A choice to be made, a price to be paid. The Romani people have never identified themselves with a territory although they come from India, they have never fought for it but fought for life with life.
As Diana Muir emphasizes ‘the Romani people, as unique among peoples, have no tradition of an ancient and distant homeland from which their ancestors migrated, nor do they claim the right to national sovereignty in any of the lands where they reside, rather, Romani identity is bound up with the idea of freedom expressed, in part, in having no ties to a homeland.’
Because of the absence of traditional land concept, the Romani phuv - Romani land is a ‘controversial issue that implies different prices to be paid when a decision has to be made’ (Nicolae Gheorghe). Romani phuv is still a dream for many Roma despite the events of life and history. This “land” is alive and continues to live in the hearts of the Roma.
Bringing this performance in today’s situation where the Roma are “located” and “dislocated” for political, economic, or social reasons, this video performance is made as a need to open a discussion and provoke people’s perception about them and their relationship with the land and territory.
In this performance I take the role of a chef who prepares a meal with SHISHIK ( a kind of soil, that Roma use to wash themselves, and the pregnant woman use to eat during her pregnancy) and the bureaucrat who represent the intellectual Romani persons who through their work, effort, negotiations and discussions can make choices in order to make this dream to live longer and end the game of location and dislocation.