Olena Shevchenko (far left) in Kiev (Photo by Willi Reichhold)
Special input from Ukraine and Hungary 1st Nordic Fire in Stockholm Salutes Eastern Europeans Stockholm -- The first
Nordic Fire on Eastern European Rainbow Barricades festival took place in the Swedish capital November 25-27, 2011 with invited guests from Ukraine and Hungary as well as presentations on LGBT situations in Belgrade, Minsk, Riga, Helsinki and Bucharest.
"We are fighting against the same law proposal against positive information about homosexuality now spreading to more Russian provinces," says
Olena Shevchenko of the women's organization,
Insight -
Kiev, new ILGCN (international rainbow cultural network) cultural ambassador from Ukraine.
Folk and classic music, song, and dance was provided at several of the festival venues by
Tamás Lovas,
Károly Varga and
Sándor Fehér of the
Continuo Trio of Budapest, the ILGCN cltural ambassadors of Hungary.
"We are working with LGBT groups in St. Petersburg and in the Balkans, and hope more Helsinki Human Rights Committees in other countries will join us in work with LGBT human rights," says
Peter Öholm of
Civil Rights Defenders (formally the Swedish Helsinki Human Rights Committee).
Tupilak and ILGCN awards for Swede, Poles At the Nordic Fire session at the CRD offices in the Stockholm Gamla Stan island, Swedish Liberal Party parliamentarian
Barbro Westerholm received the annual Tupilak
"Bifrost" awards honoring heterosexual bridge-builders uniting the LGBT and the heterosexual communities both in Sweden and abroad.
The
Polish Institute - Stockholm received the annual ILGCN
"rainbow iceberg" award for promoting Polish and Swedish LGBT cultural exchange and for bringing Polish LGBT women and men to different Swedish Pride events and for promoting Polish and international art exhibitions and publications.
"Thanks for this fine award. This appreciation for our work with this fanatic and moving motivation really means a lot to us," says
Michal Piotrowski, project leader at the Polish Institute.
Also at the CRD,
Bill Schiller described the long history of Tupilak & ILGCN involvement with Eastern European colleagues and the emphasis on mutual exchange. "We were very impressed with the mutual interaction of LGBT groups in the Ukraine and Belarus with our Swedish groups," says Schiller over the recent 3-nation meetings in Kiev and Minsk made possible with support from the
Swedish Institute -- the official body promoting international co-operation.
RFSL chairperson
Ulrika Westerlund also described the national Swedish LGBT organization's extensive international work with the Baltic states, Uganda and elsewhere, "The situation in Latvia is hardly easy and even those few open LGBT activists don't get much support from often very critical LGBT colleagues," says
Kjell Rindar, former RFSL chairman and teacher at Latvian universities.
"We are very happy to have had the financial support of
ROHS (Swedish national LGBT solidarity organization) to make this min-festival "between" Stockholm Prides possible," says Bill Schiller, international secretary of Tupilak (Nordic rainbows cultural workers) and secretary general of the ILGCN's Information Secretariat in Stockholm.
Alexander L. described the turbulent situation and extensive homophobia Serbian. (Belgrade is to be the site of one of the stages of next year's ILGCN world conference, along with Rio de Janeiro and the Crimean town of Seimiz.) while Finnish photographer
Jussi Jässkeläinen described his work with Bucharest and Helsinki Prides.
Films, Music, Photography, Discussions at Posithivagruppen
"We are pleased to have another Tupilak event at our premises," states
Ola Ståhle of the
Posithivagruppen (HIV positive men having sex with men) office, and we are happy to have colleagues from the Baltic states at our summer camps and hope to join in future Tupilak and ILGCN exchanges in Eastern Europe."
Films by Swedish Tupilak member
Willi Reichhold described the recent Swedish-Ukrainian-Belarus solidarity visit to Kiev, the summer inauguration ceremony in Visby of the first Nordic LGBT monument on the shoreline of the Swedish Baltic island of Gotland and the "global survival" journey of plants and human beings in harsh conditions around the world.
Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish and Icelandic and Eastern European works from the
Tupilak & ILGCN Travelling Art & Photography Exhibition were displayed at all the festival venues, including new photo series from Belarus and the Ukraine, and LGBT CD music from Poland and the Nordic nations were played at festival venues as well.
Other foreign visitors taking part in discussions at the CRD office, the
Bio Rio, Posithivagruppen and the LGBT cultural center
Hallongrottan came from Norway, Finland, Kenya and Somalia.
Next stop: Estonia, Russia, Belarus "We hope the next Nordic Fire festival in Stockholm at the end of next March will focus on Swedish and Nordic LGBT co-operation with Estonia, Russia and Belarus," concludes Bill Schiller. "Once again we'll ask our Tupilak colleagues and the national LGBT organizations in the Nordic region to join us. We hope the Nordic Fire festival can be duplicated elsewhere in the Nordic region -- and we'll discuss this at coming
Nordic-Baltic-Polish-Russian-Belarus Rainbow Network meetings coming up in Stockholm and other Nordic capitals during 2012."
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