BSS
  08 Sep 2021, 12:46

Slovak Roma hope pope's visit will challenge stereotypes

 KOSICE, Slovakia, Sept 8, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Crunching on sunflower seeds, a

group of Roma children watch excitedly as builders work on the final
preparations for a visit by Pope Francis to one of Europe's poorest regions
in Slovakia.

  The workers are erecting a power line in Lunik IX, a dilapidated housing
estate in the eastern city of Kosice where people from the Roma minority have
lived in abject poverty and faced stigma for decades.

  "In Kosice, when an employer found out that I am Roma and live at Lunik IX,
they refused to give me the job we agreed on over the phone," Maria
Horvathova, 45, a mother of 12, told AFP.

  "There is racism everywhere and people do not want to give us a chance,"
she said.

  Poverty and overcrowding are chronic issues at Lunik IX, where 4,500
residents are squeezed into a space meant to accommodate half that number.

  Many blocks have no electricity, heat, gas or running water as utilities
were cut due to unpaid bills.

  - 'Spiritual support' -

  The Roma have big communities in Central and Eastern Europe and are
considered the largest ethnic minority in Europe as a whole.

  They have faced discrimination for centuries -- historians estimate that
half a million Roma were killed by the Nazis, wiping out about a quarter of
their population.

  Horvathova has since found work at the local Salesian church that is
helping to organise the papal visit and is now one of the few local
inhabitants to have a job.

  "People say that Lunik IX is the poorest and dirtiest place of all. I hope
that the pope does not think so and that he will give us some spiritual
support," she said, while cooking eggs on a gas canister-powered stove.

  Pope Francis will visit Hungary and Slovakia next week and the trip to
Lunik IX on September 14 will be a key moment, reflecting his message of
closeness to impoverished communities. The eastern part of Slovakia, an EU
member state of 5.4 million people, ranks among one of the places in Europe
with the lowest GDP per capita, along with parts of Bulgaria and Romania.

  Despite the difficulties, Marcel Sana, the mayor of Lunik IX, is hoping to
create a good first impression for the pope and is busy sprucing up the area
ahead of the visit.

  "We are fixing the road leading to the district, getting rid of potholes,
renovating facades, revitalising the greenery," he said.

  - 'Not some kind of trash' -

  When the pope visits, a 35-member children's choir will sing for him in
Romani.

  "I hope his visit will make people understand that we are not some kind of
trash and that also decent and fine people live here," said 19-year-old
Monika Gulasova, one of the performers.

  Gulasova is a member of the local Salesian community led by Peter Besenyei,
who is responsible for the pastoral care of the Roma in the Kosice
Archdiocese.

  "The Roma are believers by their nature," Besenyei told AFP. "They do not
have the slightest doubt about the existence of God."

  The priest said that during his visit, Pope Francis would say some words in
the Romani language and the Our Father prayer would also be recited in
Romani. "He will bring the hope to the Lunik IX Roma that if you want to
change your life, you can," he said.