Published in February 2017 online first - political philosophical research article (qualitative data),grounded theory (nomad self governance and disaffected power) in international blind peer reviewed academic journal Critical Research on Religion : see the link Critical Research on Religion 2017,Vol 5, Issue 2 ; Nomad Self Governance and Dissafected versus Semiological State Apparatus of Capture
To place thought in an immediate relation with the outside, with the forces of the outside, in short to make thought a war machine
Deleuze and Guattari
Cerasela Voiculescu (2017)
Abstract
Inspired
by Deleuze and Guattari, the article discusses Roma Pentecostalism as nomad
self-governance or self-ministry and political affirmation, in a dialectical
conversation with stable apparatuses of power such as state and transnational polities,
advancing neoliberal program of social integration as semiological apparatus of
capture. The latter is upheld by expert social sciences as royal sciences,
which translate alternative forms of self-governance into the conceptual
apparatus of the state and transnational polities. On the other hand,
Pentecostal self-ministry works as disaffected power undoing the architecture
of the state subject, authorizing new hermeneutics of the self to take control
over semiological acts of translation, and engendering a political resubjectivation of the governed. The article
identifies Roma Pentecostalism as a
source of political reawakening of Romani civil society, a creative line of
flight with an immense power of deterritorialization of the main domains of
subjection released by the state and
transnational neoliberal government.
Introduction
Religious revivalism in Eastern
Europe has often been explained as a reaction to the repressive socialist
measures taken against religion.[1] In
Romania, during the socialist period, and generally throughout Eastern Europe,
religions were repressed, but informal religious practice was accorded a degree
of unofficial toleration. Pelkmans (2009) suggests that, in the Soviet bloc,
socialist modernization involved transformations of religious meanings and
practices and, more generally, an objectification of religion. Religious
identities became attached to ethno-national categories and in this way, became
manageable by the state as instruments of power (Bratosin and Ionescu, 2009).
However, the religious identity of the Roma in Romania has not been uniform
(Achim, 2004). Different Roma groups have been Orthodox, Catholic or Protestant;
these distributions correspond to the different historical regions of Romania.[2] In the
case of the Roma, socialist repression was oriented primarily towards their
distinct ethnic identity, which was largely subsumed under that of Romanian and
socialist proletarian identity.
After 1989, Eastern
Europeans were free to choose and practice their religions. At the same time,
post-socialism opened the doors to global religious movements, especially of
the Neo-Protestant variety, such as Pentecostalism, which pursued a pattern of
local development in Eastern European societies (Clark,
2009; Horton, 1971, 1975b; Lankauskas, 2009;
Steinberg and Wanner, 2008). Many Romanian Roma
adopted Pentecostalism as their faith. In an article by Ramnicelul (2011)
published in The Economist, devoted
to the Roma’s religious affiliations, Ilie Dinica, president of the National
Agency for the Roma, stated that the Romanian Roma’s conversion to
Pentecostalism is steadily growing. The statement confirmed research conducted
by the Roma Education Fund, which “suggests that a fifth of the country’s Roma
may now belong to smaller religious denominations, mostly Pentecostal, but also
to Catholic and Islamic sects” (Ramnicelul, 2011: 1). The principal
explanation, as acknowledged by scholars of Pentecostalism, is that the
Pentecostal ethic offers a way of “addressing local issues in locally
comprehensible terms” (Robbins, 2004: 129), promoting an egalitarian doctrine,
which offers equal opportunities to believers with different levels of
education and financial resources to experience God as an inspirational
authority, an interlocutor in religious dialogs and a life partner (Corten,
1997; Cucchiari, 1990; McGuire, 1975). In addition, as Ries (2007) argues, in
the case of the Romanian Roma, Pentecostalism integrates religious and social
meanings into a community of common values, which are incorporated into a
religious doctrine. These generally uphold the emergence of idiosyncratic forms
of self-governance and values Roma started to adopt in their social lives. Yet,
extra communitarian programs of governance directed by the state and large
important transnational actors[3] approach
the Roma as the most ‘vulnerable’ and ‘marginal’ population in Europe (e.g.
European Commission, 2010; United Nation Development Program, 2002; World Bank,
2005), or in other words, a subaltern population lacking the necessary
political and civic engagement needed for its empowerment and implicitly the
capacity for self-governance. Since the 1990s, the EU, within the context of
political enlargement, has started to pay attention to Roma as part of an
attempt at Europeanizing a population (Van Baar, 2012) who is considered to
live and act outside the mainstream European cultural and social norms. This
has led to a progressive indigenization and transnationalization of governance
with regard to the Roma. The social inclusion of the so called ‘poor’ and
‘marginal’ Roma was largely conceived as a program of social development, whose
“objective is the elimination not of inequality, but of difference” (Procacci 1991:160) through an expanding moral economic
order of capital, bringing together domains of subjectification, or
categorization (e.g. neoliberal subject as entrepreneur), which translate labor
power into waged labor.[4] The
latter is a category projected onto a population that, in this way, becomes the
object of neoliberal governance. The process is conceptually called
subjectification and is constitutive of programs of social and human
development such as social inclusion of the Roma.
The program of social integration
has been pursued principally according to the interests of EU member states
(Sobotka and Vermeersch, 2012), aiming at state welfare reduction, capital
expansion, and the integration of the ‘free’ labor power into the newly
‘liberalized’ Eastern European market economies. In other words, the social
inclusion of the Roma, aims to discipline and bring about the inclusion of the
non-integrated poor into the neoliberal economic rationality of the market,
rather than bringing about their political
affirmation.[5]
This has both altered and constituted Romani civil society (e.g. the NGOization
of Roma civil society) as an apparatus of supervision and as a mechanism for
the implementation of its social programs. It became, from a Gramscian
perspective, a site for the exercise of neoliberal hegemony, not a civil
society born from grassroots undertakings (Trehan and Sigona, 2009).
Contiguously, other
forms of criticism concentrated on what I call the semiotics of social inclusion, with practical implications for
governance. From within the discourse of social integration, the
Roma are expected to achieve equality and inclusion from an already construed
subaltern position (e.g. ‘the vulnerable’, ‘the poor’ and ‘the marginal’), and implicitly
acquiesce in their political idiosyncrasies and submit to the semiotics of
governance commanded by existent powerful transnational neoliberal actors. In this context, the neoliberal discourse of social integration of Eastern European
Roma, adopted both by the EU and member states, acts as a semiological
apparatus of capture (Deleuze and Guattari, 2005), a program of governance or
technology of power grounded in expertize and social scientific knowledge,
which aims to internalize existent forms of social and political organization
(e.g. Eastern European Roma’s civic and religious organizations) and constitute
them as a form of subordinate politics through acts of translation.[6] In the
course of translation, through the use of bureaucratic language, idiosyncratic
modes of social, cultural and political governance are redefined as state forms
of governance, which need to assume the instrumentality of the state’s
institutions, programs and technologies of power. This mechanism used by the
state for capturing the existent forms of governance (e.g. Romani
Pentecostalism) through the use of translation and the discursive language of
governmental power (e.g. social inclusion) is what I call the ‘semiological
state apparatus of capture.’ The term was coined by Deleuze and Guattari
(2005), who analyze the way wealth is appropriated by the capitalist state
through the use of language as a semiotic mechanism for the translation of
labor into surplus labor. The latter, surplus labor does not exist as such. It
is a semiotic category produced by capitalism and the capitalist state.
