About this item
Highlights
- For centuries, Romany Gypsies and Travellers have been pushed to the edges of society-misunderstood, persecuted, and ignored.
- Author(s): C J Smith
- 192 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Personal Memoirs
Description
About the Book
A raw, inspiring memoir from a Romany Gypsy who defies every stereotype. Guided by a spiritual force, he battles prejudice, celebrates identity, and finds purpose in care, music, and activism. A bold story of struggle, spirit, and strength.
Book Synopsis
For centuries, Romany Gypsies and Travellers have been pushed to the edges of society-misunderstood, persecuted, and ignored. But their story is one of resilience, survival, and an unbreakable connection to land, family, and spirit.
C J Smith was born into a proud Romany family with deep roots stretching back generations. Raised in a caravan, he grew up immersed in the rich traditions, spirituality, and wisdom of his people-guided by the rhythms of nature and an unshakable belief in the unseen forces that shape their world. But beyond the warmth of his close-knit family lay a society determined to erase their way of life.
After more than 30 years as an activist, social care manager, and leading advocate for Gypsy and Traveller rights, the author brings his powerful story to the page. The Tan is a raw and deeply moving memoir of identity, struggle, and defiance-a journey from childhood innocence to the harsh realities of prejudice, discrimination, and legal injustice. Through his fight to change policies, train police and social workers, and challenge deep-seated stereotypes, he has spent his life demanding justice-not just for his own people, but for all those who have been silenced.
But this book is more than a fight-it is also a celebration: a celebration of a culture that refuses to be erased, a celebration of a spiritual legacy passed down through generations, and a celebration of family, faith, and the unyielding strength of a people who have survived against all odds.
The Tan is more than just a memoir. Expertly blended with sharp social commentary, it's a call for change. If you believe in equality, human rights, and the power of truth, this is a book you need to read.
Review Quotes
'The personal account of the author's family life and experiences I found fascinating, and this kept me hungry to turn the pages...
It is also impacting that the author's experiences of anxiety and fear, regarding his ethnic identity being known (during his childhood), is just one more account of what can be echoed again and again.'
Gentylia Lee
Author of 'The Mystery in being a Gypsy'
'Chris Smith presents the reader with a meticulously detailed account of his rural Herefordshire Gypsy family and community in a most balanced fashion. The tensions of a traditional community adapting to a rapidly modernising world are described in nostalgic, but realistic ways, telling it like it was and not over-romanticising the Gypsy life.'
Dr Peter Unwin
The University of Worcester