âForetoldâ podcast Episode 1: âThe G-Wordâ
In the fall of 2019, reporter Faith Pinho received a tip from Paulina Stevens. Paulina said she had grown up in an insular Romani community in California, where she was raised to be a wife, mother and fortuneteller â until she decided to break away. This opens the door to a story spanning multiple continents, hundreds of years and complex realities.
Listen to the episode and read the transcript below.
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Faith E. Pinho: Where I live in Southern California, psychic shops are practically as plentiful as coffee shops. Theyâre a part of the landscape: the neon sign outlining the palm of a hand, promising to tell your fortune or prophesying a long life.
I know people who have regular appointments with their psychic. Itâs the kind of thing you can drop in casual conversation and no one bats an eye. And I can understand why.
People want security. They want to know what the future will hold. And whether through tarot cards or a crystal ball, the fortuneteller will hint at how your story will play out.
Let me say up front that I donât know how this tale will play out or how this will end. Because in this story, the fortuneteller came to me.
Paulina Stevens: I mean at the time, I felt like, yeah, like, Iâm, you know, snitching, because â whatever. Like I was ashamed for reaching out to you.
Now I donât really view it that way. I feel like Iâm telling my story. But I never thought in a million years it would turn into what it is now.
Faith E. Pinho: My name is Faith Pinho, and Iâm a reporter at the Los Angeles Times. But back in October 2019, I was working at a small community newspaper in Orange County called the Daily Pilot, and thatâs where I first got a call from Paulina Stevens.
âForetoldâ is a podcast about a Romani American fortuneteller. But when youâre explaining it to people who donât know what âRomaniâ means, where do you begin?
I donât have a recording of that first call. I wish Iâd known to record.
I tried to keep track in a messy Word doc, but she was going a mile a minute. A torrent of words and accusations. Arranged marriages. Being trained to manipulate people. Something about not being allowed to be American. But she emphasized over and over that that was all behind her now.
Paulina told me that from the time she was a child, she was told she would be a fortuneteller and that she came from a whole family of fortunetellers.
Iâm not going to lie: I had never been inside a fortunetelling shop. So I did some Googling. And if you look for news about fortunetellers, a whole bunch of them go something like this:
WISN 12 News: A local woman is out $20,000 after falling for an elaborate psychic readings scam.
Associated Press: âThe fortunetellers would tell them that they had curses, and that was why these bad things were happening to them.
WPLG Local 10: Self-proclaimed psychic Gina Marks busted at Miami International Airport. She was arrested just minutes before she was set to board to Europe.
Faith E. Pinho: I thought maybe this was the kind of story Paulina was trying to tip me off to. But something in the franticness of her voice made me feel like there was something different going on here. And then Paulina mentioned something that made my ears perk up. It was a warning about a psychic shop in Orange County â a psychic shop she said sheâd escaped.
I love Romani heritage and symbols of our unity, including our flag. But celebrating our history of resistance doesnât mean erasing our unique individual identities.
I didnât know what that meant. So I suggested we meet up in person at a local cafe.
Paulina Stevens: Iâm a little nervous. Iâm sorry for, like â
Faith E. Pinho: Thatâs OK.
Paulina Stevens: I donât know, Iâm like kind of nervous, but Iâm OK.
Faith E. Pinho: Take your time. Whatever makes you comfortable.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina looked younger than I expected â around my age. At the time, she was 24 and I was almost 23. Paulina had a round face and black bangs. And she was short like me, too, around 5 feet tall. We ordered tea and sat down together. I put my phone on the table between us and hit record. And then, because I didnât really know how to kick things off, I basically just asked her a terrible first-date question.
Faith E. Pinho: So, yeah. I think itâs probably easiest to just start all the way back. So like where did you grow up?
Paulina Stevens: That far?
Faith E. Pinho: Whoâs your family? Literally, it sounds like this is really entrenched, right?
Paulina Stevens: It is, yeah.
Faith E. Pinho: So.
Paulina Stevens: All right. So all the way back. I was born in L.A.
Faith E. Pinho: Listen, people call reporters all the time with salacious tips. But when Paulina started talking, I felt like I was drinking from a fire hose.
Paulina Stevens: My parents are also related, just so you know.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said it was common in her culture for cousins to marry. She said that she herself had been arranged to marry a distant cousin.
Paulina Stevens: At 12, itâs like youâre supposed to know who youâre getting married to. You know, thatâs like, youâre going through puberty. I was getting too old.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said that her parents shielded her from outsiders.
Paulina Stevens: They hate outsiders. So any kind of outsiders was a big like no-no.
Faith E. Pinho: And then she was pulled out of school entirely at 12 years old.
Paulina Stevens: I was actually lucky. Like, I got to go to school up to sixth grade.
Faith E. Pinho: The main thrust of Paulinaâs education, from what I was gathering, was how to become a fortuneteller.
Paulina Stevens: So basically the same times kids would read or write, they start learning like how to read tarot cards and...
