“Fortune telling Is a Curse on Your Children”: Conversion, Fortune telling, and Beliefs in Magic among Roma Women in Estonia

  • Eva-Liisa Roht-Yilmaz University of Tartu

Abstract

Missionary work by Pentecostal Finnish Roma (Kaale) started among the Roma in Estonia during the 1980s. These mission activities, carried out by both Finns and local Roma, intensified over the next two decades and continue today. The article looks into a specific case of how converted (Pentecostal and Baptist) and non-converted (Russian Orthodox, Lutheran, Catholic) Roma women in Estonia conceptualise the practice of fortune telling. For this purpose, the role of fortune telling as a traditional Roma skill and occupation is discussed as a part of the conceptualisation, together with the possible efficacy of fortune telling and its relation to beliefs in magic that also shape the women’s attitudes towards it. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, the article argues that although fortune telling is considered satanic by born-again believers and is therefore abandoned, its condemnation is not straightforward in less controlled narration situations, thus posing an extra challenge for Roma women in the conversion process.

Author Biography

Eva-Liisa Roht-Yilmaz, University of Tartu
PhD student at Department of Ethnology, Institute of Cultural Research and Fine Arts, University of Tartu
Published
2019-06-26
How to Cite
ROHT-YILMAZ, Eva-Liisa. “Fortune telling Is a Curse on Your Children”: Conversion, Fortune telling, and Beliefs in Magic among Roma Women in Estonia. Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics, [S.l.], v. 13, n. 1, p. 107–129, june 2019. ISSN 2228-0987. Available at: <http://jef.ee/index.php/journal/article/view/313>. Date accessed: 26 mar. 2023. doi: https://doi.org/10.2478/jef-2019-0006.
Section
Articles

Keywords

born-again Christians; Roma women; conversion; fortune telling; magic