According to Deleuze and
Guattari (1986 :15), this process, the semiological state apparatus of capture,
acts as an internalizing force in a “perpetual field of interaction” and
dialectical communication with global externalizing forces that challenge the
state as a form of governance. As part of the global political landscape, the
internalizing forces (e.g. states, transnational polities and their programs of
governance) aim at appropriating minor social and political movements (e.g.
ethnic groups’ political, social and religious formations). On the other hand,
externalizing forces (e.g. transnational economic, political and religious
movements such as global Pentecostalism), or the worldwide machines that
traverse the ecumenon[7] have the
power of metamorphosing into global civic movements, beyond and in dialectical
communication with the form of the state. The dynamic and process, involved by
externalizing forces—externalization—produce an active detachment of social and
political forms of organizations from established conceptual frameworks of
government established by the state and transnational polities.
Internalization or
appropriation through translation or semiological capture and externalization
are competitive and complementary global dynamics, state and counter-state
formations respectively, which belong to a global political field of
interactions (Deleuze and Guattari, 2005). The state as a force of
internalization realizes its aims by appropriating the Other through forms of
reasoning grounded in scientific knowledge, called by Deleuze and Guattari
(1986) royal sciences (e.g. state or expert social sciences). Expert social
sciences uphold the apparatus of semiological capture as part of state
governance, which acts complementary to the other strand of sovereignty, the
state’s judicial apparatus. Thus, processes of translation made by the expert
social sciences are able to inscribe and configure the social according to
state forms of governance, and, in general terms, are part of state apparatuses of territorialization or
semiological capture. For instance, the program of social integration grounded
in expertize is able to translate Romani Pentecostalism as a form of
self-government into the state and neoliberal language of governance, which
territorialize pre-existent society. By territorializing society, a political
force such as the state inhabits, regulates, classifies the social space or
imprints its manifestations onto its conceptual frame (e.g. the sovereign
modern state or reason), which assumes power to build institutional pillars of
belonging (e.g. nation state building). Furthermore, each territorialization
involves a precursory process of de-territorialization, de-construction or an
extraction of a space from its conceptual assumptions and boundaries (e.g. new
political and social movements opposed to the rationality of the nation state).
Consequently, the semiological state apparatus of capture engages both
processes of deterritorialization of existent forms of social and political
organization and re-territorialization of these into the state’s enduring
conceptual apparatus.
By incorporating
scientific reasoning into its apparatuses, the state is itself conceptualized
as a process of thought extension or rational authority,[8] which
universalizes its workings and constitutes its conceptual or semiological
apparatus as universal, as a way of establishing the truth, “the imperium of true thinking (le penser-vrai)” (Deleuze and Guattari,
1986: 41): “The State gives thought a form of interiority, and thought [Reason
CV] gives that interiority a form of universality” (42). Nevertheless, the
universality and internality of the state form are opposed by the externality
and the decentralized character of the war machine, which is defined in
opposition to the sovereign state that aims to maintain peace. The 17th
century treaties of Westphalia established a relationship between sovereignty
and peace. Strong sovereign states were considered to be a barrier to states
attacking and conquering each other and thus a means of ensuring the
maintenance of a global geopolitical order. In addition, the state itself aims
to maintain an internal social order and to preserve all the forms of classification
associated with it. In these circumstances, the war machine serves as a
reference to a struggle against the institutionalization of social and
political order and power, which are established by states within their
boundaries. It is an affirmative force manifested and engaged by non-state
populations, but also by philosophers, local knowledge(s), creative forms of
art and social mechanisms, which oppose themselves to sovereign reason.
Following this, Romani global Pentecostalism, which emerged in mid ’60
and had as a source of inspiration Methodism,[9] can be
thought, in Deleuze and Guattari’s (1986) terms, as a war machine, a
decentralized movement opposed to the state and its programs of internalization
or semiological capture (e.g. social integration); it is grounded in
personalized social ‘networks,’ ’profoundly localized’ and ethically
idiosyncratic. The
personal relation Pentecostal believers develop with the Holy Spirit emphasizes
the authority of believers in relation to the external social world and
implicitly forms of political power such as the state (De Bernardi,
1999; Gerlach and Hine, 1970; Ireland, 1991; Noll, 2001; Robbins, 2004; Willems, 1967; Wilson and Clow, 1981). These
features indicate the movement as a relaying externalizing force, a war
machine, which constitutes its enactments outside conceptually territorialized
spaces of the state, particularly the neoliberal state and its programs of
social integration or internalization of Romani cultural and political forms of
organization.
Notwithstanding, some
other authors considered new religious movements and Pentecostalism as the new
‘occult economies’ able “to conjure wealth” (Comaroff and Comaroff, 2001: 19)
and support capital ideologically and US led global neoliberalism (Comaroff and
Comaroff, 2001; Schiller, 2005), leading to a worldwide enchantment.
Nevertheless, as admitted by Comaroff and
Comaroff, enchantment is not a new phenomenon, but rather a
continuous reverberation of the new capitalism, a process of disenchantment
that involves technologies of re-enchantment, which can include religious
practices and centralized hierarchical organizations associated with leading
global ideologies such as neoliberalism. Yet, Pentecostal movements cannot be disparaged by
being stripped of their self-ruling capacity and the idiosyncratic
manifestations revealed by the believers themselves (Ries, 2007; Vate, 2009) in
order to be considered ideological missionaries of market fundamentalism. This
translation itself underpins and assumes that the ideology of capital is
omniscient and omnipotent, able to incorporate all new forms of self-government
into its technologies of power. In addition, global Pentecostalism does not
necessarily share the vision of Pentecostal churches that are centralized and
evince fundamentalist features, but, as already mentioned, it is a decentralized
movement with the power of self-government.
On the other hand, the state is an
internalizing force, a mechanism of demarcation between subject and law,
governed and governor. It is a political entity able to capture or internalize
the forms of self-government which operate as an alternative to state forms and
to constitute ‘the governed’ by regulating its space of political and social
expression, which implicitly becomes the territorialized space of the state.
Likewise, transnational polities, such as the World Bank, European Union and United
Nation Development Program, which are co-external to the state, join the same
force of internalization of the social through the semiological capture of the
various groups’ forms of governance, which are not yet territorialized by the
global neoliberal discourse. In this case, semiological capture involves the
translation of ethnic and cultural governance into the language of
transnational neoliberal government, which follows a market rationality and
implicitly aims at integrating those not yet subjected to its workings.
Besides, the same transnational neoliberal
governance constitutes, in Deleuze and Guattari’s terms (2005), ‘the right to
capture’ (e.g. policies, laws, programs), which has been programmatically
informed by extensive social research, building the overall legitimacy of the
language or apparatus of semiological capture (e.g. governmental program for
the social integration of the Roma), enacted both by states and transnational
actors in development. The term ‘social
integration’ itself suggests a
force for internalization, in this case ordained by the state and neoliberal
transnational government, opposed to externalization
and political affirmation as the modus operandi of a war machine (e.g. global
Romani Pentecostalism) that assumes, as Deleuze and Guattari (2005: 421)
suggest, in a reversed Clausewitzian formula, “that politics is the
continuation of war by other means.” It is a war that involves political
affirmation or, in other words, a capacity to act independently from the state
and dominant frameworks of governmental power through the use of idiosyncratic
cultural and social features. The whole process is able to contribute to the
constitution of a political subject or a political subjectification. The
latter, as Ranciere (1999: 36) argues, performs “a disidentification, removal
from the naturalness of place” assigned by the governor[10] to the
governed and a direct engagement of the governed with the governing as an
expression of a political will and affirmation.
Returning to the local
religious initiatives found among the Romanian Roma, Romani Pentecostalism
seems to be able to release forms of agency and empowerment alternatives to
state programs of social integration/internalization and act at the grassroots
as a form of political affirmation and globally as a war machine, in a
dialectical opposition to state and transnational forms of neoliberal
governance. In addition, the religious movement seems to be external and
distinct from the existent Romani civil society constituted by neoliberal
governmental power, and an almost unexplored area in terms of political
mobilization and self-affirmation (Trehan and Sigona, 2009). Thereafter, the
research undertaken in this article is an inquiry into Romani Pentecostalism as
a form of self-government and counter discourse to the neoliberal program of
social integration as a state and transnational semiological apparatus of
capture, a conceptualization discussed by Deleuze and Guattari (1986).
Generally, the article, informed by qualitative data, aims to prompt critical
social research on Romani Pentecostalism and civil society, outside the
existent semiotics of governance. In connection with these problematizations,
some significant research questions demand attention:
Is Roma conversion to Pentecostalism a form of
self-governance and political subjectification? Is Pentecostal religious
practice a new language of power for the Roma, construed as an alternative to
social integration as a semiological apparatus of capture?
The next section presents
the methodology of this study, and the participants and group of Roma with whom
I worked. The following sections offer alternative responses to the questions
raised and explanations for the conversion to Pentecostalism in Eastern Europe.
These issues are further explored in the data analysis sections. I then analyze
the data with a view to examining royal sciences or state social sciences as
part of the semiological apparatus of capture or program of social integration
advanced by the state and by transnational polities (e.g. WB, UNDP, EU).
1. Method and field site
The study is the result of
seven months qualitative fieldwork carried out in 2010 with the Roma in
Alexandri, a Romanian locality of 10,000 inhabitants, of which 1,000 are Roma. Religion
is one of the most important spheres of interactions for one group of Roma—the
Kalderash—whose members have been conducting their lives in an
extraneous relation with the state. During 1960s, the socialist state forced
the Kalderash’s sedentarization and heavily restricted their trading of
products made from copper. In order to seize their gold, the Kalderash’s form
of accumulation, the socialist security services centralized their customary
leadership and the newly installed leaders became responsible for seizing their
gold. After the 1990s, the customary leadership, as a key institution in their
self-governance, deteriorated badly and suffered a considerable loss of
authority among the Kalderash. These days, the Kalderash are still mobile,
traveling seasonally within Romania engaging in informal trading. In addition,
by involving themselves in informal businesses in the industrial sector (e.g.
buying, selling and re-selling old technology from large plants to small
companies), many of them have become affluent. However, some other families
continued practicing trading copper made products throughout the country and
succeeded in providing themselves with a reasonable degree of financial
security. The latter are regarded by both Romanians and affluent Roma families
as ‘the poorer’ Kalderash.
In this study, I engaged
in participant observation inside the Kalderash’s Pentecostal church[11] for
almost four months, and complemented this with ten semi-structured interviews
focused on religious practices. My respondents were both females and males, in
their 30s and 40s, comprising Pentecostal preachers, union administrators and
Kalderash Pentecostal converts who were interested in describing their personal
religious practice. I carried out informal conversations outside the church and
in their homes and I conducted one interview with the union administrator
inside the church. My analysis of the interviews and observations focuses on
the relation between religious experience and new understandings of authority
and self-governance, which are constitutive of their new subjectivities as
converts. In the following account, in order to offer a framework for the
analysis of this constitutive relationship, I critically compare and examine alternative
explanations by social scientists of the Eastern European conversion to
Pentecostalism with regard to state vs. non-state ideological mechanisms of
subjectification.
2. Conversion to Pentecostalism and ideological dialectics
The post
1990s religious revival among the Roma in Romania is not necessarily a sign of
a ‘traditional’ practice or strategy of survival as portrayed by the media (see
Cantón-Delgado, 2010). On the
contrary, it may represent the expression of a non-secular process that can
bring alternative forms of empowerment (Meyer, 1996; Werth, 2000). Notwithstanding, the religious revival has sometimes been associated with poor
economic performance and political instability and a diminished sense of
security (Norris and Inglehart, 2004), characteristic
of Eastern European societies. These types of sociological explanation,
focusing on “disorganization and deprivation” (Cantón-Delgado, 2010: 256),
have a political character (Thurfjell and Marsh,
2014) and can be specifically associated with
derogatory explanations, which consider Roma conversion to Pentecostalism as a
mechanism for the inclusion of the ‘excluded’ or ‘dis-integrated’ into
mainstream society or, as Cantón-Delgado (2010: 256) asserts, as a “symbolic rebellion by
marginalized and oppressed people.” Yet, many other social scientists pointed
out the idiosyncrasies of Romani Pentecostalism (Hefner, 1993) without
distorting its force of deterritorialization and semiotics, developed outside
the semiological state apparatuses of capture upheld by expert social sciences.
In this case, one of the explanations
offered was that
Romanian Roma populations looked for an ethnic-religious category that offered a distinct identity (Foszto,
2006). If being a Hungarian meant being Catholic or Protestant, and being a
Romanian meant being Orthodox, it is conceivable that being a Roma would mean
being Pentecostal. Nevertheless, the religious landscape looks more complex and is locally
highly particularized. For instance, in my case study, while some groups of
Roma living in extreme poverty—Romanianized Roma—were not interested in
conversion to Pentecostalism, Kalderash, enjoying a degree of affluence, were
very receptive to these new religious practices and built their own Pentecostal
church. During the socialist period, most of the Romanianized Roma were
sedentary, working as unskilled workers in state factories and farms. Their
lives were primarily organized by the state, which still appears in their
language as a paternal figure. Broadly, it can be argued that the Romanianized
Roma were more inclined to miscognition of state domination, as well as of
alternative forms of governance, which are elaborated by external forms of
authority. They have been subject to a process of mystification, which is
performed ideologically by the state, blurring the boundary between the reality
of the state domination and the illusion of independent thinking subject. Following
this, Romanianized Roma, as ideological subjects of the state, were less able
to identify Pentecostalism with a form of self-governance, alternatively
construed with state governance. On the other hand, the Kalderash perceived the
socialist and the post-socialist state as a threat to their independent forms
of social organization and economic life, associated with nomadism as lifestyle
until the 1960s. In this context, the differential relation with the state
indicates a different relation towards external authority and different levels
of ideological subjection to state power,
which is strongly challenged by the Kalderash looking for alternative forms of
governance, but appropriated and incorporated by the Romanianized Roma into
their everyday lives.
Similarly, for the Chukchi and other ethnic
groups of Siberia, Pentecostal conversion was interpreted “as an attempt to
regain agency” (Vate, 2009: 41), previously captured by the Soviet state. For the Spanish Gitano, as Gay y Blaso (2002: 185) suggests, Pentecostal
religious practice emphasizes “the uniqueness and superiority of Gitanos over non-Gypsies,” which can
act as an engine for self-reformation and renaissance of a
rejuvenated political community. It is indirectly implied that Romani
Pentecostalism should be understood as a reversed ideological construction in a
dialectical opposition to current transnational Romani activism and politics,
largely seen as an abettor-subject
of global neoliberalism, which fuels processes of ethnic minoritization[12] pledged
by transnational governmental power. The conversion to Pentecostalism can also bring
about an individual’s disconnection from imposed forms of authority and a
reformulation of self-authority
through religious practice and objectification of the religious self.
Individuals can simultaneously adopt alternative narratives, which can be
‘hegemonic’ reproducing the existing structures of power or ‘subversive’
challenging different layers of power (Ewick and Silbey, 1995). For instance, as
Marshall (2009) documented in the case of Nigeria, the Born Again movement has
answered to needs of re-subjectification and remodeling of the national
subject’s sovereignty previously destroyed by colonialism, but it has also
cultivated an ethic of submission to Christian values, which generally requires
penitence and an increased self-control. Hence,
it could be claimed that conversion to Pentecostalism is neither a totally
atomistic experience, nor a discourse entirely colonizing the individuals’
consciousness (Pelkmans, 2009). It involves both the adoption and domestication
of meanings conveyed by articulations between religious authority and self-expression. Thereafter, the study of
conversion to Pentecostalism can cast new meanings upon “cultural categories
such as agency and power, familiar and foreign, space and time” (Wanner, 167)
as well as new forms of grassroots self-governance and political
subjectification. In the following section, I explore Roma believers’ religious
domestications and the way in which conversion to Pentecostalism brings changes
in their discursive practices and their relation with forms of authority,
leadership and pastorate.