Faith E. Pinho: And besides reading cards, she had to learn how to be a wife and mother.
Paulina Stevens: If girls turn 18 and theyâre not married, itâs like, people look down on it. Like, âOh, thereâs something wrong with her.â
Faith E. Pinho: Keep in mind, I was a rookie journalist. And I was having a hard time keeping up.
Faith E. Pinho: Yeah. What happens? What does it mean to be engaged at 13? Is there a proposal? Is it someone tells you youâre engaged? Or what is the actual process?
Faith E. Pinho: At the time, I was used to writing stories on city council meetings and town art shows. So Paulinaâs story â it was totally out of my wheelhouse. This seemed like a massive story with numerous claims to investigate. I couldnât quite tell how Iâd begin to write about them. It seemed too big. Because ultimately Paulina kept blaming her culture, her culture, her culture.
Paulina Stevens: And if you disobey us, then you disobey your culture. You disobey your father. You bring shame.
Faith E. Pinho: You only marry within the culture, you only socialize within the culture, and you certainly only trust people within the culture.
And Paulinaâs culture is Romani. I donât think I had ever heard the word âRomaniâ before. And thatâs because Romani people are often known by another name.
Paulina Stevens: You know, a Gypsy.
Faith E. Pinho: Youâre not going to hear me throwing around the G-word on this podcast because, for many in the community, itâs a slur â not for outsiders like me to use. But at the time I had no idea. Because even a pop star like Shakira casually throws around the G-word.
Itâs set against this catchy, poppy backdrop, like something youâd instinctively hum along to. If you werenât paying attention, youâd never notice the lyrics are actually overtly offensive.
Shakira song: âCause Iâm a Gypsy. Are you coming with me? I might steal your clothes and wear them if they fit me.
Faith E. Pinho: Once I started noticing it, I couldnât stop seeing the G-word everywhere. Almost like a conspiracy.
In pop culture, Paulinaâs people are usually seen as thieves. Like in the 1960s sitcom âThe Andy Griffith Show,â Sheriff Andy Taylor is a picture-perfect example of morality and justice, and when his son has a questionâ
Opie: Can Gypsies do any magic at all?
Andy: Yes, they can. They can take out a pair of worthless earrings, show them to your Aunt Bee and make 12 dollars and a half disappear like nothing.
Faith E. Pinho: The tone of Andyâs voice is so reasonable, even while casting an entire ethnic group as swindlers.
And the G-word is actually the root of the word âgypped.â Like, ripping someone off. And that pejorative is so mainstream, that even Michelle Obama said it.
Michelle Obama: But what I realized was that I got gypped on that front.
Faith E. Pinho: It is so wild to me that the general population knows an entire ethnic group by what is, for outsiders, a slur. I had seen it on clothing brands and restaurant menus, surfboards and teabags. Itâs become a shorthand for something nomadic, wild, deceitful, romantic. Something exotic. A style anyone could put on and wear like a costume.
And thereâs one stereotype that always comes up: that Romani people are fortunetellers.
Zoltar machine: I am Zoltar, the great Gypsy, and I can see your fortune.
Faith E. Pinho: I was walking along the Venice Beach boardwalk recently, when I found a Zoltar machine. Which is, basically, an animatronic fortuneteller in a box.
Faith E. Pinho: And heâs wearing a turban. Itâs kind of like all of the stereotypes you would expect to see, all wrapped into one. Heâs even got, I think, like a crystal ball thatâs glowing. And then thereâs just all kinds of tarot cards scattered around his table.
Faith E. Pinho: But the thing was, Paulina and her family were actually fortunetellers. Her mom ran a psychic shop and gave daily readings to locals and tourists. Paulina and her sisters helped too. And while Paulina told me about her family and their history, she also seemed to be fitting into those very stereotypes.
Paulina Stevens: Like the rule is no stealing, only scamming, because people give you stuff. So itâs not considered stealing.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina seemed to be telling me, âYes, everything you Googled was true. Fortunetelling is a scam.â
Paulina Stevens: And I am a scam artist. You know, born and bred. Thatâs what Iâm telling you.
Faith E. Pinho: I remember the exact moment she said that in the cafe. âA scam artist, born and bred.â Paulina kept plowing ahead, talking away, while I just looked at her, like, âWhat? You know youâre sitting here with a reporter. Are you turning yourself in?â
I didnât know what to think, and honestly, it didnât seem like Paulina did either.
Paulina Stevens: Gypsies have a bad rep. And they should. I think. I donât know. Not all of them, butâ
Faith E. Pinho: Even though the specifics of Paulinaâs story were foreign to me, I have to admit, I found myself relating to her. Because I grew up in a restrictive evangelical community on the East Coast. So things like having to wear certain clothes or filling certain gender norms, distrusting outsiders â those were things I could wrap my head around and why I could understand when Paulina told me she had chosen to leave.
Paulina Stevens: When I left, I had no education. I had two kids. No driverâs license, OK, no car. You know what Iâm saying? I had nothing. Nothing, nothing, nothing.
