Times Colonist

Activist battles Poland’s anti-gay culture and laws

- VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — Bart Staszewski felt angry and hopeless when local government­s in Poland started passing resolution­s last year declaring themselves to be free of “LGBT ideology.”

The activist and filmmaker objected to the way conservati­ve officials were using the word “ideology” to describe what he considers a natural desire for people who love each other to be together. At least 100 municipali­ties or regions, mostly in conservati­ve southeaste­rn Poland, have passed declaratio­ns that vowed to keep out “LGBT ideology” or adopted “family charters” that backed heterosexu­al unions.

“I am just a normal Pole who just wants a good life with my partner and to be able to marry him one day,” the 30-year-old said. “Where is the ideology?”

In response, he settled on a protest around the communitie­s that are now widely referred to as “LGBT-free zones,” a move that has enraged Poland’s conservati­ve, nationalis­t government as his posts have gone viral.

With Poland under mounting internatio­nal criticism for its treatment of its lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r community, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki accused Staszewski of carrying out a “hoax” that has led some to believe that Poland has a human rights problem.

Staszewski travels to the the areas involved, where he briefly attaches a yellow sign saying “LGBT-FREE ZONE” next to the town sign. He posts the photos on social media, sometimes including a lesbian or gay man from the town.

The signs, in four languages, have the look of military warnings. Staszewski calls it “performanc­e art” aimed at “making it possible to visualize the literalnes­s and meaning of the harmful documents.”

Almost 32% of Poland’s 38-million people live in such areas, according to “Atlas of Hate,” an LGBT group tracking the issue.

Morawiecki singled out the activist for rebuke after 50 ambassador­s to Poland and foreign representa­tives published an open letter of solidarity with LGBT people in Poland.

“He completely falsified reality,” Morawiecki said. “To call it fake news would not do it justice. It was a deep fake.”

The term “LGBT-free” is sensitive because it carries an associatio­n of language used by Nazi Germany to describe areas free of Jews — Judenrein or Judenfrei — after they had been forced out or killed during the Holocaust.

The term, however, was already being used before Staszewski began posting. A pro-government newspaper, Gazeta Polska, printed stickers last summer saying “LGBTFree Zone” with a rainbow flag crossed out. The European Parliament used it in a December resolution denouncing the Polish municipali­ties.

Representa­tives of Poland’s conservati­ve ruling party, Law and Justice, which have sponsored the resolution­s, argue they are trying to protect families and their Christian traditions, and say they are not discrimina­tory because they do not ban anyone from living in the areas.

“To the dear ambassador­s, I can only say that tolerance belongs to Polish DNA,” Morawiecki said.

But Staszewski and other activists say the resolution­s stigmatize a minority that is already suffering from bullying, depression and homophobic violence, including attacks on pride parades. He recites the names of Polish teenagers who have died by suicide after facing homophobia.

He fears Poland could follow Russia, where regional resolution­s banning “gay propaganda” preceded a 2013 national law that Human Rights Watch calls “a tool for discrimina­tion and harassment.”

Poland’s culture clash has been simmering for years but intensifie­d as LGBT activists became more visible, holding more Equality Parades and demanding same-sex unions and marriage.

A tolerance declaratio­n signed by Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowsk­i in 2019 — itself mostly symbolic — was a key trigger for the backlash. Another was his gay deputy, Pawel Rabiej, saying that samesex civil unions should be introduced to pave the way for marriage rights and adoption.

President Andrzej Duda made the protection of traditiona­l families a key campaign theme during his successful re-election this summer against Trzaskowsk­i, vowing a constituti­onal ban on same-sex adoptions. He called the LGBT rights movement a “neo-Bolshevism” group pushing an “aggressive sexualizat­ion” in schools.

 ??  ?? The names of young LGBT people who have died from suicide are shown spray-painted on the Education Ministry building, an act of protest by LGBT activists, in Warsaw, Poland. LGBT rights are the focus of a culture clash in Poland where a growing LGBT rights movement has been met with a backlash from the conservati­ve government, church and many communitie­s.
The names of young LGBT people who have died from suicide are shown spray-painted on the Education Ministry building, an act of protest by LGBT activists, in Warsaw, Poland. LGBT rights are the focus of a culture clash in Poland where a growing LGBT rights movement has been met with a backlash from the conservati­ve government, church and many communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada