Jew, Gay - Misrepresentation of the unknown

Project facts

Project promoter:
Camera of David Foundation WJFF.pl(PL)
Project Number:
PL-ACTIVECITIZENS-NATIONAL-0115
Status:
Completed
Initial project cost:
€22,500
Final project cost:
€23,966
Programme:

Description

According to a 2019 study, only 39 % of Poles are immune to hate campaigns. Meanwhile, in official broadcasts of public television, anti-Semitic and homophobic content can be easily identified. The foreign and the unknown is discredited and causes resentment and hatred. According to the Campaign Against Homophobia research, 30% of LGBT + people in Poland face violence because of their identity, and the number of hate crimes for other reasons is also growing.The project addresses the problem of spreading anti-Semitic and homophobic attitudes through a series of workshops and film screenings "Jew, Gay - deformations of the unknown".As part of the project, anti-discrimination workshops will be conducted on the basis of selected films. The aim of the workshop will be to familiarize participants with unknown, and therefore often demonized, groups (Jews and LGBT + people). Workshop participants will have the opportunity to learn about the life of movie protagonists (Jews ang LGBT+ people): a rock star, cyclist and activist of urban movements. At least 100 people will take part in the workshops all over Poland.The workshops will be conducted by activists from all over Poland. In the first stage of the project, they will learn the methods of working with the film as source material and the basis for starting a discussion on equality issues. A scenario of meetings around selected films will be developed, aimed at eliminating anti-Semitic and homophobic attitudes. Both the films and screenplays will be available on a dedicated subpage of the Jewish Film Festival.Due to the project, at least 100 people will have the opportunity to learn about new ways of conducting anti-discrimination education based on film materials.

Summary of project results

In Poland, a political and media campaign of hatred has been going on for several years, with more social groups falling victim to it, including Jews or LGBTQ people. These people are presented as a threat, the so-called ''ideology'' that stands in opposition to so-called ''traditional values''. The  campaign has also moved to the level of local authorities, which have massively established ''LGBT-free zones''. The homophobic and antisemitic message, which is also strongly present in the public media, reaches a large part of society. Meanwhile, in Poland, up to 30% of LGBTQ people have recently experienced violence because of their identity (Campaign Against Homophobia), and hate crimes are also on the rise. The LGBTQ community in Poland has also been traumatised by the events of August 2020 in Warsaw Krakowskie Przedmieście str. , when an activist from Stop Bzdurom collective and 48 demonstrators were brutally detained.

As part of the project, a series of anti-discrimination workshops and film screenings ''Jew, Gay - deformations of the unknown'' were conducted. Scripts were also created for classes based on selected films. Films that served as educational material included such productions as ''Gold'' by Tomasz Knittel and ''7 August'' by Michael Bolland. Workshop participants learned about the lives of the films'' heroes and heroines - a rock star, a cyclist and an urban movement activist, LGBTQ activists - and their individual stories became the starting point for a conversation about the situation of minorities. A total of 101 people took part in the online workshops.

Those who took part in the workshops deepened their knowledge of the mechanisms of discrimination, especially homophobia and antisemitism,developed their skills in critical thinking, argumentation and active advocacy of people experiencing prejudice based on their identity. The project was also an important initiative showing how film art can go hand in hand with educational activities and carry an anti-discrimination message.

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