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On Free Women and a Free Belarus. A look at the female force behind the protests in Belarus

  • The images are blurred and a bit chaotic, as they often are in on-the-spot videos of fast-moving events circulating on social media. But the gist of the story is clear. Three men clad in dark face masks and combat gear, their identities hidden behind their uniform exterior and emotionless body language, are rounding up a crowd of women. The women are fighting back, trying to break out of the cordon. Suddenly the three men in camouflage retreat. One holds his mask in his hand and looks distressed. They walk away quickly, the crowd whistles after them. What happened? The answer rests with a 73-year old great-grandmother who is a celebrity of the Belarusian protests. Fearlessly she demonstrates, scolds and sometimes kicks the security forces. And she always attempts to take off their masks—this time successfully. Belarusian security police do not like to show their face while shoving around women. And the Belarusian women know this. They have been coming out onto the street in ever increasing numbers to continue the fight against an entrenched dictatorship, inspired by their three female leaders, who are not career politicians, but ordinary women, some with husbands and children, all of them with aspirations. In the following, three scholars have a look at the question of how to explain the female presence on the Belarusian streets and what it means both in the short and in the long term. The articles were written on the day of mass arrests of women in Minsk. The future is uncertain. Mass violence is on the cards as much as the possibility of a Lukashenko retreat. Whatever it will be, however, it deserves the world’s attention.

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Metadaten
Author:Juliane FürstGND, Anika WalkeORCiDGND, Sasha Razor
URL:https://zeitgeschichte-online.de/kommentar/free-women-and-free-belarus
DOI:https://doi.org/10.14765/zzf.dok-2537
Parent Title (German):Dossier: Jetzt kennen uns alle*. Ein Dossier zur gegenwärtigen Situation in Belarus
Publisher:ZZF - Centre for Contemporary History: Zeitgeschichte online
Place of publication:Potsdam
Document Type:Online Publication
Language:English
Date of first Publication:2020/09/22
Release Date:2023/07/08
ZZF Topic-Classification:Militär
Geschlecht / Gender Studies
Friedens und Konfliktforschung
Menschenrechte
Opposition
Protest
ZZF Regional-Classification:Europa / Osteuropa / UdSSR/Russland
ZZF Chronological-Classification:21. Jahrhundert
Web-Publications:Zeitgeschichte online
(Theme) dossier(s):zeitgeschichte|online / Jetzt kennen uns alle*. Ein Dossier zur gegenwärtigen Situation in Belarus
Licence (German):License LogoZZF - Clio Lizenz