Print It Yourself!
Projektträger: eDemokrácia Műhely Egyesület
Verantwortliche*r: L. László János
2020
3. Preis
HU
Zivilgesellschaft / Sozialwirtschaft
Bildung
Lokale Entwicklung
With the adoption of the EU’s Sargentini report, the European Union has declared that democracy in Hungary is in danger. Violations of civil liberties and the freedom of the press are especially alarming. In the last few years, Viktor Orbán and the government currently control the majority of media outlets in Hungary and promote propaganda.
Reviving the Samizdat tradition of Eastern Europe, Nyomtass Te is! (Print it Yourself!) is a weekly summary of the most important news from independent media in simple, accessible language printed on a half-fold A/4 paper. The mini-newspaper can be downloaded from our website for anyone to print and distribute in any quantity.
Nyomtass Te is! participants include activists, volunteers, and rural communities. Due to the socio-economic background of our target group, we also deliver physical copies of news from independent websites to the elderly, low income, and rural communities with limited educational and internet access.
By reaching out to communities in small towns, we offer diverse perspectives on issues often represented only from one-side. Through countering government propaganda in the Hungarian countryside, we can improve public political consciousness and democracy in the whole country
Nyomtass Te is! can be implemented in different countries and contexts. For example, the project can promote social and political engagement with civil society organizations, independent journalists. Local communities can volunteer to distribute and print local editions of Nyomtass Te is!.
Die Regierung in Ungarn kontrolliert mittlerweile mehr als drei Viertel aller Medien im TV, Radio und Printbereich. Das hat vor allem Auswirkungen auf das Wahlverhalten der Menschen in ländlichen Regionen. Print It Yourself! versorgt diese Menschen auf innovativ einfache Weise mit regierungsunabhängiger Information. