How to be fearless in the face of authoritarianism Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya

On August 12, 2020,

two groups of girls
went out to protest in Minsk,

the capital city of Belarus.

They put on white clothes

and went barefoot out into the street.

In the morning,

some went to Komarovskiy Market
in the center of town.

Later that day,

the other group gathered with flowers

at the eternal flame
under the victory monument.

They stood together holding hands,

and they started to sing
the Belarusian lullaby,

waiting for the police cars to arrive.

They knew the police
would pick them up just like that:

barefoot with flowers in their hands,

that they would take them
to the police station,

beat them up and try to humiliate them.

And yet they did it anyway.

This year, something changed in Belarus,

a country of more than nine million people

that has been ruled
by an authoritarian leader since 1994.

These young women were protesting
the latest rigged election result,

which had taken [place]
just a few days earlier.

Their small expressions of protest
very quickly expanded

into massive, peaceful,
women-led demonstrations

all across the country.

Within just a few days,

a few hundred thousand people
took to the streets

and demonstrations
have continued ever since,

the likes of which
Belarus has never seen before.

All this despite the fact

that the president proclaimed
himself reelected

and that more than 10,000 people
have been detained,

hundreds tortured

and at least six killed.

Many people wonder why the people
of Belarus are speaking up now.

What makes them keep taking to the streets

despite unprecedented police violence,

despite state lawlessness?

The answer I hear the most

is that people have become fearless,

and it’s something
we have become together.

Because fear is the province of one.

It feeds on isolation.

It doesn’t discriminate:

men, women, children, elderly –

all of us can feel fear,

but only as long as we are on our own.

Fearlessness takes two.

It only works if and when
we show up for each other.

Show up so that your neighbor,

your colleague, your friend has courage.

And they will do the same for you.

A lot has been made of my own role
in the presidential election

of August 2020.

How I stepped in to run for my husband,
Sergei, when he was jailed

and it became clear that the authorities
would deny him his chance to run himself;

how I rightfully won the election

and became the elected leader
of a democratic Belarus,

but the official results
only gave me 10 percent of the vote

and I was forced
into exile with my children;

how I still fight
for those who voted for me

and whose voice the regime wants to steal;

how “fearless” I am.

But there were many moments
when I was frightened,

and I wanted to step down.

I was threatened

and forced to believe
that I’m alone in this fight.

And yet the more cities I visited,

the more people showed up for the rallies,

the less fear I had.

And then in the days
before the election in Minsk,

60,000 people came
to show their support for me,

and I was no longer afraid.

I never wanted to do any of this.

I was never overly political,

and I never planned to run for office.

I wanted to be a mom and a wife.

But by fate and the will of my people,

I was elevated to this position.

And I accept this
with a sense of duty and pride.

I will not give up.

And I will show up for people,
because they show up for me.

Our courage is born from unity.

Our solidarity is our strength.

I also now understand
that being fearless is a commitment.

It is a decision you make
every single day.

It is a responsibility you take –

responsibility for one another.

In this regard, I’m no different
from my fellow Belarusians.

Their support is tangible.

Their solidarity grows in progression.

When there are two of you,

you are daring.

When you’re 100, you are brave.

When there are thousands of you,

you are fearless.

And once you are tens of thousands,

you become invincible.

Thank you.