3. Roma Pentecostal pastors and domains of subjection
According to Dionis, one
of the Union’s administrators, in 2008 there were only forty-five Kalderash
converts in Alexandri. By 2010, their number had reached 135. This expansion
evinces an increased level of conversion among the Kalderash, who emphasize a
change in lifestyle—‘Godly ways’—which marks a significant distinction between
themselves and everybody else. Moreover, the Pentecostal conversion brought
changes in the way the Kalderash approached local authorities and their
customary leaders (bulibasi).
However, not all Kalderash converted to Pentecostalism. Some of the believers
considered that only ‘the poorer’ Kalderash, who hoped for more equality and
community cohesion, joined the union. It was also an opportunity for several
rich Kalderash, who had been unsuccessful in their economic activities and
unsuccessfully aspired to customary leadership, to become administrators of the
union and, in this way, regain some prestige and authority in the eyes of
poorer converts.
Before
delving into the analysis of religious practices and forms of self-governance, I
explore several considerations about Roma leadership. In Romania, until the
state enforced sedentarization in the 1960s, the Kalderash Roma had a nomadic
lifestyle and an idiosyncratic form of self-governance based on reticulated
movements and the small family group administration of resources and
distribution of economic activities. In Deleuze and Guattari’s terms (1986:
13), nomadic Kalderash were organized around customary leaders of “groups of
the rhizome type,” opposed to centralized forms of power such as the state,
based on hierarchies and rational authority. In general terms, rhizome type
groups, operating as part of decentralized networks, are based on kinship
relations and do not follow a pre-established order, but rather share a
collective support for common social and economic practices. Small group
customary leadership and its forms of control over members are limited and
mainly based on the continuous negotiation of collective avowal, involving “no
instituted power other than prestige, no other means of persuasion, no other
rule than his [leader’s CV] sense of the group’s desire” (Deleuze and Guattari
1986: 11).
Among
the Kalderash, the customary leader was usually a respected elder negotiating
access to local state services and commercial activities, embodying an almost
non-hierarchical “complex mechanism that does not act to promote
the strongest, but rather inhibits the installation of stable powers, in favor
of a web of immanent relations” (Deleuze and Guattari, 1986: 12). It follows
that customary leaders did not dominate, but were part of mobile small units of
governance connected to each other as part of a larger decentralized network
impeding the reticulated political organization of nomadic family groups from
being captured by the state apparatuses of power. In other words, mobile groups
of Roma were not subordinated to a main leader able to collaborate with state
institutions and were more focused on mobile governance organized by a leader
with limited attributions. The small groups were able to both connect to each
other and maintain their independence within a network opposed to the
centralized and hierarchical character of the state. I call this form of social
and political organization, based on kin relationships, reticulated mobile self-ministry, or in other terms, nomad self-governance. Deleuze and
Guattari (2005) identify the nomadic feature as an expression of a political
affirmation in dialectical opposition to stable and settled state centralized
apparatuses of power. The term does not necessarily emphasize dichotomies
between the state and external forms of governance, but rather indicates independent
forms of governance (e.g. community governance) in a dialectical communication
with state governance, which both configure the architecture of their political
subjectivities.
Yet, the nomad forms of self-governance and leadership underwent
substantial changes in conjunction with the transformation of the state from
socialism to post-socialism. During the state enforced sedentarization of the 1960s,
the customary leaders of small nomadic groups became subordinated to a
principal customary leader, who would then serve as a collaborator with Securitate, the state security service,
and serve as a broker in a shared
control-dyadic relation with the
socialist state. This constituted a mechanism of incorporation of the
Romani leadership and indirectly of their nomadic self-governance into the state apparatus of control and repression. Overall,
the relations between the customary leader, the socialist state and the
Kalderash progressively delegitimized the institution of bulibasa among the Roma. Once the
post-socialist period began, with no support from institutions and with a
delegitimized institution of leadership
that the Kalderash associated with state violence, the principal leaders lost a significant degree of
their authority. On the other hand, the informal economy that emerged created
opportunities for the Kalderash to improve their material position and for
members of some wealthy families to claim the position of bulibasa, which decentralized and multiplied the Kalderash’s claims to leadership. In
order to gain some authority (e.g. the power to institute and maintain
local community governance) several of them became preachers, enacting the
re-building of community, re-approached
through religious dialogs with God and the idiosyncratic practice of communion.
The Pentecostal church in Alexandri
followed the model of a small congregation that incorporates or negotiates
local cultural norms and the believers’ experiences and expectations. In
general, the atmosphere during the church services is quite different from that
in Romanian non-Romani Pentecostal
churches, where believers follow the pastor’s directions and listen in silence
to his prayers, sing in the choir and pray in a moderate voice. In the Kalderash’s
church, believers pray loudly and speak in tongues. In addition, as believers
indicated, Pentecostal religious performances are different from those
permitted in Orthodox churches, which are mainly directed by the priest, who
performs ministerial power over a
community of values, which are taught and not presumably reflected upon. Divine
authority is not delegated, but is personified in the image of the priest who
governs the believer’s religious self in a continuous rhetoric of submission to
a transcendent Holy Spirit, and is disconnected with the endeavors for
self-government. However, during Pentecostal sermons, Roma believers are
expected to actively and creatively participate in the new architecture of
their subjectivities, practice the art of self-dialog through testimonies and
prayers, deterritorialize existing domains of subjection to extraneous forms of
power and incorporate the self into a communion with the immanent Divine, which
is appropriated as a life partner. Notwithstanding,
and similar to Pentecostal Gypsy Travelers (Voiculescu, 2012), pastors
are not recognized as community leaders exercising power over believers and are not followed as advisers on
self-conduct. They are rather expected to enhance the believers’ participation
in the religious community (e.g. sermons), to extend and strengthen social
bonds and financial support among community members, without interfering in
their private lives and sphere of decision-making. Likewise, there is a
practice of ethical communion which promotes egalitarianism and condemns
affluence as a source of alienation from an authentic self, engaged in a
dialogical personal relationship with God—an immanent authority defiant of
alternative forms of subjection. Dionis, a charismatic leader, who is a
preacher of the Pentecostal Union, often calls for the dissolution of the
differences between rich and poor Kalderash. Some other believers themselves do
not accept a clear-cut division
between rich and poor, which from their viewpoints would generate conflicts
between members of the community. During one sermon, a young woman performed a
song, a call for the rich Kalderash to give money to the poorer ones. In
exchange for their good deeds, the rich would receive rewards from God.
