COMMUNICATORS’ MEETING FOR ABONG AND CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
14 de November de 2017By Felipe Sakamoto, from the Observatory
In September, a Communicators Meeting for Civil Society for the Defence of Rights was held in São Paulo. Over five days, activities were run to regulate, organize and disseminate content production about human rights, and participant exchanges regarding experiences and social mobilization alternatives also took place.
Twenty communicators from social organizations and movements were selected from a number of regions. Fifteen representatives associated with ABONG and five strategic partners undertook to run face-to-face communication workshops in their respective regions.
Furthermore, participants in the face-to-face meeting supported mobilizations for the distance learning (DL) course “Communication and Political Advocacy” linked to the São Paulo event. The DL Course will take place between 26/09 and 28/11. Content available online focuses on the potential of social networks, creating partnerships, using new tools, as well as topics such as mobilization and social engagement, media advocacy and relationships with the press and media.
The aim of the online course is to support the training of professionals who work in Civil Society Organizations in order to improve their communication practices so that “communications become a key part of social resistance, particularly in a context in which communications from social movements have not reached the mass of the Brazilian population, which continues to be disoriented by the corporate media” as described in the course introduction.
These activities are part of the “Civil Society Constructing Democratic Resistance” project funded by the European Union. In a context of political crisis, with an agenda to dismantle human rights policies, such as the labour reform, and threats to indigenous lands, social movements and civil society organizations are growing and pressurizing the State to guarantee a decent life for its citizens. The initiative seeks to support such organizations as a response to this context. One of its objectives is policy training, through courses and the creation of a communicators’ network capable of representing the field in Brazil.
SEE WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT US
In the name of historical and structural racism, many people look at us, black women, and think that we aren’t competent, intelligent, committed or have no identity. Our experience with CESE is different. We are a diverse group of black women. We are in varied places and have varied stories! It’s important to know this and to believe in us. Thank you CESE, for believing in us. For seeing our plurality and investing in us.
Over these 50 years, we have received the gift of CESE’s presence in our communities. We are witness to how much companionship and solidarity it has invested in our territories. And this has been essential for us to carry on the struggle and defence of our people.
CESE was set up during the most violent year of the Military Dictatorship, when torture had been institutionalized, when arbitrary imprisonment, killings and the disappearance of political prisoners had intensified. The churches had the courage to come together and create an institution that could be a living witness of the Christian faith in the service of the Brazilian people. I’m so happy that CESE has reached its 50th anniversary, improving as it matures.
You have to praise CESE’s capacity to find answers so as to extend support to projects from traditional peoples and communities, from family farming, from women; its recognition of the multiple meanings of the right to land, to water and to territory; the importance of citizenship and democracy, including environmental racism and the right to identity in diversity in its discussion agenda, and its support for the struggles and assertion of the values of solidarity and difference.
I am a macumba devotee, but I love being with partners whose thinking is different from ours and who respect our form of organization. CESE is one such partner: it helps to build bridges, which are so necessary to ensure that freedom, diversity, respect and solidarity can flow. These 50 years have involved a lot of struggles and the construction of a new world.
When we hear talk of the struggles of the peoples of the waters, of the forests, of the semi-arid region, of the city peripheries and of the most varied organizations, we see and hear that CESE is there, at their side, without replacing the subjects of the struggle. Supporting, creating the conditions so that they can follow their own path. It is this spirit that we, at ASA, want you to maintain. We wish you long life in this work to support transformation.