Romani people in the Czech Republic

Romani people in the Czech Republic
Romani people in the Czech Republic, 2016
Total population
≈ 40,370 - ~250,000
Regions with significant populations
Industrial cities or near the mining areas of Moravia and North Bohemia
Languages
Carpathian Romani, Czech
Historically Bohemian Romani
Religion
Roman Catholicism

Romani people (Czech: Romové; commonly known as Gypsies, Czech: Cikáni) are an ethnic minority in the Czech Republic, currently making up around 2% of the population. Originally migrants from North Western India sometime between the 6th and 11th centuries, they have long had a presence in the region. Since the creation of Czechoslovakia in 1918, the Romani population have experienced considerable hardship, having been a main target of Nazi extermination programs during World War II, and the subject of forced relocation, sterilisation, and other radical social policies during the Communist era. In the successor state, the Czech Republic, challenges remain for the Romani population with respect to education and poverty, and there are frequent tensions with the white majority population over issues including crime and integration.