Faith E. Pinho: The franticness in Paulinaâs voice suddenly made sense. It was the sound of someone stepping out of one world and into another, questioning everything sheâs ever learned and feeling out who she might like to become apart from it all.
I know from experience that the initial transition from one world to another can make you resent everything you came from, and how hard it is to leave it all behind.
Paulina Stevens: I figured out my exit plan for one year. You know, back and forth. One year. âShould I go? Should I stay? Should I go? How am I going to do this?â I constantly, like didnât know what to do, didnât know how to execute it. And I want to be the person to be like, âIf you are thinking about leaving, you can. Like, itâs possible.â
Faith E. Pinho: And this was certainly part of why Paulina said she had come to me. But it wasnât just to tell her life story. The real reason Paulina reached out to me was: She needed help.
Iâm Faith Pinho. From the Los Angeles Times, this is âForetold.â
After that first meeting with Paulina in the cafe in 2019, I had a feeling weâd just scratched the surface of her story. She had given me the highlight reel of all the most salacious things that would intrigue a journalist.
And, like, OK, Iâll admit I took the bait. Clearly there was something to cover here, among all of Paulinaâs various claims about arranged marriages and scamming and child labor.
But as we finished our cups of tea, it finally emerged: the real reason Paulina had decided to get in touch with me.
Paulina has two little girls, and when she left her community, she was at risk of losing them. She was terrified her family would leave with the kids, which had happened once before.
Paulina Stevens: Like Iâm not losing my kids again.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said she didnât know where her girls were for a whole month.
Paulina Stevens: It was the most terrifying thing Iâve ever been through in my life. The most scariest.
Faith E. Pinho: And now she was terrified that her kids would get whisked away somewhere. Paulina told me she was so concerned, she was teaching her daughters how to say âIâve been kidnappedâ in Spanish, in case they were taken over the border to Mexico â which, I know now, never actually happened.
Paulina Stevens: I have to teach my 5-year-old, you know, that you come back on Sundays at 5, and if anything changes and Mom doesnât tell you, then you need to tell somebody that youâve been kidnapped.
Faith E. Pinho: To fight to keep her daughters, Paulina did the No. 1 thing people in her culture were taught not to do: She turned to the outside world. She took her case to the American legal system, and her custody hearing was coming soon.
Faith E. Pinho: What are the dates in January?
Paulina Stevens: Sixth and seventh. Yeah. Room 813, if you want to be there.
Faith E. Pinho: I do want to be there.
Paulina Stevens: Yeah. Can you testify for me? No, Iâm just kidding.
Faith E. Pinho: No, I canât.
Paulina Stevens: I know.
Faith E. Pinho: I was intrigued. So three months later, I followed her to court.
It was January 2020 at the Harbor Justice Center in Newport Beach. Paulina had been waiting for this hearing for over six months. It was meant to decide, once and for all, if Paulina would be legally entitled to her children. I wasnât allowed to bring a recorder into the courtroom, but as it turns out, I didnât really need to. Most of the action happened just outside the courtroom anyway. While the lawyers conferenced inside, everyone else waited in the hallway.
Paulina Stevens: Well, hopefully this gets done quick and we can do something.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina was dressed up in heels and a blazer, and I remember her being really jittery. I waited with her on one side of a giant staircase that split the hallway in half.
On the other side of the staircase were a few members of the community Paulina had left behind. The staircase was large enough to mostly block them, but from what I could see, it was a small group of men. Fathers, brothers, uncles. No women.
Paulina Stevens: Yeah, thereâs no women at all. Itâs just the women are not allowed in the courtroom.
Faith E. Pinho: Why are women not allowed in court? Itâs a whole group of them.
Paulina Stevens: Those men arenât â because men are like the king. You understand? If a woman ends up in the courtroom, itâs too â the woman who has too much power and itâs, like, embarrassing.
Faith E. Pinho: From what I could see while peering at them around the staircase, the men were standing in a tight huddle by the buildingâs north entrance with their backs turned toward us. One or two of them were dressed in tracksuits. There was just this nervous energy hanging in the air around them.
Gina Merino: Itâs a bunch of men against three women.
Faith E. Pinho: The three women were on my side of the staircase. Paulina, her quiet younger sister, Nicole, and a woman in her 40s with bright teal hair. Her name was Gina.
Gina Merino: Theyâre using everything. They have nothing against her, and we have everything against them. So they might â
Faith E. Pinho: Right away, I could see Gina is a character. And not just because of the teal hair. It was in the way she boldly walked over to the other side of the staircase to size up the huddle of men before coming back to Paulina and standing over her like some sort of mother hen. Gina was amping her up as they ran through Paulinaâs case.
Gina Merino: Just so you know.
Paulina Stevens: I filed the emergency court order. I got physical, temporary sole custody.
Gina Merino: Oh, so you filed emergency and they gave it to you.
Paulina Stevens: Yeah.