Similarly, but on a different day, a Kalderash woman on her way to the church
contemplated the rich Kalderash’s ‘palaces’ and remarked that their wealth
means nothing in God's eyes. The content of this kind of utterance and
performance suggests an opposition to the religious community of values and
sharing in which all are brothers and sisters. In other words, Roma believers,
who share a kin related solidarity and a socially unbound rhetoric of a
dialogical self in relation with God, go beyond a collective ideological
communion, and guided by the pastor help each other financially when needed
(e.g. the illness or death of family members). Additionally, all the concerns
related to interactions with the local authorities and the problems of life
(e.g. poverty, sickness) are portrayed in songs or testimonies and discussed
collectively inside the church. These symbolic enactments of local community
governance are usually harmonized by a pastor who performs the duties of
gathering believers, connecting those in need to those who can be supportive
and dealing with administrative issues that can affect the unity of the religious
community. As many Romanian Roma believers in Alexandri stated, the pastor’s
authority is limited to power to administratively
build and organize a religious community, and does not include the control over
believers’ everyday lives. This kind of community governance is commonly
practiced in Romanian Roma Pentecostal unions all over Europe, including those
established in the UK (Voiculescu, 2012; WSREC, 2015). Notwithstanding, these
do not indicate an integration into a social and cultural space of the
majority, as Slovak ethnologists Podolinska and Hrustic (2014) claim for the
case of Slovak Roma. On the contrary, as Cantón-Delgado
(2010) and Gay y Blasco (2002) argue, in the case of Spanish Gitano, believers
are already integrated in social networks and identify themselves with Roma
local communities, but they distinguish themselves from the non-Gitano/Roma. In general, Roma
Pentecostals are primarily looking to emphasize the idiosyncrasies of a moral
self, fed by a religious dialogical practice, in a seamless dialectical
conversation with non-Roma
culturally enchanted modern forms of subjection such as state
institutions.
Preaching about the role of faith and religion
vary in relation to the preachers’ identities. Irrespective of their cultural
or ethnic background, pastors from other Pentecostal Unions are often invited
to preach at the Kalderash’s church. On one of these occasions, a Romanian non-Roma pastor, Teodosie, from a
neighboring area, was invited. His speech was different from Dionis’ and
followed the logic of controlled governance imposed from above. In his speech,
he mentioned that believers should avoid engaging in informal commerce. He gave
as an example an illiterate woman who used to cheat customers at the market
and, after she became a Pentecostal believer, without being able to read the
Bible, she received the Holy Spirit and gave up cheating. However, Teodosie’s
speech was not very well received. His preaching was rather didactic, with
questions from the Bible to which no one knew the answers. Many of the
Kalderash believers either started laughing or left the church. At the end of
the service, non-Roma pastor Teodosie explained his views on Pentecostal
religious practice, which he saw as a form of education, encouraging literacy
and promoting the reduction of criminality among the Roma. He indirectly
confirmed that his preaching was aimed at producing a contiguous effect. It was
a different way of approaching Pentecostal religious practice, as a form of
teaching from above, adopted and ideologically performed by the state, with the
aim of demarcating the border between governors and governed. Notwithstanding,
Kalderash preachers and administrators of the union follow the local,
contextualized character of Pentecostalism, and promote a softer version of
change, which does not exclude the so-called Romani ‘traditions’ (e.g. early
marriages, informal economic practices). In general terms, Pentecostal
religious practice brings about a domestication of religious practice and a
reformulation of the subject as a ruler of the self, in a dialog with God as an
internalized authority. It establishes a new sphere of self-ministry and of the
hermeneutics of the self, which I discuss in the next section.
3.1 From Bulibasa to God: self-ministry and the hermeneutics of the self
In many informal conversations about
leadership, Kalderash believers claimed that they no longer ‘listen’ to their
customary leaders —bulibasi— and that
the roles of bulibasi are, when
needed, limited to mediation between the community and the police. The presence
of God became more important and even replaced the role of customary leaders in
their everyday lives. In addition, many believers started to claim that their
ultimate bulibasa is God. In a
conversation I had with one of the union administrators, Daniel, this transfer
of authority between bulibasa and God
was clearly stated.
C: Do they [Kalderash] still listen to bulibasa?
D: Who listens to bulibasa today? He does not matter
anymore. We listen to
God. Why should I listen to bulibasa? Does he give us anything?
C: Who gives you support? Bulibasa or God?
D: In the past, bulibasa helped us. Now it is finished with bulibasa.
C: What does he do now?
D: He handles police claims or
intervenes when there are fights among us, and
that is all.
C: Do you have other bosses?
D: No. We just listen to God.
C: Why are they bulibasi then?
D: It is just that they consider
themselves bulibasi.
C: What role do they have in
relation to you?
D: They have no role (...). Instead
of helping the poor, they tell everything to the
police. (Interview with Daniel,
Pentecostal union’s administrator)
As with many other Kalderash
believers I talked to, Daniel explained that the bulibasi are self–appointed and are part of the self-interested rich community and lack
authority among the poorer Kalderash. Mediation with the police is again
mentioned as the single role customary leaders still play. On the other hand,
Pentecostalism, as practice and belief, seems to have blurred the division
between rich and poor and to have generated a transfer of government from bulibasa to God and, finally, to the
Kalderash themselves. It gives a sense of empowerment to individuals, who are
no longer in a relation of dependence upon an extraneous source of authority.
For instance, Dumitru, a Kalderash believer from a moderately wealthy family
claims that Jesus is the new bulibasa
and the only leader in his life.
C: But, who is bulibasa now?
D: Everyone is her/his
own master. Bulibasa deals with police issues only. It is
just a word: bulibasa. They are bulibasi, but not our masters. We have Jesus.
C: Do you fear him [bulibasa]?
D: We feel fear
because he is our bulibasa, but we
have no issues with him. If
they [bulibasi] help you, they ask for money.
It is better to manage yourself. If
you are weak and don’t
know what to do, you still go to him [bulibasa].
He
sometimes says: come
to me, if you do not come, I’ll beat you. We have our
bulibasa, that is, Jesus.
C: Can you still have
a bulibasa, or is Jesus the new bulibasa?
D: Bulibasa is a name, but we are masters
of ourselves. If someone comes to me
to harm me, I go
directly to the police and complain. I'll go to courts and ask for
his arrest. (Interview
with Dumitru, Pentecostal believer)
Similarly, to many other Kalderash, when
referring to the roles and importance of bulibasa
for the Kalderash community, Dumitru’s statements are contradictory: “we
feel fear because he is our bulibasa” which contradicts the assertion “they are
bulibasi, but not our masters.” The
distinction indicates that bulibasa
is no longer an authority, but only a source of fear and control for the
‘weak,’ who ask for mediation services provided by the local authorities.
Believers’ strength in their relation with external forms of control comes
through their private relationship with God. In this context, Dumitru’s
statements become relevant: “everyone is his/her own master” and “we are
masters of ourselves.” Both suggest that Roma believers tend not to distinguish
between divine authority (e.g. God or Jesus) and a dialogical religious
self—self-God—and claim to be both
masters of themselves and have God as the master of their private lives
(Voiculescu, 2012). For believers,
God appears as an egalitarian internal life partner, and is therefore
relational. God is an immanent authority, in Deleuzian terms, indistinguishable
in relation to the self, and not a transcendental sovereign force commanding
obedient submission, as it is the case in the Orthodox and Catholic faiths.
This religious partnership with God internalizes the center of decision-making
and control over acts of translation, authorizing a new hermeneutics of the
self to evolve into a form of self-ministry,
which is no longer subject to external semiological capture, in so far as the
seamless self-God dialog remains the
constant locus of authority and constitution of believer’s subjectivity.
Furthermore, through conversion and penitence (e.g. renouncing bad habits)
believers break their relation to their past identities to become subjects of
their own self-mastery. This process
creates affective and reflective relations to oneself—a form of knowledge of
the self, complementary to a care for the self (Foucault, 2005) as part of a
new form of self-government, exclusively mediated by Divine-self authority (Voiculescu, 2012).
Like other Roma believers, Dumitru
considers that they do not need mediators or representatives (e.g. bulibasi or pastors). The
self–governance gained through the new religious Pentecostal experience and
partnership with God replaced leaders’ mediation of their everyday problems. It
led believers into a much closer relation and interaction with the local
authorities (e.g. police and local council). Many of them claim they can
approach state institutions directly and solve their problems with no help from
their customary leaders. Hence, on the one hand, Roma believers endorse a
domesticated Pentecostal ethic and on the other hand, expand their private
space of decision-making to encompass their interactions and relations with
heteronomous sources of authority (e.g. the state or leaders), which ultimately
are mediated by the religious self.
