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Just Leave the Dishes | “Granny's Notes” | My First 84 Years |
Carefree
lifestyle hid darker side of gypsies By Sue Gerard First published in Columbia Daily Tribune on 1999-04-06 About the time people began to ask, "What do you want to
be when you grow up?" I imagined it would be great to be a
farmer like Dad and wear bib overalls all of the time. Now in my
80s, I realize that my lifetime interests may have also been
influenced by something we saw at the roadside as we drove back
and forth to Olivet Church, east of Columbia. There were often tall, covered wagons parked beside Fulton
Gravel now Route WW near Carlisle School and a
small branch of Grindstone Creek. Children waded in the creek,
horses grazed near the creek and the women cooked over open
campfires. Dad and Mom called the people gypsies. Gypsies! They were short people with very black wavy hair, and
at night, lanterns hung inside their tall wagons, creating eerie
shadows as they moved around in their canvas "houses." It looked like fun, especially when they were singing around
the campfire at night or if a fellow was playing a fiddle. This
level spot was large enough for three or four wagons and their
many horses. Mom and Dad didn’t stop and visit with them and were glad
when they left, but I didn’t know why. Their way of living
out in the open looked great to me. As the years passed, I
learned that gypsies were beggars who told sad lies about hungry
children and bad luck. Some people thought gypsies were just too lazy to work, but
they were a cult, born free to live without rules and to dodge
census takers. Sometimes the women wore gaudy skirts and huge dangling
earrings, and they made money at local fairs by telling
people’s fortunes. Dad and Mom had no part of that. They
said: "The men are dishonest horse traders, and the women
are not only beggars, they’re also thieves." There were
few nice words for gypsies. I was in my teens when I helped a grocer keep an eye on two
women "shopping" in their big black cloaks with pleats
and deep pockets. One jabbered excitedly to distract the
storekeeper while the other gathered extra things and stuffed
them into the pockets and pleats of her filthy black garments. Men offered to doctor sick animals, particularly horses, with
herbs. Farmers whispered about unfair horse trades and even told
of horses that mysteriously disappeared in the night. Before the law could locate them, the gypsies had disappeared
to parts unknown, leaving no evidence that could be used against
them. My 1876 encyclopedia calls India the gypsy
"fatherland" and says that small bands of gypsies
roamed in Europe before the eleventh century. "Inveterate
vagabonds," they suddenly appeared in Germany in hordes in
1417, "traveling on foot and camping at night in fields,
being thieves and fearing arrest in cities." Gypsies spread through Greek-speaking countries and finally to
many counties of the world. My teenage children and I saw them in
England in 1966 when touring by bicycle. Their "wagons"
were small tents and big old black cars, and they offered
trinkets for sale on card tables. Remembering my childhood, we pedaled faster as we passed and
didn’t stop or speak. |
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