Gina Merino: Thatâs why they keep filing emergency. They keep thinking, âWell, she filed, so I can file too.â
Faith E. Pinho: Gina and Paulina talked like theyâd known each other for years, but it turned out this was only the second time theyâd ever met in person.
I learned that Gina had left the Romani community herself, back in the early â90s, before Paulina was even born. Gina had gotten pregnant with a non-Romani man and fled before her family found out. So for Gina, it was simple. There was no custody battle. No question of what it meant to leave the culture. Gina had severed ties entirely.
Gina Merino: What assholes.
Paulina: Yeah, and so then they turned over the kids andâ
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina had asked Gina for help. Thatâs why Gina was here. She had flown in from San Jose to show Paulina she had someone in her corner. That it was possible to leave.
Todd Coulston: Weâll just wait on the order, then.
Gina Merino: Weâre waiting on the order.
Faith E. Pinho: It turns out, this trial had been a bit of a dud. Or at least it was very anticlimactic. It was mostly for the lawyers to convene about when to reschedule and have the next hearing.
Todd Coulston: Right. You guys are free to go.
Faith E. Pinho: But I still didnât understand what was so complicated about the whole situation. Like how much different could this be from most normal custody cases?
Faith E. Pinho: OK. So today was going to be a trial, but then it was continued because why?
Todd Coulston: Right. Itâs continued primarily becauseâŚ
Faith E. Pinho: Thatâs Paulinaâs lawyer. When I asked him what was up, he basically said that the opposing lawyer was new to the case and she needed more time to prepare. Especially because she was representing people who didnât want to go to court in the first place.
Todd Coulston: When she first hired me, they came in and the elders were just very, very loud and very much in animated voices saying, âTake this out of court. Weâre a loving family. Weâll agree to anything. Just no court. No court.â
And so it got to the point where it was very tense and I had to basically say, âLook, I canât help you guys here.â
Faith E. Pinho: Yeah. Wow, that sounds â OK. Cool. Um, OK I think those are all the questions I have up to this point.
Faith E. Pinho: Those were not all the questions I had. But I felt like I was in a whirlwind in the middle of that courthouse hallway. Just sort of dazed and confused. Like what kind of story was this, and did I even know how to write it? I still didnât know where to start.
So I decided to turn next to the person who seemed most accessible, most fired-up and ready to talk about this world: Gina.
Gina Merino: Look, I lived in the culture all my life. You donât need any more âexpertâ than that. Paulina and I are the expert witnesses. We lived the culture. We both didnât go to school.
Faith E. Pinho: Away from the courthouse, in her noisy hotel lobby, Gina told me that at the crux of Paulinaâs custody case was education.
Gina Merino: The girls wonât go to school if they live with their father. Thatâs a guarantee.
Faith E. Pinho: I just want to make a small note here: Gina had never met their father. But anyway.
Gina said she herself had been taken out of school around 11 or 12. She said she worried the judge wouldnât understand just how common it is for Romani kids to leave school early. That for girls like her and Paulina, it wasnât so much a choice as an inevitability. Gina was ready to testify.
Gina Merino: In the Gypsy culture, girls donât go to school for very long. Because their primary existence is learning how to take care of a husband and get married at a very young age. Schooling, education, is not even on the last thing on the list; itâs not on the list.
Faith E. Pinho: As I talked to Gina, she seemed to be confirming so much. Like the lack of schooling. But also this expectation to get married young and keep outsiders at a distance.
Gina Merino: Weâre taught non-Gypsies are beneath us, and so you separate yourself. So when you get older, you believe theyâre beneath you, so itâs easier to scam and steal from them.
Faith E. Pinho: And then there it was. The scamming again. Granted, Gina was the second of two Romani people I had spoken to for this story so far. But here she was repeating almost exactly what Paulina had told me in the cafe.
But Gina wasnât exactly like Paulina. While Paulina was all over the place, I could tell Gina was more confident, like she had always thought this.
Gina Merino: So thatâs why Iâm unique and different. Iâm not one of those people who believed it and then all of a sudden was like, âOh my gosh, I was brainwashed all this time.â I was one of those people that was, âI donât understand any of this.â
Faith E. Pinho: Gina said that ever since she was a little girl, she believed that, yes, fortunetelling was 100% a sham. And now, on the record with a reporter, she was relishing the opportunity to prove it.
Gina Merino: The readings, first of all, most readings are all the same. I could probably recite it.
Faith E. Pinho: Letâs hear it. I want to hear what a typical reading is.
Gina Merino: Hold on. Hold on. OK, I will. So if Iâm looking at your palm, I would say, âFirst thing I see for you is youâre going to live a long life. You have many years ahead of you. You have a good, strong head on your shoulders. You usually know what youâre doing at all times. Youâre a very sensitive person. You feel deeply for the feelings of others.â
So then the next thing I would say is, âNot too long agoââ God, this is coming back. Wow. âNot too long ago, you had a misunderstanding with someone. This person is sorry and wants to be forgiven.â
And then I think I would probably say, âLooks like youâre going to be going on a trip pretty soon. And you have questions about the trip, but Iâm going to tell you you should go on the trip because itâs really good for you. Go.â
Faith E. Pinho: At this point, I tried to hide my laugh. But Gina noticed anyway.
