Date: 17 September 2018
Country: Macedonia, Skopje
It was a powerful ending of the first day at the EU-Western Balkans Media Days event in Skopje. Two performers, Mia and Leon, danced in front of media professionals, experts and policymakers from the Western Balkans and the EU, helping the Media Diversity Institute (MDI) and its partners launch the project “Disability: Matter of Perception” and prove why we need better inclusion of people with disabilities.
“Through dance or through journalism, we can and we have to do something to include people with disabilities in the media. MDI together with our partners is working here in Macedonia on challenging perceptions, both our own and those of others,” said MDI Executive Director Milica Pesic. MDI had a unique opportunity to launch its project at the EU-Western Balkans Media in Skopje by hosting a short dance work “LEMIA: Carousel of Perceptions” that is a part of the Performance Research Intesive programme of the Inclusive Movement Research Collective (IMRC).
“We chose LEMIA to help us launch our ‘Disability: a Matter of Perception’ programme because they reflect through dance what we do through journalism and civic activism. We both challenge perceptions. We both believe that as humans we all have endless possibilities to express ourselves and turn what others might see as ‘limitations’ to our advantage, into a creative act, a good cause, an impactful piece of journalism which can change the world. Freedom to express ourselves as artists or journalists is not only our fundamental human right; it’s what makes us better and richer as human beings,” says Milica Pesic.
MDI’s partners on the project are the Macedonian Institute for Media (MIM) and the National Council of Disability Organisations of Macedonia.
The whole performance LEMIA at the EU-Western Balkans is available here.
‘Disability: A Matter of Perception’ is a programme that reflects some of the key values of the EU – inclusion; free expression; engaged civil society. The aim of the project is to strengthen visibility of persons with disabilities in the Macedonian media. A weakened role of the media as protectors of public interest in Macedonia on one hand, and the difficult climate in which civil society organisations operate on the other, led to a shrinking of media space for the pressing needs of disadvantaged groups, and consequently to citizens’ misperceptions in recognising existing discrimination. The invisibility of people with disabilities in the media hampers their true participation in public life and full exercise of their human rights and social inclusion.