Matéo Maximoff: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 01:29, 20 December 2012
Matéo Maximoff (January 17, 1917 – November 24, 1999) was a French writer and Evangelical pastor of Romani ethnicity. His eleven books have been translated into fourteen languages.
Born in Spain, he had parents who had migrated from Russia and France. His family sought shelter in France with relatives during the Spanish Civil War. After the outbreak of World War II, they were arrested as foreign nationals and interned for years, along with many other foreign refugees. He settled in France after the war and made his literary career there.
Early life and education
Matéo Maximoff was born in Barcelona, Spain. His father was a Kalderash Rom from Russia; and his mother was a Manouche from France. She was a cousin of the singer Django Reinhardt. He had several younger brothers and sisters.
His father, a tinker, a traditional trade among Romani, taught Matéo how to read, write and count. He also had much to tell him about Russia, Kalderash history, and different Roma and countries. He died when Matéo was 14. Matéo took over as a tinker to support himself, his mother and younger brothers and sisters. He taught his siblings to read and write.
Refuge in France
In 1936, because of the Spanish Civil War, Maximoff with his mother and siblings left Spain to seek shelter among relatives in France. In 1940 after the defeat of France in World War II and German occupation, the Maximoffs were arrested under suspicion of intelligence with the enemy, as were many other foreign refugees. Maximoff's family were interned in a camp for 'spies' for 42 days before being transferred to a 'Gypsy camp' in Tarbes. In May 1941, they were interned at a camp for 'nomads' in Lannemazan.
Literary career
After World War II, Maximoff settled in France. He wrote eleven novels, which have been translated into fourteen languages. He also produced a book that included ethnographic photographs of Romani (known as 'Gypsies') in France.
In 1961 he became an Evangelic pastor. He translated the New Testament into Romani language. Many of his books were published in English in the late twentieth century, before his death in 1999 in France.
Bibliography
- Angels of Destiny (1999)
- People of Roads (1995)
- Roads without Caravans (1993)
- This world that isn't mine (1992)
- Say that with tears (1990)
- Vinguerka (1987)
- The Doll of Mameliga (1986)
- Condemned for Surviving (1984)
- The Seventh Daughter (1979)
- Savina (1957)
- The Price of Freedom (1955)
- The Ursitory (1946)
External links
- Mateo Maximoff's biography, Rombase
- Mateo Maximoff's bio, Romany Kultury i Dzhiipen (in Russian)
- Mateo Maximoff's bio, Unionsverlag (in German)
- Mateo Maximoff, O Vurdon (in Italian and English)