Gina Merino: Are you remembering this from a reading that you had before?
Faith E. Pinho: No, this is just really funny. I am going on a trip soon.
Gina Merino: Whoâs not going on a trip soon?
Faith E. Pinho: Thatâs true.
Faith E. Pinho: I canât say this rocked my world. I didnât really believe anyone could literally tell your future. But what did I know? Plenty of other people believe in it. Or at least they pay for it. And even Gina, the ultimate skeptic, seemed to hint that fortunetelling is more than just a hustle. That there is this element of belief.
Faith E. Pinho: How much of people who are within it are actually believing in what theyâre doing?
Gina Merino: All of them.
Faith E. Pinho: All of them, said Gina, and this includes Paulina. And if you really, deeply believe fortunes can be told and your fate sealed, it makes it all the more difficult to break away.
Ever since that anticlimactic afternoon in court, I was consumed with what Paulina and Gina had told me.
I donât know if Paulina had really thought that Iâd come, cover the trial, write something up about it and then weâd never see each other again. Perhaps that Iâd totally forget sheâd implicated herself in widespread, long-running fortunetelling scams. But it seemed obvious that there was something more there than a story about a psychic shop.
I felt like a door had been cracked open, and now I wanted to see the whole world behind it. A rare peek, that Paulina had given me, into a culture thatâs been intentionally hidden from outsiders.
Paulina Stevens: People are telling me weâve survived so long by staying out of the media, like weâve survived in America this way, by keeping things hidden. And honestly, I feel like we can survive, you know, not being hidden.
And so I knew I had to do some digging. I needed to understand Romani culture, get some perspective here. But getting firsthand accounts from Romani people isnât that easy.
Ian Hancock: Romani culture is a closed culture.
Faith E. Pinho: You wonât find a lot of Romani tell-alls. Talking to the media is seen as pretty taboo.
Ian Hancock: You have to be exclusionist in order to preserve identity. You have to close ranks to prevent infiltration from outside. Which doesnât encourage people getting too close, knowing too much. And this also does not make you friends.
Faith E. Pinho: OK, yeah. But I would like to consider myself friends with Professor Ian Hancock.
Professor Hancock is generally seen in the U.S. as the preeminent source on Romani history. He recently retired after more than 30 years as a professor of linguistics at UT Austin. And at 80 years old, heâs still traveling the world, educating audiences on Romani heritage and culture.
Ian Hancock: I mean the Gypsy identity is rife with stereotypes. We all hate stereotypes. But stereotypes have an origin somewhere.
Faith E. Pinho: Like the fact that Paulina had grown up fortunetelling for as long as she could remember.
Paulina Stevens: When I was little, I didnât have much thought about it because it was just all around. Everybody was reading palms and reading cards. Every aunt. Every grandmother. Like even the guys. My grandfather read palms too.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina told me she learned the art of fortunetelling almost by osmosis.
Paulina Stevens: Itâs like, I wake up in the morning and weâre cooking coffee and playing some music and my aunt is like, âOK, letâs practice your reading. Here, lay the cards out and tell me, what do they mean?â
Faith E. Pinho: They would practice together for hours, tracing each otherâs palms and memorizing the meaning of different tarot cards.
Paulina Stevens: As a kid, I didnât really think that it was anything out of the ordinary. I didnât really think about it because itâs like telling people, âWhat do you think about cereal?â Like, âWell, we always had cereal.â You know, it was just natural.
Faith E. Pinho: When Paulina was a girl, committing these symbols to memory felt sort of like a family game or a hobby.
Paulina Stevens: When I was just starting out, it was for fun. Like, it was kind of like, you know, if you have ever had like a Magic 8 Ball.
Faith E. Pinho: But it was also something more. Because in so many ways, fortunetelling can be about health and healing.
Ian Hancock: We donât call it fortunetelling. We call it reading and advising.
Faith E. Pinho: According to our resident linguist, Professor Hancock, there are actually two words for âfortunetellingâ in the Romani language.
Ian Hancock: There is another verb, which is âdurikeripĂŠ,â which actually means âdivination, fortunetelling, predicting the future.â But thatâs not the word thatâs used by professional readers and advisors, which is ââdrabarimĂłs.â And âdrabarnĂ,â which Paulina is a drabarnĂ, strictly means âhealer.â So the actual translation of the Romani word is âhealing,â not âfortunetelling.â
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina was very much raised as a healer. Someone who could help people turn their lives around, who could provide comfort and counseling. And her primary teacher was her mother.
Paulina Stevens: I do remember clients would come up to me and be like, âHey, you know, your mom is really special.â
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said clients were dazzled by her momâs presence â but most importantly, her uncanny ability to make them feel better.
Paulina Stevens: A lot of the times, clients would be friends. Like, we had good relationships, like, with our clients.
