Right to Remember – Educational Handbook
Right to Remember
A handbook of the Council of Europe for education with young people on the Roma Genocide
Right to Remember is a self-contained educational resource for all those wishing to promote a deeper awareness of the Roma Genocide and combat discrimination. The handbook is based on the principles of human rights education, and places remembrance as an aspect of learning about, through and for human rights.
Strengthening the identity of Roma young people is a priority for the Roma Youth Action Plan of the Council of Europe. This implies the creation of an environment where they can grow up free from discrimination and confident about their identity and future perspectives, while appreciating their history and their plural cultural backgrounds and affiliations.
The Roma Genocide carried out before and during the Second World War has deeply impacted on Roma communities across Europe and plays a central role in understanding the prevailing antigypsyim and discrimination against Roma. Learning about the Genocide is very important for all young people. For Roma young people it is also a way to understand what was perpetrated against their communities, and to help them to com to terms with their identity and situation today.
Involving young people, including Roma youth, in researching, discussing and discovering the meanings of the Roma Genocide is a way to involve them as agents and actors in their own understanding of human rights and of history.
Right to Remember includes educational activities, as well as ideas for commemoration events, and information about the Genocide and its relevance to the situation of the Roma people today. It has been designed primarily for youth workers in non-formal settings, but it will be useful for anyone working in education, including in schools.
The second edition of Right to Remember incorporates some small revisions into the original publication. Since it was first published (in 2014), Right to Remember has been widely used, by both Roma and non-Roma youth groups. The response has been almost overwhelmingly positive, but inevitably there have been some suggestions for clarification, amendments, or inclusion of additional material. Certain groups or individuals working on the Roma Genocide have also been kind enough to respond to a call for feedback on the publication.
Order or Download the publication “Right to Remember”.
Or contact the Dikh He Na Bister youth initiative for educational advice and materials.
Educational tools and places of learning
The Encyclopaedia of the Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma in Europe
the first comprehensive overview of the existing knowledge on the persecution and murder of the Sinti and Roma under National Socialism and during the Second World War (1933–1945)
Romasintigenocide.eu – The Learning Website
The genocide committed against European Roma and Sinti during the National Socialist era
Sinti_zze und Rom_nja in Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp
Persecution, memory and self-assertion
Sintiundroma.org
Online portal about the Holocaust of the Sinti and Roma
Sinti and Roma in the Ravensbrück concentration camp
Contribution of the Education Forum against Antigypsyism and the Ravensbrück Memorial
Tajsa.eu – The Genocide of the Roma & the Roma Identity
A web-based collection of video/audio podcasts and educational resources
RomaSinti.eu – a virtual exhibition about the life stories of Holocaust survivors
The life stories of nine Sinti and Roma children who survived the Holocaust
Right to Remember
A handbook for education with young people on the Roma Genocide
Elses Geschichte
Interactive online learning site
Places of memory – Places of Learning
History and stories – learning and locating