TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 12月27日 04時59分
When Russian poet Galina Rymbu saw images from online flash mobs protesting the arrest of LGBT feminist activist Yulia Tsvetkova in June, she knew she had to add her voice in support. Tsvetkova is based in the Khabarovsk region in the far-east of Russia and has been fined multiple times under Russia’s “gay propaganda” law. “I wanted to create a poetic and political portrait of my vagina,” Rymbu, 30, says via video call from her home in Lviv, Ukraine. After Rymbu posted “My Vagina” to her Facebook page in late June, the poem was shared hundreds of times and calls for Tsvetkova’s release grew. “For me, poetry is a form of politics and of protest,” Rymbu says. “I believe that poetry, and language more broadly, is capable today of changing the world politically.” For artists like Rymbu, that change is much needed. Russia’s political climate has become increasingly hostile to human rights activists, writes @suyinsays. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @dina_litovsky for TIME
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2020/12/27