Faith E. Pinho: And there was no better place to practice healing and wellness than California in the early 2000s.
Paulina Stevens: This whole New Age thing was happening. There were other spiritual stores in town, and so my mom and aunts or whatever, they would work with them.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said her mom went beyond tarot cards and palm readings. She also did meditations and energy work like Reiki. It was more wellness-based, maybe a touch more alternative. Paulina got into it too.
Paulina Stevens: I was also allowed to do, like, Reiki, you know, classes and palmistry classes.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said that when she was old enough â starting around 10 years old â she would sit beside her mom and absorb how her mother read the cards, her use of eye contact, her bold, declarative statements. Paulina was hooked.
Paulina Stevens: I was totally looking into it, and my parents loved it. Like, it wasnât something that they really forced upon me.
Faith E. Pinho: In the beginning, Paulina studied the art of fortunetelling whatever way she could.
Paulina Stevens: I originally took it very seriously, like as a kid. You know, as serious as a kid could take anything, I guess.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina said sheâd spend hours going through books on spells and astrology, like a giant dictionary of dream interpretation or âPsychology for Dummies.â
Paulina Stevens: And my mom had so many books. She really did. Like I believe she took it seriously too.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulinaâs mother learned fortunetelling from her mother. And her mother learned it from her mother and her mother and her mother, all the way back. Back to the very origins of the fortunetelling tradition. Back to the origins of the Romani diaspora.
Ian Hancock: Well, first of all, it comes from India. It was brought out of India, where it is a highly regarded, respected means of income. So it didnât have a stigma from the very beginning.
Faith E. Pinho: Fortunetelling is also a mobile business.
Ian Hancock: Reading cards just requires a deck of cards, right? Crystal balls? Stick it in your backpack. So it was a transportable means of income.
Faith E. Pinho: This is important. Because from the very beginning of their recorded history, Romani people were forced to move from place to place.
Ian Hancock: It wasnât a genetic wanderlust that weâre supposed to have. Thatâs bullshit.
Faith E. Pinho: Romani people were chased from the moment they first migrated from India around 1000 A.D. The exact reason for their leaving is unknown, but some historians think it was to escape militaries invading India around that time.
So Romani people left India and migrated across the Middle East and to Eastern Europe. When they reached Europe, Professor Hancock says, they stood out right away.
Ian Hancock: They were people of color. The church was clear in their belief that whiteness was purity and darkness was sin. So the church had a problem with the first people of color to show up in any numbers.
Faith E. Pinho: Many Europeans thought these newcomers had arrived from Egypt and were Egyptians. Hence the G-word, which came to be pejorative.
Ian Hancock: Romanis were not Christians. A lot said they were, to get by. They had no country. They dressed funny.
Faith E. Pinho: In the region that is now Romania, hundreds of thousands of Romani people were enslaved for over 500 years. As late as the 1800s, the penal code in the region declared that Romani people are âborn slaves.â Many were sold off and traded around Europe and other parts of the world.
And Romani enslavement wasnât abolished until the mid-1800s â around the same time of the Emancipation Proclamation in the U.S. But even in their freedom, Romani people were met with prejudice everywhere they went.
Ian Hancock: There were many, many laws against Romanis.
Faith E. Pinho: Including in the U.S. Laws in Oregon, Louisiana and even California have banned fortunetelling. Weâll talk more about that later. But there is a legacy of American laws that directly target Romani culture.
Ian Hancock: A lot of them, just like laws that were in this country, forbidding Romani people to stop, set up a place to live, to establish a business of some kind. People were being chased from pillar to post. If they werenât being killed, they were being driven out across the closest foreign border.
Faith E. Pinho: The most horrific example of Romani persecution in recent history is, of course, the Holocaust. In Professor Hancockâs book âWe Are the Romani People,â he says that in 1940, the Nazis tested out the poisonous gas they would use in their death camps â on 250 Romani children.
Ian Hancock: People simply do not know the details about the fate of Romanis in the Holocaust.
Faith E. Pinho: Itâs impossible to know how many Romani people were killed in the Holocaust because of incomplete census data and undercounting. But Iâve seen a couple estimates that say approximately 1.5 million Roma were killed in the Holocaust. I had no idea.
Ian Hancock: Nobody knows about the slavery â five and a half centuries of slavery â that ended at the same time as slavery in this country. Nobody. Thatâs not taught in school.
Faith E. Pinho: And this history directly connects to Paulina. Sheâs from a subgroup of Romani people who were enslaved in Romania.
Ian Hancock: And Paulinaâs ancestors were slaves. Six generations ago, maybe five generations ago, they were slaves.
Faith E. Pinho: Once they were freed, they moved to Serbia. Specifically, a place called Macva. Thatâs where the name of Paulinaâs subgroup comes from: the Machvaya.
Ian Hancock: They regard themselves as the classier Gypsies.
