Sandra Jayat
Sandra Jayat was a French writer and artist of Romani descent. She left her nomadic family at age 15. She travelled on her own to Italy and Paris. She became associated with the surviving family of Django Reinhardt. In Paris, she was encouraged by the writers Marcel Aymé and Jean Cocteau, plus as an artist by Chagall and Picasso. She published many works of literature documenting the experience of Romanies in France and has advocated on behalf of Roma and Sinti at the international level, and is a recognized artist whose work has featured in well regarded exhibitions. She resided in Paris up to her death.
Early life
According to her own account as represented by Begoña Barrera, 2022, Jayat was born "somewhere between two countries" "between 1938 and 1939", although for reasons that are unclear, her official notice of death lists her date and place of birth as 13 May 1930 at Moulins, Allier, France; the same details are apparently also given in "Who's Who in France". The reason for this discrepancy is presently unknown. rather than an older one.Jayat's family were Manouche Roma who were transiting at the time from Italy to France to escape the wartime persecution of Roma that was occurring in Italy. Finding that Roma were equally persecuted in northern France in the same period, the family moved on to southern France where conditions were less severe, and by the time Sandra was 14 were to be found back in north Italy in the Lombardy region, specifically in an encampment on the banks of Lake Maggiore.
Again according to her own account via Barrera, on the eve of her fifteenth birthday it was announced that in accordance with the clan tradition she would be married to another Roma boy. The prospect terrified her and she decided to run away. Her grandfather had told her of the clan's "cousin", Django Reinhardt, a famous Romani guitarist, who lived in Paris, and she resolved to travel on her own to Paris in order to try to find him. The young girl traveled on her own overland to Paris over a period of many months, surviving, despite many hostilities, via the assistance of other Roma encampments along the way plus the kindness of strangers on occasion.
Upon her arrival in Paris in spring 1955 she discovered that Django had in fact died two years previously. However, she encountered a Jewish family of whom the mother had lost a child in a concentration camp during the second world war and who believed that Jayat was her child who had come back to her, and Jayat lived with this family until she could not stand the deception any longer. She claimed to have eventually made contact with Django's surviving family and to have been accepted as an honorary daughter by the family, maintaining her connection with the family for a number of years.
Career
Although she spoke two languages at the time she arrived in Paris, she soon taught herself French. Jayat was unable to read and write at that point, since the children of the clan had never attended school; however, over the next few years she taught herself to read and write in French and began to write poetry. She also began to produce drawings/paintings, which caused her to come to the attention of prominent Parisian writers and artists of the day, the latter including Picasso and Chagall, her early work somewhat resembling that of the latter artist in particular.Writing
In 1961 she published a book of her poems entitled Herbes manouches with a cover design provided by the poet and visual artist Jean Cocteau with a preface by the French author J.-B. Cayeux; a second collection entitled Lunes nomades appeared in 1963, and a third Moudravi: où va l'amitié in 1966, including a cover designed by Marc Chagall.She also showcased the work of others, co-presenting a 1963 volume entitled Poèmes pour ce temps which featured the work of other young Parisian writers. While, in the words of Barrera, her first two volumes of poetry contained a sequence of images about Romani life and customs, her third volume was "a much more profound humanistic reflection on personal relations".
In the 1970s she produced two stories for children, Kourako and Les deux lunes de Savyo. In the words of Barrera:
Commencing in 1978, she produced four partly autobiographical novels: La Longue Route d'une Zingarina , El romanes , Les Racines du temps and La Zingarina ou l'herbe sauvage . Of her 1978 book, Barrera López wrote in 2020:
El romanès recounted the adventures of Romanino "El Romanès", a Spanish Romani man, during World War II, while regarding her next novel:
Finally, in La Zingarina ou l'herbe sauvage, the writer again recounted the story of her own life commencing with her escape from her encampment as a result of her refusal to marry and extended this time to her first years in Paris, this time in a text aimed at adults rather than children. Regarding this work, Barrera López wrote:
Art
Simultaneous with her development as a writer, Jayat was also exploring the world of painting, being guided among others by Henri Mahé as well as by gallery owner Émile Adès who from the early 1970s onwards exhibited her work alongside that of Chagall, Salvador Dalí and others. Her early artistic style has been described as "an innocently abstract, unassuming style... inhabiting two, apparently contradictory states, dream and reality, which merge in the Surreal", while later works included some influences from cubism. An entry for her in "Benezit Dictionary of Artists" states:According to Benezit's Dictionary, Jayat's work has been shown in collective exhibitions in 1983 and ongoing, and in solo exhibitions in Paris, Trouville, Venice and Liège.
