Los Angeles Times

Poland’s LGBTQ community feels fear after election

The winning party demonizes the rights movement as a dangerous ‘ideology.’

- associated press

WARSAW — Members of Poland’s LGBTQ community say they are angry and afraid after President Andrzej Duda won reelection in a divisive campaign that cast their movement for equal rights as a dangerous “ideology” that threatens families in the deeply Roman Catholic country.

Some activists say the homophobic rhetoric that emerged echoes policies in Russia under President Vladimir Putin, who signed a law in 2013 banning gay “propaganda” and where the constituti­on now bans same-sex marriage.

They worry that Polish authoritie­s are moving the country in that direction, and some already have left, fearing further discrimina­tion.

Others are vowing to stay and fight even harder for LGBTQ rights.

“There’s always a price for this kind of narrative, and it’s not the politician­s who are paying the price. It is us,” said Hubert Sobecki, head of Love Does Not Exclude, a Warsaw-based LGBTQ rights group.

He said some have been driven to suicide, including students who were bullied at school.

“It’s been going on for years,” he said in an interview Tuesday from an LGBTQ-friendly cafe in Warsaw where “we are with you” was written in chalk on the pavement outside, along with a heart filled in with colors of the rainbow.

“It’s a disaster. You can call it a humanitari­an disaster, but that wouldn’t even bring you close to the scope of human suffering those people are inflicting on us as a community,” Sobecki said. “They call us ‘ideology,’ but it’s not the ideology that is beaten up on the street.”

Duda won a second fiveyear-term Sunday, narrowly edging liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowsk­i by getting 51% of the vote.

As the race tightened in its final weeks, Duda seized on LGBTQ rights to shore up support among conservati­ves.

He signed a “Family Charter” that pledged to “ban the propagatio­n of LGBTQ ideology in public institutio­ns.”

He formally proposed a constituti­onal amendment to ban adoptions by samesex couples.

Duda’s campaign also tapped into anti-Semitism and xenophobia, but he reserved his harshest rhetoric for the LGBTQ rights movement, calling it more dangerous than communism.

And in a comment that was denounced as the most dehumanizi­ng of all, the president said: “LGBT is not people; it’s an ideology.”

That triggered demonstrat­ions in which protesters carried banners stating that they were people, not an ideology. The message also spread on social media.

“To me, it was so humiliatin­g. Like in 2020, I have to say I am human? It’s horrible,” said Mariusz Kurc, the editor of Poland’s only LGBTQ magazine, Replika.

“When the results of the elections came out, I felt fear,” Kurc said. “It was pure fear that the situation is not going to get any better, the situation is not going to stay as it is, the situation will get worse.”

He said he also felt anger “at the ignorance of people, at indifferen­ce — a big disappoint­ment that we didn’t use the chance that we got.”

Acceptance of LGBTQ rights had been growing since Poland joined the European Union in 2004, with more people coming out and more pride parades each year, even in small towns.

But the mood had changed dramatical­ly in recent years under the ruling Law and Justice party, which has cast LGBTQ rights as a foreign import that threatens Poland’s national identity.

The backlash intensifie­d last year following a declaratio­n that Trzaskowsk­i signed which promised help for LGBTQ youths in Warsaw who were rejected by their families.

It called for sex education in schools in line with World Health Organizati­on guidelines, rather than church teaching.

The backlash included many local government­s, particular­ly in the conservati­ve southeaste­rn areas of Poland, which declared themselves to be “free of LGBTQ ideology.”

It was a mostly symbolic gesture but it was one that left many in the LGBTQ community feeling unwanted and unsafe, particular­ly in small towns where they already felt more vulnerable.

One-third of all people in the nation of 38 million now live in the self-declared “LGBTQ-free zones.”

“I am disappoint­ed, sad, angry,” said Romana Dybalska, a 37-year-old who is raising three children with her longtime partner, after Duda’s victory.

“I believe that good times will still come to Poland,” Dybalska said. “But at this point I am considerin­g leaving this country.”

‘It’s a disaster. You can call it a humanitari­an disaster, but that wouldn’t even bring you close to the scope of human suffering those people are inflicting on us as a community.’ — Hubert Sobecki, head of a Warsaw-based LGBTQ rights group

 ?? Czarek Sokolowski Associated Press ?? LGBTQ RIGHTS were a major issue pushed by the ruling conservati­ve party in the campaign to elect Poland’s new president. Above, a pride parade in 2019.
Czarek Sokolowski Associated Press LGBTQ RIGHTS were a major issue pushed by the ruling conservati­ve party in the campaign to elect Poland’s new president. Above, a pride parade in 2019.

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