Faith E. Pinho: Classier because Romani subgroups formed around different regions or different traditional trades. Like, thereâs a subgroup of Romani people who traditionally were coppersmiths. Experts say those skills eventually translated to doing metalwork on cars.
Ian Hancock: Yeah. Thereâs a street in Portland, Ore., where there are loads of used car lots, and most of those people down there are Romanis.
Faith E. Pinho: But Machvaya people, along with a few other Romani subgroups, became, by tradition, fortunetellers.
And not only is fortunetelling a mobile business, but it was also something that could be done without formal education in reading and writing. Romani people â and especially Machvaya girls like Paulina â became experts in reading something else: body language and social cues. So they knew how to give people what they wanted.
Paulina Stevens: We were also putting a performance on, too.
Faith E. Pinho: Especially at big events like the annual Renaissance fair in nearby San Luis Obispo. Paulinaâs parents would run a booth, complete with a rickety wooden sign.
Paulina Stevens: It was so fun because family would come from either L.A. or sometimes New Mexico or Utah, like wherever they were living at the time. And we would dress up like old, you know, Gypsies.
Faith E. Pinho: They would dress in traditional headscarves and coin belts, their arms stacked with gold bangles.
Paulina Stevens: The Renaissance fair is interesting because itâs one of the only fairs where I felt like it was OK to dress like a Gypsy. But we still wouldnât tell anyone we were Gypsies.
Faith E. Pinho: From the actual Renaissance period to modern-day Ren fairs, Romani people have survived by keeping this air of mysticism around their trade. Itâs a double-edged sword: a stereotype that has exoticized them and protected them.
Paulina Stevens: You know, itâs not just this little entertaining, fake, âweâre going to put a spell on you,â hocus-pocus type of thing. Like this is really what we do for a living.
Faith E. Pinho: And Paulina says she actually did start doing this for a living â at around 12 years old. This was the point when fortunetelling went from just a fun pastime to a job.
Paulina Stevens: My mom was just like, âI think youâre ready.â I think I was practicing doing readings with her and sheâs like, âI think youâre ready. You can go ahead and do it.â
Faith E. Pinho: So Paulina had this in mind one day when she was riding her bike around town and a beautiful young woman caught her eye.
Paulina Stevens: So I gave her a handbill. Thatâs what we call them, but theyâre fliers, like tiny fliers. And I was like, âWhy donât you come back?â
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina told the woman to meet her back at the familyâs psychic shop.
Paulina Stevens: And then she came back and my mom was like, âWell, you can do the reading since you brought her to the store.â
Faith E. Pinho: Were you nervous then?
Paulina Stevens: Yeah, I was extremely nervous.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina sat down with the woman and pulled out a stack of tarot cards.
Paulina Stevens: And I was so nervous that I laid the cards out face down and my mom looked at me and sheâs like ⌠and Iâm like, âWhat?â And sheâs like, âYouâve got to flip the cards over.â And the customer was right there. And then, like, I read all the cards and the person ended up liking it.
Faith E. Pinho: Even with the fumble, it was clear Paulina possessed the same gift her mom had. The same natural, intuitive clairvoyance that put people at ease. In fact, the reading ended up going so well that Paulina said the woman became a repeat customer of hers.
Paulina was 12 at this point, and this woman was her first steady customer. But also, she was Paulinaâs first peek into the inner workings of an outsider â someone from beyond her world.
Paulina Stevens: We were told that outsiders will never understand us. And to a certain extent, Faith, like, I do believe that.
And maybe this is just ingrained in me, but thatâs what was told to us: Outsiders have bad intentions. They have diseases. They will never accept you. They will never be on your side.
And very early on, that mindset, you know, whittled away. I loved learning new things. And so I was very curious about their thoughts and curious about their life.
Faith E. Pinho: If you want to know about someoneâs innermost life, fortunetelling is an effective way to do it.
Paulina Stevens: Itâs kind of like a low-key version of â I guess not therapy, but you know â therapeutic sessions, I guess.
Faith E. Pinho: But Paulinaâs sessions were way cheaper than any therapist I know.
Paulina Stevens: You know, 50 bucks, 30 bucks.
Faith E. Pinho: And that money was crucial. Because, Paulina said, it helped her family stay afloat.
Paulina Stevens: A lot of the times, especially when there wasnât, like, any money and, like, if someone came for a reading and if I made, like, $50 or if I made a couple hundred dollars, like, just from grinding, that would be our food. Like that would be our light bill. That would be, um, our survival.
Faith E. Pinho: And so Paulina did whatever she could to keep clients coming back.
Paulina Stevens: I was taught that people can pick up on your desperation. We were taught that if we were desperate, even if we were, people would pick up on that and they would see something and that it would scare them away. Thatâs how, like, deep the psychological training was done, that I had to control myself even as a, you know, 15-year-old.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina became a master of her own words, what to say and how to conduct herself.
Paulina Stevens: There were social cues that we had to follow. They were like, âKeep your eye on the client. Like, you need to be convincing.â
Faith E. Pinho: And not just convincing. Paulina wanted to be good, wanted to be helpful, to use her gift of intuition to genuinely help people.
