Background
In 2018 and 2019 Roma communities in Hungary faced multiple crises that impacted their rights and livelihoods.
First, for a long time there had been hostile marches in Roma settlements by extremist right-wing groups and the general experience of systemic and institutional racism; and in 2020 the Covid-19 pandemic exacerbated existing problems in Roma communities such as access to food, livelihoods, education, and healthcare. Access to food was reduced because the price of food rose, because school canteens were closed (for many families the only available cooked food), and because food barrels were not accepted in the village center. Access to a livelihood was reduced because many Roma workers were laid off, especially from temporary jobs, and they did not have a financial reserve. Access to education was reduced because many families did not have the digital equipment, internet access, and digital skills to participate in digital education programmes. Access to medical supplies like masks, gloves and sanitisers was reduced and these items were often not available at the store or too expensive for Roma families. Social distancing was challenging as Roma families often lived in small flats or settlements with high Covid contamination risks. There was a need to provide immediate response to these crises.
Organizing process:
The Civil College Foundation (CKA) had already been organizing Roma communities in the years prior to the pandemic as one of the social groups that is mostly impacted by systemic racism and discrimination in Hungary and Europe. They had a team of Roma organizers and leaders in different communities who they had been working with and had ongoing relationships and trust within those communities. When the pandemic hit, CKA responded by engaging their Roma organizers to conduct an assessment of the effects of the pandemic on local Roma communities with a focus on disadvantaged settlements. They coordinated crisis response activities including delivering aid packages and vaccination registration. Based on the key issues emerging from the assessment in Roma communities, CKA organized several emergency response campaigns in 2020 and 2021 on access to food, livelihoods, education, healthcare, and Covid vaccination, combining community organizing with digital organizing. One of the most successful campaigns was the “Vaccinate for Life” campaign where CKA played a key role in bringing together the national Roma municipality, Roma NGOs, activist groups, and prominent Roma media to promote vaccination registration. In the campaign, volunteers visited Roma settlements in an effort to overcome skepticism and to help with registration for vaccination. It included a digital organizing component with memes on social media, featuring Roma celebrities as well as health care professionals. Throughout the campaigns, CKA coordinated the strengthening of cooperation among Roma organizers, Roma groups, Roma NGOs, pro-Roma organizations, Roma politicians, Roma media, national Roma municipality, and activist groups to respond to the crisis and curb institutional racism towards Roma people.
Outcomes:
Lessons learned:
Source
ECON (2023). Organizing in Crisis: A curriculum for community organizers. CC-BY NC-SA 4.0.
ECON is a hub for the community organizing movement in Europe. We support organizers, groups and organizations to build collective power to respond to systemic injustices and emerging crises and create a just and democratic future for all