The Guardian (USA)

Trans community in Poland braces for political attacks as election nears

- Shaun Walker and Dominika Sitnicka in Warsaw

Poland’s transgende­r people are bracing for an onslaught of hate speech from politician­s before parliament­ary elections next year after the chair of the ruling party used several meetings with supporters to launch attacks on them.

Jarosław Kaczyński, the chair of Law and Justice (PiS), first touched on the topic in late June, on the same day as Poland’s largest Pride parade took place in Warsaw, when he met supporters in the town of Włocławek.

“We have elementary knowledge in biology, we know that gender is determined at the level of chromosome­s … In extreme cases, an operation must be performed, but this does not mean that after this operation a man will be a woman and a woman will be a man,” he said.

Demonstrat­ively looking at his watch, he told the crowd that leftwing people believed that “it’s now half past five, before I was a man but now I’m a woman”.

Since then, Kaczyński has returned to the topic on numerous occasions, snickering about situations in which someone with a male name wants to change it to a female name, and claiming to feel compassion for transgende­r people while describing them as “abnormal”.

He also launched personal attacks on Anna Grodzka, Poland’s first transgende­r MP, who sat in parliament from 2011-2015.

It is not the first time the Polish government has targeted the LGBT community. Two years ago the PiS-aligned president, Andrzej Duda, ran a successful re-election campaign based on a fight against so-called LGBT ideology, though the focus was rarely on trans people.

“For a long time, ‘gender’ and ‘LGBT’ was just used to mean ‘gay people’,” said Maja Heban, a trans activist and writer.

But polls suggest there is increasing tolerance for gay people in Polish society, possibly making transphobi­a the next political strategy. Heban said Kaczyński appeared to be “workshoppi­ng” the material to see if it resonates.

Emilia Wiśniewska, of Trans-Fuzja, a Polish trans advocacy organisati­on, said: “Many people already know someone who is gay or bisexual, and it’s difficult to make people hate their friends or neighbours. Trans people are still less understood and less accepted and that makes us a better target.”

Although it is difficult to measure hate crimes against trans people because Polish law does not classify them as such, Wiśniewska said there had been an increase in incidences of violence and hate speech over the past two years.

Krzysztof Śmiszek, an MP with the opposition New Left party and head of the parliament­ary group on LGBT + equality, agreed that “homophobia doesn’t resonate the way it used to” among large sections of Polish society. He said Kaczyński was happy to sow hatred if he believed it would bring political gain, noting the rhetoric used by PiS during the 2015 refugee crisis.

“Poland in 2022 is not so easy to be manipulate­d with homophobia … Kaczyński consciousl­y did not choose the entire LGBT group, but only transgende­r people,” he said.

Rightwinge­rs around the world are pushing back against trans rights. In Hungary, traditiona­lly the PiS government’s closest European ally, the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has led an attack on “gender ideology”, and his government outlawed legal gender recognitio­n on official documents in 2020.

One of Duda’s first acts when he became Poland’s president in 2015 was to veto a bill passed by parliament that would have made it easier for trans people to gain legal recognitio­n – which at present can only be achieved by using a loophole in which a trans person sues their parents for assigning them the wrong gender at birth, often a lengthy and difficult process.

Since the PiS came to power, trans activists say they have stopped all government­al advocacy, believing it to be at best pointless and at worst counterpro­ductive. Instead, they have been focusing on raising awareness and empathy in Polish society.

So far, other members of the ruling party have not joined in with Kaczyński’s anti-trans rhetoric, and it has not been widely picked up by progovernm­ent media, suggesting a decision may not yet have been made about whether to make it a main pillar of next year’s parliament­ary election campaign.

Heban said she believed that, ironically, the lack of progress on trans rights in Poland may be the thing that saves trans people from being the target of a full-fledged government campaign.

 ?? Photograph: Pawel Wodzynski/East News/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? Jarosław Kaczyński at a meeting with supporters in Grójec in July.
Photograph: Pawel Wodzynski/East News/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck Jarosław Kaczyński at a meeting with supporters in Grójec in July.
 ?? ?? Warsaw Pride in June. Polls suggest increasing tolerance for gay people in Poland, possibly making transphobi­a the next political strategy. Photograph: Attila Husejnow/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Warsaw Pride in June. Polls suggest increasing tolerance for gay people in Poland, possibly making transphobi­a the next political strategy. Photograph: Attila Husejnow/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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