Paulina Stevens: You know, you want to surprise them. Like you want to do the best that you can. Like you do want to connect with them in that first initial reading. And then thereâs many different goals. Like you want their friends to come to you. You want them to talk good about you. You do want them to trust you.
Faith E. Pinho: And for clients to believe and trust her, she needed to believe and trust in her own skill.
Paulina Stevens: We needed to believe what we were saying. That was really important. Because if we were not confident in what we were saying, then the person could see.
Faith E. Pinho: But as she got older, her confidence started to waver. She was engaging in this ancient practice thatâs been used for centuries as a way to help people, to heal them. And, of course, to make a living. And thatâs where it can get complicated: when itâs commercialized and abused.
Ian Hancock: Itâs the kind of occupation that lays itself wide open to abuse.
Faith E. Pinho: But, Professor Hancock argues, fortunetelling is just like any other industry in that way.
Ian Hancock: You could say the same about lawyers. There are excellent lawyers and there are shyster lawyers, right? And itâs the same with the readers.
If you are good, you will stay in business for years and years and years, and you will get comeback âkhastomĂĄyaâ â clients. If you are bad, if you are a ripoff artist, you wonât last long. You end up getting arrested. You will be chased out of the community.
Faith E. Pinho: I spoke to lots of other Romani Americans, including other fortunetellers, who agree with Professor Hancock: That, yes, there might be some bad actors, but they spoil the reputation and livelihood of all the other good and decent fortunetellers trying to make a living and help people.
And as Paulina started to question the ways she was raised â why she was taken out of school or why she had to dress a certain way â she started to fundamentally question the trade she had spent her whole life practicing.
Paulina Stevens: There were times where I would really question, of course, like as I got older, like is this real? Is it not?
Faith E. Pinho: Those questions just got louder and louder.
Paulina Stevens: Are we being deceptive? You know, are we not?
Faith E. Pinho: Until eventually, she sat down at a cafe and told a reporter that sheâs a scam artist, born and bred.
Paulina Stevens: I think around the time that I met you, I just kind of woke up and I was like, âWhoa. I was being manipulated my whole entire life.â
Faith E. Pinho: But Paulina told me she still finds herself coming back to fortunetelling. Like a subliminal, supernatural pull to the cards â even if sheâs not sure what she believes. Even if it changes day to day, year to year.
Paulina Stevens: Occasionally, once every, like, couple of years, Iâll just pull out one card just to, like, see what it says. Three out of four times that Iâve done this, itâs been like the Death card.
Faith E. Pinho: Donât worry. No oneâs getting murdered in this story.
Paulina Stevens: The Death card represents like an ending or the death of you and, ultimately, this blooming or manifestation of some new version of yourself, like being reborn. And so itâs this like Grim Reaper, and then thereâs like this beautiful rose. And it represents like a new beginning.
Faith E. Pinho: Paulina was going through a new beginning when we first met in 2019. Leaving the Romani world for the non-Romani world.
Paulina Stevens: I donât want to reinforce negative stereotypes about Gypsies, but there are bad things that do happen in this culture, and people need to know about it.
Faith E. Pinho: By leaving her community, going to the courts, and talking to the press, Paulina was opening up her life to a world of scrutiny and doubt.
Richard Sullivan: I think she used the Romani culture as, as a sword, so to speak. âWoe is me. Iâm the victim. I need to get away. The bad guys are after me.â I didnât buy that at all.
Barry Fisher: Lots of things are said in the heat of a fight to protect and to not lose your children.
Gina Merino: Itâs hard for me to support you if I donât know what the fuck youâre doing.
Nick Wildwood: Paulina was a diamond. Now sheâs just a stone.
Faith E. Pinho: Do you ever have doubts about sharing your story?
Paulina Stevens: I do. Like I totally do. And I really donât know. I donât know how itâs going to be. I donât know if once this is released, itâll be a mistake. And Iâm scared.
But in my mind, Iâm speaking to a really small group of people. Like Iâm speaking to my younger cousins; Iâm speaking to the girls that I knew and my friends. And the reason why it makes me emotional is because I feel like the people that I want to speak to the most will probably never hear me.
Faith E. Pinho: But Paulina and I kept talking. For years. And although we started talking about the most shocking and bombastic parts of her story, as Paulina and I got to know each other, we peeled back layer after layer together, both of us trying to get to the actual truth beneath the surface. To the place beyond the resentment and the stereotypes.
Because itâs true of any community, of any identity, that there are stereotypes and there are truths. And while sometimes they can overlap in superficial ways, the whole and deep story is so much richer and more complicated than we could have ever predicted.
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About 'Foretold'
Thanks to Shani Hilton, Kevin Merida, Abbie Fentress Swanson, Julia Turner, Brandon Sides, Dylan Harris, Carrie Shemanski and Kayla Bell. News clips in this episode are courtesy of WISN and Miami news station WPLG-TV10.