-five years ago and we talk about him every day.”

Once a year, Kathleen visits a cemetery in Ireland, underscoring these values. “It’s a respect thing. All our ancestors are buried there. People come from all over Ireland and England on one specific day, and we all stand by their graves – it’s like a blessing.” She continues, “Our people belong to us, when they die they’re more important than when they were alive.”

Bradford is renowned as a space of sanctuary and safety, welcoming communities across the world to make it their home. For centuries, the vibrant tapestry of Bradford has been woven together with the diverse threads of the Irish Traveller community, whether it has been a pit stop for those who embody a nomadic lifestyle, or somewhere to call home. When asked about her own experience, she says, “It’s like home. I’ve been here since I was 5, I’m 57 now, so 52 years I’ve lived between Leeds and Bradford.”

Kathleen lives on the Mary Street site in Bradford, designated for the Gyspy Traveller community. “We used to stop here years ago when I was about eight. It was a potato yard and it was all built up, all along here there were shops and public houses, whereas now it’s all gone and it’s industrial.”

“Since then they’ve opened up a sand quarry across the way, and a tip behind us.” Like many in Kathleen’s community, a prevailing sentiment of being overlooked persists. “No one can see us because we’re blocked in these walls and we’ve got enough cameras, we’re like being on ‘Big Brother’,” which seems to perpetuate her feeling of being out of sight and out of mind.

Explaining the history of where she lives, she says, “This site to start with was looked into for a housing estate and they said it wasn’t fit for humans to live, but yet they could make a traveller site on it – so what is the difference? The fact that this site is managed by environmental health tells me everything.”

She continues, “We’re full of sand twenty four seven, everybody on this site has got issues with their chest breathing. You can’t breathe in the night, it’s like you’re choking because of the sand” and then the additional impact of living behind a garbage facility, “we’ve got flies everywhere, it’s not nice when you’re eating.”  

She’s concerned, and so are other families and parents, for the future wellbeing of their children.There have been positive talks about moving the site and it probably will happen at some stage but not for a few years yet.

The multicultural nature of Bradford is one of the main reasons Kathleen has been able to call Bradford home for so long, because she feels more welcome here amongst other minority groups than in other parts of the country.

For example, the Asian community, “Indians and Pakistanis, they’re tret like us. They understand our way of life and we understand theirs. This town is full of lots of cultures and they’re more comfortable with us than, say, the white community. Some don’t understand us and just think ‘ah, it’s the stinking gypsies’.”

On one hand, society is becoming more accepting and inclusive of previously excluded minority groups, yet on the other it is seemingly trying to erase a way of life for the Traveller community. “We don’t want to change anything. We just want to get on with the life that we’ve always led,” Kathleen says.

A charity worker who works alongside Kathleen and the Gypsy Traveller community says, “In my 20-year career of working with some of the most marginalised communities, I can honestly say that the Gypsy Traveller community face the worst discrimination and racism. I would like to say that they have also been the most welcoming and inspiring to me in my work in challenging people’s inaccurate views and perceptions.”

Kathleen then shares numerous instances of discrimination and stereotyping she has encountered as an Irish Traveller and how she’s always had a feeling of being an unwanted outsider in society, “There’s good and bad in us all, but we all get painted with the one brush,” she says.

Unjust stereotypes brand Travellers as thieves that “live in a jungle and run around with no shoes on”. There is a real sense of persecution and fear within the community. Kathleen describes feelings of being unsafe and vulnerable as soon as she leaves the site, creating a feeling of never truly belonging.

She believes media representation is partly to blame for reinforcing stereotypes and failing to acknowledge the community’s positive actions. Her community’s charitable support for vulnerable people in society go unnoticed, such as large country-wide donations to food banks and children’s hospitals.

It’s disheartening that our positive efforts rarely receive recognition; the spotlight always seems to be on the negative aspects of our community,” says Kathleen. One shining light however is the boxer Tyson Fury. “He’s pushing all the limits and he knows where he comes from. Every traveller, it doesn’t matter what they’ve got, they don’t lose their morals, they want to keep their culture,” she says. “He’s just like us, he’s all about his family.”

Preserving Traveller tradition is important for Kathleen, particularly due to external influences threatening the continuity of her rich, cultural heritage, but at the same time Kathleen recognizes the need to modernise, specifically in education and work.

Kathleen says, “I never went to school when I was a child because I’m telling you we were roadside. Here today, gone tomorrow.” However, when she became a parent, ensuring her own children received an education became a priority. “I think everyone should have the right to read,” she says.

Another cultural shift Kathleen has been part of, is supporting her daughter into further education and now championing her choice to go to work. “It’s only in the last ten years this has happened,” Kathleen explains. “Before that women didn’t work, they didn’t leave home. They done what had to be done at home, like housework. They looked after the younger ones or whatever.” There are still many women in the community that don’t work, but more and more women are going out to find a vocation, and Kathleen feels it’s a good trend. 

As Kathleen passionately shares her life as a Traveller, although some aspects of culture are changing, it’s clear that nothing will ever change her identity. The strength of the community is in how they value and look after each other and pass on their traditions from generation to generation.

However, she feels the world around her is becoming less tolerant of her way of life, trying to brush this traditional way of living out of sight, and out of mind. “It’s a culture and I don’t think they’ll ever stop it, but they’re doing their best to try,” she continues “You can’t think you’re better than anyone else, we’re all the same. It’s not right to look down on someone else.”

Conversation must be had to create positive social change and support greater understanding of the Gypsy and Traveller communities and unite in the face of inequality. Bradford and our wider society have an opportunity to challenge perceptions and be open to understanding the Traveller way of life. Surely we can find a way to live alongside each other, celebrating our differences, looking at those with a different way of life and thinking about how society can champion their cherished traditions. 

Story co-written by People Library Mentee Nathan McGill and Storyteller/Mentor Tom Harmer

Photos by Nathan McGill