Compared to the program of social
integration of the ‘marginal’/’vulnerable’ as a semiological state apparatus of
capture of vernacular forms of governance, aiming at constituting Roma as
subaltern subjects of the neoliberal state structures and labor markets, the
Pentecostal ethic constitutes Roma believers as political subjectivities in the
making, capable of self-governance. Partnership with God as self-mastery offers
a new hermeneutics of the self, exclusively mediated by the God-self
relationship, which becomes the autonomous center of decision-making in the
interactions believers have with external authorities or the state. This
process translates into a form of self-governance independently and
alternatively construed to state governance and customary leadership, and
generates a form of empowerment from within the self and community. In the next
section, I critically discuss the way Romani Pentecostalism as a form of
self-government is translated by expertise and social sciences into the program
of social integration of the ‘marginal,’ run by states and transnational
polities, as an apparatus of internalization or semiological capture.
Discussion: Romani Pentecostalism as Nomad Self- Governance vs. Semiological State Apparatus of Capture
Inspired by this case study and
previous research I carried out (Voiculescu, 2012), I suggest that Romani
Pentecostalism is able to engender an individualization of the space of
decision-making, which is not in any sense a space of responsibilization
associated with ‘reflexive modernization’ (Beck, Giddens and Lash, 1994) that
can easily be translated into the liberal understanding of ‘free will,’ which
stands at the core of projects of human development and social integration for
the Roma. Responsibility becomes blurred by the private relationship believers
establish with God, who provides the source of both right and wrong. Claiming
the supreme authority of God in relation to themselves and others, Roma
believers feel more able to manage their relation with extraneous forms of authority
and manipulate discourses on right and wrong, good and bad, which are usually
structured by state power and transnational government through institutions,
norms and laws. On the other hand, localized Pentecostal practice leaves space
for the domestication of religious doctrine, which does not beget the
submission expected by the state, but is instead translated into self-government, which strengthens and
internalizes the center of individual decision-making and underpins the
expropriation of other forms of authority (e.g. state institutions, bulibasi) from their everyday lives.
Hence, the locus of authority and empowerment is disaffected into the private space of relations with God and the
religious self. In this case, Pentecostal religious semiotics acts as disaffected power, deconstructing or
undoing the subject of the state. Furthermore, centered on a dialogical
religious self—God-self—Romani
Pentecostalism deterritorializes/deconstructs existing domains of subjection to
external forms of power, including subjection to state power. The religious
self is re-territorialized as
political affirmation into a form of self-governance
that is construed alternatively to the state and its program of social
integration, and these reveal the main characteristics of self-ministry or nomad
self-governance, discussed in the first sections. Following Foucault
(1997), the latter matches juridical-political patterns of subjectification
through which strong relations to oneself are cultivated, imposing a rupture
with the previous forms of subjection (e.g. subjection to the state) and
establishing the relation with God-self as a new locus of mastery and sovereignty.
In other words, the conversion to Pentecostalism does not “target the
establishing of an identity but, instead, serves to mark the refusal of the
self, the breaking away from self” (Foucault 1997: 96), a nomad self-government
or a form of political subjectification that involves a detachment by Roma
believers from a mechanism of identification and constitution of the governed
subaltern, imposed by the state and transnational neoliberal governance.
In addition, based on
two other pieces of research carried out in the UK with regard to Romanian Roma
migration and Roma migrants in other European countries (Voiculescu, 2012),
Romanian Roma Pentecostal unions appear to be organized around extended
families, having a reticulated and volatile nature within the EU (WSREC, 2015).
Romanian Roma who constantly travel, live and work in various EU countries
institute unions they can easily divide or dissolve if necessary (e.g.
conflicts between families, migration to a different country), to be recreated
in a different city or country, in a smaller or larger format (WSREC, 2015).
This conforms to the image of a rhyzomatic—irregular, dispersed,
decentralized—and highly unstable movement of cells of self-government disembodied from central routes of governance, which gives
an idiosyncratic character to the Romanian Romani Pentecostal movement. It
helps Gypsy Travellers from all over Europe such as the Spanish Gitano (Gay y
Blaso, 2002; Cantón-Delgado, 2010) to build
transnational networks through Pentecostal unions and organize annual global
conventions. All these suggest that Romani Pentecostalism can act as a form of
reticulated self-ministry in dialectical opposition to centralized, stable
apparatuses of power such as the state or transnational actors in development.
Besides, the
decentralized and non-hierarchical nature of the global Romani Pentecostalism,
which connects independent Pentecostal unions to each other, without altering
the autonomy, wards off the state capture of the Pentecostal network and its associated
ideology, or, in other words, its absorption into the state structures of
domination. Although some unions might surrender to state projects of
internalization/semiological capture, other ones would be able to continue to
act independently as units of nomad self-governance. Some pastors can become
brokers of the state, but they would be unable to exercise control over the
believers’ ideological choices, as believers are endowed with self-mastery. In
both cases, fragments of the captured units,[13]
rejecting domination by the state or other powerful organizations, are able to
split into multiple units, which can, in their turn, claim autonomy. On the
other hand, such independent Pentecostal unions are able to communicate with
each other, retaining power to diffuse ideology and engagement with local
self-government and possible civic movements. Thereafter, the global
Pentecostal network seems to act as a war machine, with the capacity to resist
state projects of internalization or capture of its idiosyncratic forms of
self-government, which, in the long run, may lead to the constitution of an
independent civic and political Romani society, and implicitly to a
decolonization of the subaltern governed subject of the state and transnational
neoliberal governance.
Notwithstanding, the semiotics of Romani Pentecostalism are
not always reflectively problematized by many Romani studies researchers. The
Roma pastor is portrayed as the governor, holding power over believers and leading the formation of the local opinion, “achieved by silent control over the
members of the community” (Slavkova, 2003: 10). According to this
interpretation, Roma pastors are “desired partners of local governments in
solving the accumulated Roma problems” (Todorovic, 2004: 1017) or, state
brokers able to discipline the community as promoters of state social
integration (e.g. Podolinska and Hrustic, 2014). Nevertheless, Pentecostal Roma
pastors have no instituted power over
the transfer of community government to the centralized and hierarchical state
power apparatus, but only power to organize
religious community locally. As my
fieldwork data and previous research show (Voiculescu, 2012), pastoral power over is displaced to believers
through self-mastery and internal dialogs with God. Yet, experts on Romani
issues seem to translate the Pentecostal discipline into a form of
‘normalization’ and ‘education’—a successful program of ‘social taming,’ a
substitute for state programs of integration, which helps to produce submissive
Roma.
If we focus on the changes in
behavior within these communities, and the forms of coexistence with others,
then we can say that the church, especially the Neo-protestant church, has
succeeded in integrating them [Roma CV] into society (...) We cannot compare
what the state does with what the church has succeeded in doing for them.
(Horvath, 2009: 1)
The
strong emphasis on bible studies, sermons and devotional literature creates a
high literacy rate among the Pentecostal converts that in turn lead to a valorization
of education as a way of social achievement (Gog, 2009: 106) (...) the internalization of moral codes
and the puritan ideals allows the converted Roma to articulate distinct
practices that are totally contrary to the general perception or Roma as
vagabonds that steal, cheat and are dirty. (p.108)
These statements and the meanings
assigned to the Roma Pentecostal conversion raise challenges to the legitimacy
of the program of social integration, which could be regarded as an
unsuccessful project of ‘social taming,’ pursuing a purely instrumental
rationality. It also suggests how a genuine form of self-government can be semiologically incorporated into the state language of
normalization and how particular forms of cultural translation made by social
scientists unmask a thought territorialized by the state, which makes “the
distinction between the legislator and the subject under the formal conditions
permitting thought, for its part, to conceptualize their identity” (Deleuze and
Guattari, 1986:43). These forms of semiotic translation made by social sciences
can be considered as symbolic procedures for wielding the semiology of the
state apparatus of capture.
