Civitates: consortium that we are a part of, has funded a projects of support for civil society organizations which have worked tirelessly in difficult conditions and keep democracy and public participation at the heart of society. One of those project is placed in Poland. Dorota Setniewska from the NGO Klon/Jawor Association, a leading partner in a new set up aimed at boosting the presence of civil society organizations in Poland, explains what has changed in recent years.

 

Dorota Setniewska © Jan Van de Vel

© Jan Van de Vel

The stabbing and death of Pawel Adamowicz, the liberal mayor of the Polish city of Gdansk in January 2019 was perhaps the clearest sign yet of the tensions and divisions in the country. Civitates has funded projects of support for civil society organizations which have worked tirelessly in difficult conditions to try to break down these divisions and keep democracy and public participation at the heart of society.

“At the beginning of 2017 we built an NGO coalition after a series of attacks against organizations on public television” – says Dorota Setniewska from the NGO Klon/Jawor Association. The idea was not to focus on one issue, but to broaden efforts, engage with a variety of people and promote democracy across Poland. There are now over 30 organizations focusing on a range of issues whose work is boosted by the coalition.

Civil society organizations
Before we did anything, we wanted to make sure that the work of NGOs was in line with the needs of the country and that people understood the positive contribution of civil society organizations, says Setniewska. “We decided to check what people had in mind and what they expected from us,” she explains. “We created focus groups in different villages and cities across Poland.” From these meetings, the organizations understood that people often did not understand what was meant by terms such as “NGO” or “nonprofit”. For the general public, the term “social organization” was clearer and less abstract, says Setniewska. Using this term “brings us closer to people”, she believes.

Positive impact
“The public’s trust in polish NGOs is pretty high, but when we checked we found that people associated the civil sector with helping children or working on health issues, but not with democracy or civic rights for example,” says Setniewska.

The NGOs decided to change this by working more closely with people and showing the positive impact they are having in local neighborhoods. This led to the launch of a nationwide campaign called “Organizacje społeczne.To Działa” or “Civic organizations. It Works” in English, recruiting organizations from all over Poland and targeting different audiences to ensure the voice of NGOs is better heard in public debates and their work given more support and recognition. The campaign is being supported by consultants to improve the way NGOs in Poland communicate and strategize, not simply as individuals, but also together as a sector.

Joint calendar

“We are using social media, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube, and working with traditional media to tell emotional human stories, share infographics and use facts to bust myths,” explains Setniewska. The campaign is also aimed at encouraging members of the public to join civil society organizations or to carry out voluntary work with them.

The whole of the NGO sector has come together to work under the same umbrella to increase its impact and understanding of civil society organizations, she adds. This is helped by the creation of a joint calendar, enabling NGOs working on different issues to communicate with a single voice around a specific event or a special national or international day, such as the United Nations backed human rights or earth day.

Solidarity & trust
The impact of the change of direction so far is pretty difficult to measure, admits Setniewska, but she insists the NGO coalition will continue to measure reactions and coverage in the media. It may even hold new focus group meetings in the future to see whether public perception has altered. Most importantly is that “we are in this for the long haul”, she says, estimating the campaign will need to continue for ten years or longer to really make a difference in the fight against civic space shrinking in Poland. “We believe we are now stronger in the face of attacks and we will continue to build solidarity and trust in society,” says Setniewska.

“We believe we are now stronger in the face of attacks and we will continue to build solidarity and trust in society,” says Setniewska.

About Civitates

Civitates is a philanthropic initiative for democracy and solidarity in Europe. It provides funding for civil society actors to come together, revitalize public discourse, and ensure that all voices are heard. One of Civitates’ activities is strengthening the capacity of civil society actors, collectively and more effectively.

The 16 members of the consortium are:

Dear representatives of the civil society!

We are calling on you to join the final stage of a campaign led by civil society organisations (CSOs) to make a new EU Rights and Values programme, planned for 2021-2027, an effective tool for promotion of democracy and European values in the EU. The goal of the programme is to support initiatives which promote and protect democracy, rule of law, equality, non-violence, civic participation, cultural heritage. It will be open to CSOs operating at local, national and European level and its procedures will be simplified to ensure access to funding for smaller, grass-root initiatives.

The shape of the programme gives hope that promotion of democracy and European values will get priority in the EU. However, the originally planned budget – 641 million EUR for 7 years for initiative in all EU countries is far too small to make a real difference. We have to convince the governments to increase the budget of the programme at least to the level suggested by the European Parliament, that is to 1.83 billion EUR. The negotiations of the next 7-year EU budget begin this fall. We have to act now!

If you represent a CSO in the EU, we urge you to sign a letter to your government and a separate letter to Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) asking them to raise the budget of the Rights and Values programme to the level of 1.83 billion EUR recommended by the European Parliament.

You can sign the LETTER to the governments and/or national parliaments HERE

The letter to Members of the European Parliament is available HERE. The letter was sent out to MEPs on Monday, 7 October. We continue to collect signatures for the letter to member states’ governments until Thursday, 17 October.

Ewa Kulik-Bielińska
Executive Director
Stefan Batory Foundation

Translations of the letter to the governments:

Translations of the letter to Members of the European Parliament:

Background information:

Information on the Rights and Values programme – legislative train
Regulation on the Rights and Values programme  (with European Parliament’s amendments)