Xoraxane (also spelled as Khorakhane, Khorakhanè, Horahane, Kharokane, Xoraxai, lit. ‘those of the Quran’) is a Romani language term of Turkish language origin used to refer to Muslim Romani people. Muslim Roma generally trace their faith back to ancestors who converted during the Ottoman period in the Balkans. While they remain primarily concentrated in the Balkans, they are also dispersed across other parts of Europe.
Muslim Roma are often cultural Muslims or nominal Muslims. While traditionally affiliated with Sunni Islam of the Hanafi school of thought, today, they are often non-denominational. One of the largest Religious order of Jerrahi outside Turkey is located at the largest Arlije and Gurbeti Muslim Romani settlement in Europe, in Šuto Orizari ( Shutka), North Macedonia. They have their own mosque and Romani Imam and use the Quran in the Romani language.
Muslim Roma generally preserve enduring influences of Ottoman Turkish culture, as shaped within former Europe provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The majority of Muslim Roma in the former Yugoslavia speak Balkan Romani and South Slavic languages, while many speak only the language from the host countries. The Albanized Muslim Roma groups from Albania, Kosovo, Montenegro and North Macedonia, speak only the Albanian language and are called Khorakhan Shiptari; they have fully adopted the Albanian culture.
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