Following Deleuze and Guattari (2005: 444),
the translation of Romani Pentecostalism reflects two operations constitutive
of the semiological apparatus of capture: “direct comparison and monopolistic
appropriation,” which presuppose each other. In the act of comparison with the
state’s social integration, Romani Pentecostalism is, in Deleuze and Guattari’s
terms ‘overcoded,’ reconstituted in the act of translation and incorporated
into state language and its programs of governance. In other words, Roma nomad
self-governance is translated into
sovereign’s colonizing discourse, which ingests creative acts of redefinition
of the self and community. The latter are conceptualized by social expertise
into the theorematic apparatus of the state, which assumes social integration
as a scientific solution and an internalized model of governance.
Henceforth, Romani
Pentecostalism that can act globally as a war machine and locally as nomad
self-governance, productive of political subjectivities—the ruled who become
rulers of themselves—can often be ‘overcoded’ by state scientific language as
the state governance of the subaltern. The semiotics of social integration used
by scholars and experts in their analyses of Romani Pentecostalism enclose the
symbolic power of classification and identification,[14] and can
be seen, in Dean’s (2012) terms, as the signature of state power with subtle
and secret mechanisms of re-enchantment, which go beyond the language itself.
Notwithstanding, any research inquiry (e.g. social sciences) implies an
idiomatic mechanism for the cultural translation of the social, which sometimes
acts as a foundation for the semiological state apparatuses of capture. In
Deleuze and Guattari’s terms (1986), the latter are underpinned by royal
sciences or expert state knowledge(s), which can deteritorialize/deconstruct
the internal idiosyncrasies of a community and its forms of self-governance and reterritorialize/insert
these into the conceptual apparatus of the state. Thereafter, the functioning
of social sciences as royal or state sciences can contribute to the
annihilation of nomad forms of self-governance and implicitly of their political
affirmation, fostered outside a “striated mental space” of the state which “aspires to universality” (Deleuze and
Guattari, 2005: 379). Romani Pentecostalism, globally acting as a war machine
and locally as a nomad form of self-governance, in dialectical relation with
depoliticized models of state governance, continues to remain subject to
semiological translation made by royal sciences or state expert social sciences.
To summarize, this
article brings to light an important problematic of governance and empowerment
from within the self and community, which needs to be carefully articulated in
the context of the current neoliberal transnational program of social
integration of the Roma. The latter reveals itself as a force of
internalization that reterritorializes vernacular models of government and
political affirmation into the semiological apparatus of the state and
transnational polities. In addition, the article reveals that Romani
Pentecostalism can act as a form of nomad
self-governance and disaffected power,
which can uphold mechanisms of de-subjectification of the governed subaltern of the state and neoliberal governance. It
also acts to promote the re-subjectification of the Roma as political subjects, which involves “a
break with the axiom of domination, that is, any sort of correlation between a
capacity for ruling and a capacity for being ruled” (Ranciere, 2010: 32). Hence,
Romani Pentecostalism can be seen as a sign of a grassroots undertaking, “a
creative line of flight” (Deleuze and Guattari, 2005: 422), able to contribute
to the reconfiguration of Romani civil society and its emancipation from acts
of subjection to both the state and transnational neoliberal government and as
Deleuze and Guattari (2005: 384) metaphorically affirm: “when religion sets
itself up to a war machine, it mobilizes and liberates a formidable charge of
nomadism or absolute deterritorialization and turns its dream of an absolute
State back against the State- form.”
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[1] See Pelkmans, Vate, Falge
(2005), Pine and Pina-Cabral (2008), Vallikivi (2003), Vate (2009), Werth
(2000).
[2] Whereas in Walachia and
Moldavia the Orthodox religion is the predominant one, in Transylvania there is
a religious mix of Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant religions and Neo-Protestant
cults.
[3] I refer here to polities
such as the European Union, the World Bank, the United Nations Development
Program, and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.
[4] For further details, see
Karl Marx (1902), who makes a distinction between labor power and labor. While
the first refers to the existent natural capacity to work, the latter is part
of capitalist production.
[5] The program of social integration of the Roma, as a force for the
internalization and depoliticization of the subject, engaged by states and
transnational polities, can be seen in opposition to the political affirmation of the Black People and their social and
political movements in the US, which constituted them as political subjects.
[6] This is a reference to re-definitions
made by state and transnational actors in development, which through expertize
and social research translate the existent cultural, political and social
manifestations of various groups in society into the language of governance. In
this context, Romani civil society became an extension of the neoliberal
governmental apparatus engaged in the program/language of social integration.
[7] Ecumenon, the Greek word, suggests here a global inhabited space, a
decentralized network of local congregations or communions with particular
values and vernacular features.
[8] In the way Weber (1978)
defines it, rational authority refers here to modern bureaucracy, but also
science, which stands at the core of bureaucratic work within the capitalist
state.
[10] This refers to the Roma’s
position of vulnerability and marginality, assigned by the transnational
neoliberal government.
[11] Whereas Pentecostal church
is a reference to a site for prayer and sermons, Pentecostal union indicates a
mode of association and organization specific to small Romanian Romani
Pentecostal communities, mainly based on kinship ties.
[12] Ethnic minoritization refers to the
process of constructing a minority in relation to a majority, its cultural and
political values, which are considered to exist by default as ideological
constructs (e.g. European identity). Additionally, its construed minoritary subject is expected to
subordinate its idiosyncrasies to a Master signifier (e.g. European neoliberal
model of citizen as entrepreneur), which incorporates its enactments and
reveals the majority’s vision.
[13] In Edinburgh and Glasgow,
UK many of the Roma Pentecostal unions have split into two or more unions and some
of them have disappeared. For example, one of the Pentecostal unions in
Edinburgh has split into two distinct unions because one branch of the union
started to collaborate with an American foundation, whereas the other branch
decided to remain independent ideologically and form a different Pentecostal
union.
[14] As discussed in the
introduction, Romani Pentecostalism was culturally translated as the social
integration of the Roma for the good of the market economy and welfare state
reduction.
CRR is a Sage international peer reviewed journal edited by Warren S. Goldstein, Center for Critical Research on Religion, USA and Jonathan Boyarin, Cornell University, USA
"Critical Research on Religion is a peer-reviewed, international journal focusing on the development of a critical framework/theory and its application of research on religion. It provides a common venue for those engaging in critical analysis in theology and religious studies, as well as for those who critically study religion in the other social sciences and humanities such as philosophy, sociology, anthropology, psychology, history, and literature."
"Critical Research on Religion is a peer-reviewed, international journal focusing on the development of a critical framework/theory and its application of research on religion. It provides a common venue for those engaging in critical analysis in theology and religious studies, as well as for those who critically study religion in the other social sciences and humanities such as philosophy, sociology, anthropology, psychology, history, and literature."
Final Anonymous Academic Reviews 03/05/2016
Reviewer 1
"I consider that the article is extremely interesting and necessary to check and review the complicity of Social Sciences with the thought of the State. The functioning of social sciences as royal sciences within the state apparatus, can contribute, in the author's view, to the annihilation of the most genuine forms of self-governance, specially regarding the ethnic minorities and the religious innovation. The main proposal of the text is to inquire into Roma religious discursive practices as counter discourses to the "State semiological acts of capturing forms of self-governance", which is a largely unexplored perspective.”
