Muslim Romani people are generally
Turkified. Under Ottoman Rule, the Christian and Muslim Roma were separated, by the order of
Suleiman the Magnificent. Muslim Romani men served in the
Military of the Ottoman Empire, especially in the
Ottoman military band. Muslim Roma were forbidden to marry Christian Roma or live together, and differences emerged between Muslim and Christian Roma. Today, some Orthodox Christian
Vlax Romani see themself as the
čáče Roma (true Roma) and do not consider Muslim Roma to be part of Romani society and call them
Turks. Some Muslim Roma, however, see Christian Roma as foreign and call them Dasikane (Servant, slaves). Also the phrase Amare Roma (Our Roma) and Cudza Roma (foreign Roma) is used vice versa. There is a considerable cultural gap between the two religious groups. Although Muslim Roma paid a
jizya in the first centuries of the Ottoman Empire, an exception were the Muslim Roma in
Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina, who were exempt from taxes by the order of
Selim II. After the
Edict of Gülhane , all Muslim Roma became exempt from paying the
taxes to the Ottoman Empire and became fully accepted Muslims. In 1874, the Ottoman Empire gave equal rights to other Muslims. After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the Muslim Roma have found themselves under double discrimination in regions where Islam was a minority religion, experiencing both
Antiziganism and
anti-Muslim sentiment. At the
Greek War of Independence,
Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) and
Balkan Wars (1912–1913), Muslim Roma flee together with other different Muslim Groups to Istanbul and East Thrace, as
Muhacir. At the
Population exchange between Greece and Turkey, Muslim
Turkish Roma from Greece have also been resettled in Turkey. In Turkish, they are called Mübadil Romanlar. In 1950–1951 Muslim Turkish Roma from Bulgaria came to Turkey and settled in Çanakkale and surroundings. From 1953 -1968, Muslim Turkish Roma and Turks from Yugoslavia emigrated to Turkey. Turkish Roma from
Turkey and also other Muslim Roma from ex-Yugoslavia, came to Western Europe as
Gastarbeiter, but seen by the Host population as Turks or Yugoslavs. Muslim Roma from Bosnia and Kosovo went at the time of the
Yugoslav Wars to Italy, and live especially in Florence.
Xoraxane (Muslim Roma) from former
Yugoslavia went to USA, settled mostly in
New York, and South America. == Faith and status ==