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New Town Hall is illuminated in rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community during International Day of Tolerance in Gdansk, Poland
New Town Hall is illuminated in rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community during International Day of Tolerance in Gdansk, Poland.Reuters
Palace of Culture and Science is illuminated in rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community during International Day of Tolerance in Warsaw, Poland.
Palace of Culture and Science is illuminated in rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community during International Day of Tolerance in Warsaw, Poland.Reuters
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The Palace of Culture is illuminated with rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community in Warsaw, Poland.
The Palace of Culture is illuminated with rainbow colours in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT community in Warsaw, Poland.Reuters
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WARSAW – Several cities in Poland illuminated buildings with rainbow colours on Monday in a gesture of solidarity with the LGBT+ community, but activists called for more support in the face of rising hostility.

LGBT rights have been a flashpoint in Poland over the last two years, with politicians tied to the ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party and senior members of the Catholic Church arguing against what they term “LGBT ideology”.

Last week liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski, along with several other city mayors, pledged to illuminate buildings with rainbow colors to mark the International Day for Tolerance.

To many religious conservatives in predominantly Catholic Poland, Trzaskowski represented a threat to traditional values when he signed an “LGBT+ Charter” pledging, for example, to introduce education about LGBT rights in Warsaw schools.

But LGBT+ activists say Trzaskowski has not fulfilled the promises he made, which included creating a shelter for young LGBT+ people who became homeless after coming out to their families.

“This is obviously a symbolic gesture and we welcome it when it comes from mayors of smaller cities and smaller towns,” said Hubert Sobecki, an activist with a non-governmental organization Love does not exclude.

“We expect more from someone who … pledged to do something tangible for the community,” he said, adding that two years after the “LGBT+ Charter” was signed “there was absolutely no action from the municipality”.

A Warsaw city hall spokeswoman said the mayor was committed to the charter’s proposals but their implementation was “a complex process” and some efforts had been halted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Buildings were also illuminated in Gdansk, Krakow, Poznan, Wroclaw and other smaller towns.

Activists say hostility is rising against LGBT+ people in Poland, which does not recognize any form of same-sex marriage and there have even been calls for Pride parades to be banned.

Bartosz Staszewski, a filmmaker and LGBT activist, said the illumination of a bridge over the Vistula river in Warsaw made him think of a trans activist who died after jumping off a bridge.

“I have such terribly bad associations when now the same bridges are simply rainbow-lit and nothing more will happen in Warsaw,” he said.

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