Reviewer 2
"The manuscript presents a well researched, theoretically sophisticated, and somewhat convincing argument on the possibility of reading Roma Pentecostalism through the Deleuzean lens. By employing the Deleuzean notion of "State semiological apparatus of capture," the author reads the idiosyncratic religious identity of Romanian Roma Pentecostals as a form of creative appropriation and self-empowerment of the Roma community that resists the state apparatus which seeks to govern/control them with its politics of assimilation and inclusion. The qualitative data gathered by the author him/herself indicates how the reinvented religious identity of the members of the Roma Pentecostal community functions as a powerful frame of self-empowerment and agency which displaces the sovereignty of state control by reconfiguring the role of both political and religious leader in a way that their (Bulibasi and the pastor) power and influence over the community and its members becomes either obsolete or limited while at the same time the agency of the subject is invigorated, thus
presenting a form of self-governance over against the state apparatus of capture. Such form of nomadic self-governance (a la Deleuze), according to the author, allows the de-subjectification of the “governed” and re-subjectification of them as political subjects.
In what follows, I am presenting a few questions that might require further clarification and in some cases—a careful rethinking of the claims the author is making.
1.The first question concerns the difficulty of reconciling the notion of God (who is, the driving force of the Roma Pentecostals) with the Deleuzean notions of subversive politics such as war machine, nomadic movement, rhizome, and line of flight. Such notions Deleuze suggests are based in the ontology of immanence, a philosophical vision that rejects any claim or resort to a transcendent and pivotal notion of (the organization and articulation of) power. The author needs to articulate how the Roma Pentecostals displace such notion of God, and if they do not, he/she will have to give a serious consideration to the gap lying between the Deleuzean platform of radical immanence which leaves no room for the notion of God and the Roma Pentecostals’ understanding of God.
2. The second question is connected to the first one. In a way, the author does providing an answer to my previous question by suggesting the idea of the dialogical religious self, that is, the self-God. The author argues that the lack of distinction between divine authority and the self-God is the sign of non-hierarchical structure of power which transfers power back to the self. What exactly is this dialogical religious self (God-self)? The author should elaborate with more detail what he/she means by this. I’m not sure how this God-self is different from a conventional self who is inspired and guided by the external source of authority (God). Is this a God-self because God is immanent and mediated by the self to the point that it becomes indistinguishable from the self? If this is the case, how does the process happen? Is the idea of God as a sign of transcendent power completely displaced? Is there a line of distinction between the self’s own independent decision, the decision guided from the self-God, and the decision informed by the external power (God)?
3. The last question regards the cause that produces the idiosyncratic religious identity of Roma Pentecostals. While the manuscript provides an ample description of the process and possible implication of such phenomenon, it does not provide any explanation on what causes it and what aspects of Pentecostalism enables this process/phenomenon."
Reviewer 3
"This piece should definitely be published. It shows a good combination of theoretical sophistication and suggestive fieldwork to shed new light on a topic that, at least in global Pentecostal studies, has not received sustained scholarly attention: the socio-political implications of the growth of Pentecostalism among the Roma. The author makes very fruitful use of Deleuze’s and Guattari’s thought to examine the emerging notions of governmentality as a result of conversion to Pentecostalism among the Roma. The essay asks the right questions: “Can Pentecostal religious practice be seen as a new semiology of power for the Roma, alternatively construed to semiological apparatuses of capture? Can Roma conversion to Pentecostalism be seen as a form of self-governance and political re-subjectification?” (p. 6).
More importantly, it offers a very provocative and quite plausible answer, namely, that Pentecostalism represents a “reticulated mobile self-ministry” that challenges or, at the very minimum, cannot be reduced to the semiotics of capture deployed by the Romanian state and transnational polities and organizations like the EU and the NGOs that have sought to normalize and categorize the Roma. From a religious studies perspective, this answer has very important implications, offering a powerful critique of the automatic modernist assumption that religion is necessarily a vehicle for submission (vis-à-vis the emancipatory thrust of secular liberal notions selfhood, autonomy, and citizenship, the last on connect to the discourse of integration). In that sense, the piece stands in the tradition of works like Saba Mahmood’s on the alternative notions of agency that animate piety among Muslim women.
While
there is no question that the piece should be published, I think that it can be
strengthened theoretically and empirically. Theoretically, I believe that the
author should engage the larger literature on Pentecostalism, geopolitics, and
the hermeneutics of the self. Now, there is a vast literature on this, going
back to the origins of the movement itself, since it has traditionally grown
among marginalized sectors of society (Robert Mapes Anderson called
Pentecostalism “the vision of the disinherited”). Thus, it is not fair to
expect the author to master all of this lit. However, s/he should at least see
the work of Kevin O’Neill in Guatemala (on soul security and neo-liberalism),
Nina Glick-Schiller’s “Transnational Social Fields and Imperialism. Bringing a Theory
of Power to Transnational Studies” (on Evangelical churches among African
immigrants in the U.S. and Germany), Jean and John Comaroff’s essay on the “economies
of the occult” in Africa (see their Millennial
Capitalism and the Culture of Neoliberalism), and
Ruth Marshall’s Political Spiritualities (which
uses Foucault and Agamben, two theorists who would complement the insights of
Deleuze and Guattari).
Most
of these works highlight that Pentecostalism’s politics of the self are deeply
ambivalent, with
Glick Schiller, O’Neill, and the Comaroffs arguing that it carries forms of subjectification and governmentality that have
a strong elective affinity with neoliberal capitalism and new forms of state panopticism.
Manuel Vásquez’s recent essay in Journal
for Cultural and Religious Theory (Winter 2014)
seems to agree a bit more with the author of the piece under review, using Derrida’s
notion of radical hospitality to argue that religion may be offering alternative
forms of visibility and presencing for undocumented immigrants in the face of a
new transnational biopolitics (built on the dichotomy of illegality-legality).
In any case, while the author recognizes the “overcoding” of Pentecostalism
among the Roma, that is, its potential interpenetration with and translation to
state and capitalist technologies of governmental power, it would strengthen
his/her claims to confront the larger debates about Pentecostalism’s geopolitics
and hermeneutics of the self.
I
wonder if the claims the author makes about Pentecostalism as a subaltern war
machine do not have something to do with the kind of Pentecostalism present
among the Roma, that is, the specific trajectories, scales, morphologies, and
theologies involved. It is not the same to speak of small, decentralized, and
rhizomatic congregations led by indigenous leaders creatively appropriating
local notions of authority like the bulibasa than to deal with huge, strongly centralized,
hierarchically arborescent transnational networks like the Brazilian Universal Church
of the Kingdom of God or the Nigerian Redeemed Christian Church of God, both of
which advocate a gospel of health and wealth that does have strong resonances
with the neoliberal capitalism’s individualist overconsumption and
hyper-reality. In other words, the author’s argument that Pentecostalism is
functioning as “a creative line of flight,” a source of political rejuvenation
of Romani civil society, might be on target for his/her particular case study,
pace countervailing dynamics in other forms of Pentecostalism. This just shows
the diversity and glocal adaptability of the religion, that cannot be dismissed
as merely as a reactionary religious ideology vis-à-vis late modernity.
Beyond
the theoretical debates about Pentecostalism and politics, I think the piece
could also be more explicit about the alternative forms of self-government
emerging among Pentecostal Roma. The author provides a couple of long citations
of his/her informants, which are very helpful in bringing the argument down to
earth, illustrating it and supporting it. However, I would encourage him/her to
draw from more from the testimonies, speeches, sermons, and performances
s/he has collected to characterize more fully what the new nomad forms of self-governance
entail. This fuller characterization would strengthen the argument, showing the ruptures
and continuities between there forms and the interpellations of the state and
global capital."
