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Lovari

Lovari Romani
Newark (NJ)
Southern EuropeRomania flagRomania
Community Profile: Many different waves representing a diverse array of Roma communities have come to New York since at least the mid-19th century. Many were emancipated slaves who came from regions across Southern and Eastern Europe, principally Kalderasha (mostly Rusurya, or "Russians") and some Machvaya from Serbia, also speaking what is considered a "Vlax" language variety. Given a long history of discrimination in Europe, NYC Roma have kept a low profile, but many have maintained community languages as well as forms of internal organization and governance such as the local kumpanija, kris, and shato.
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any of the earliest Roma communities in New York formed on the Lower East Side/East Village among other immigrant communities from Southern and Eastern Europe, and for some the city was a seasonal base. Following the Second World War and the 1956 revolution in Hungary came a Hungarian Roma community, including many musicians. There is no community center, according to Roma scholar Ian Hancock, but some Pentecostal churches have large Romani American congregations and a Romani-owned restaurant in the Bowery was at one point a gathering place. Later, many came to be most concentrated in Greenwich Village, with fortune telling as a major source of income. There are also reports of a Lovari community in Newark.

Note that the language above may be used throughout the New York area — this is just one significant site.
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Lovari

Lovari Romani

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