In 1985 Jayat co-organized the first international exhibition of Roma art in Paris, the "Première Mondiale D'art Tzigane".
In 1992 she painted a work entitled "Les gens du voyage" which was used as the design for a French postage stamp of denomination 2.5 NFR. In 2002, she created drawings for a set of 24 tarot cards which were published as Tarot Manouche: Universel du XXIè Siecle.
Music
In the mid-1960s, Jayat began frequenting a venue on Paris, the Pleint Vent Club, which on its ground floor offered a bookstore and an exhibition hall, while its 13th-century vaulted basement offered a performance space for jazz and flamenco music; among these performances, Jayat presented recitations of her poetry accompanied by her friends Babik Reinhardt and Cérani. She later met regularly with friends and acquaintances from the world of music, art and literature at the Adlon Club.Following up her initial public performances, in 1967, Jayat recorded several songs, released on French Vogue as 2 EPs entitled "Il Ne Faut Pas and "Le Malentendu Millenaire". She also released a single "Chante Django Reinhardt" in 1972 which comprised her singing/reciting 2 songs/poems over previous instrumental recordings by Django Reinhardt and quintet performing "Minor Swing" and "Tears", respectively; according to her sole known filmed interview, she was encouraged to release these creations by Django's widow, Naguine, with whom she had earlier formed a friendship.
Personal life and death
Jayat resided in Paris and died there on 19 February 2025, aged 94 according to her official notice of death, or alternatively, in her mid 80s if a c.1939 birth date is considered more plausible.Works by Sandra Jayat
Poems (anthologies)
- Herbes manouches, Paris, la Colombe, Éditions du Vieux Colombier, 1961
- Lunes nomades, Paris, P. Seghers, 1963
- Moudravi où va l'amitié, illustration by Marc Chagall, Paris, Seghers, 1966
- Je ne suis pas née pour suivre, Edition Philippe Auzou, 1983
Stories
- Les Deux lunes de Savyo drawings by Jean-Paul Barthe
- Kourako illustrations by Jean-Paul Barthe
- ''Le Roseau d'argent''
Novels
- La Longue Route d'une Zingarina, illustrations by Giovanni Giannini, Paris, Bordas, 1978
- El romanes, Paris, Magnard, 1986
- Les Racines du temps, Cergy-Pontoise, Éd. Points de suspension, 1998
- La Zingarina ou l'herbe sauvage, Paris, Max Milo, 2010
Other
- Tarot Manouche: Universel du XXIè Siecle. Sandra Jayat, 2002
Recordings
By Sandra Jayat
- Il Ne Faut Pas - RCA Victor, 1967
- Le Malentendu Millenaire - RCA Victor, 1968
- Chante Django Reinhardt - Vogue, 1972
By others
- Suzanne Gabriello, Suzanne Gabriello, Unidisc UD 30 1257, 1974. Songs of Sandra Jayat, music by Jean-Pierre-Lang, with the participation of Petits Chanteurs d'Île-de-France directed by Jean Amoureux.
- Yves Mourousi, Sandra Jayat, La Pastorale des Gitans, Unidisc UD 30 1307, 1976. Five songs of Sandra Jayat.
- Elisabeth Wiener, Manitas de Plata – Kourako Or La Guitare Aux Cordes D'Or, Arion OP 105, Canada, LP. 19?? Elisabeth Wiener reads Jayat's children's story "Kourako" with guitar accompaniment by Manitas de Plata.
Awards