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"WHO
WE ARE
I asked my parents when I got home from school. I was about seven years
old in the early fifties. On the tram that afternoon I could not answer
my schoolmate`es question "what is your religion". This was the first
time that we began to talk at home about minorities, Judaism, forced labour
and death camps in Central Europe. My parents had survived. Surrounded
by the warmth of my family and the wisdom of three thousand books in the
room, it was like a frightening fairy tale, having a bad dreamy walk in
a dark, endless tunnel. Later I understood that even if you would like
to forget your roots, somebody always will remind you where you are from.
WHO ARE THEY
murmured to myself looking out of the road while I was driving home in
the countryside of Hungary. Some barefoot gypsy children stood on the
snow and behind them a mud-hump-house was on the snow-covered field alone,
far from the village. It was in early seventies when I first had this
dramatic and visual example of the suppressed social problems of gypsies.
During those years all the papers were full of nothing but hooray-optimism.
As a young and ambitious photojournalist and as an another "Jewish minority"
I had a great empathy for gypsies. But what else was I able do, then photographing
their life revealing it for the others? As a "champion for the truth"
I had the persistence to work on it for three years, in spite of the fact
that nobody was going to publish any of those "sad" images on a topic
which was not in favour with any editors in a socialist country. But sometimes
miracles do happen: an editor let himself be persuaded to do a photo book
publication, on the theory that the courage of facing social problem would
rather prove the strength than hurt to a communist system. That was my
first photo book (Bucsu a ciganyteleptol) Bidding Farewell To A Gypsy
Colony in 1977."
- Tamas Revesz
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