František Kotliar

František Kotliar, born 1927, Richnava, Krompachy district

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How to cite abstract

Abstract of testimony from: HÜBSCHMANNOVÁ, Milena, ed. Po židoch cigáni.” Svědectví Romů ze Slovenska 1939 – 1945.: I. díl (1939 – srpen 1944). 1. Praha: Triáda, 2005. ISBN 8086138143, 558 – 560 (ces), 561 – 562 (rom). Testimonies of the Roma and Sinti. Project of the Prague Center for Romani Histories, https://www.romatestimonies.org/testimony/frantisek-kotliar (accessed 4/30/2026)

Testimony origin

František Kotliar gave the interview in 1991 at his home. It emerges from the use of the plural when describing the circumstances of the visit that there was more than one interviewer; however, this is not explicitly stated. The Kotliars’ house was the largest of all the brick houses, of which there were only a few, as the rest of the Roma lived in shacks. The Kotliars were the only family to have a telephone.

František Kotliar describes the pre-war situation of the Roma in the village of Richnava and talks about the meaning of the socio-economic relations between the Roma and the Jews in the Slovak countryside. This fundamentally influenced the fates of the Richnava Roma during and after the war. Before the war, the settlement was part of the village, and many Roma made their living as blacksmiths. The reason for several blacksmiths living in one village was that their products were bought by Jewish traders from the nearby town of Krompachy – unlike other towns, where only local farmers bought from the Roma blacksmiths, and could therefore sustain only one blacksmith in the village. Another advantage was that the Jewish traders paid for goods in cash. The deportation of the Jews thus meant, as well as the personal and psychic shock, a deterioration of the social and economic situation of the local Roma, because there was no one to purchase the blacksmiths’ products. Although the Richnava Roma were protected from eviction from the village during the war, paradoxically this did not help them after the war, when they were socially and economically weakened and were forced to relocate to a place four kilometres from the village, accessed only with difficulty. They found work at the Krompachy smelting works, but after 1989 the long-term employed were among the first to be sacked. Many Richnava Roma therefore were in receipt of social security benefits, and were trying to resurrect their traditional occupation at the anvil, like their fathers and grandfathers. As the editor adds, it is not known whether they succeeded.

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