Coming of age for Roma girls
Coming of age for Roma girls
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.
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Roma children grow up with freedom and emotional attachment to their family, however there are few role models for them in an isolated community with little contact to the outside world other than with the family, members of their community and television. The daily life is marked through poverty and struggle. Roma children and youth are constantly confronted with their stigmatised identities and discrimination and they develop their selfperception with this attitude from the environment. Boys are prefered, the girls have learned to accept it without complaining. The girls will most likely have few choices to shape their own life, they will have to accept what is considered to be the facts of life in their tradition.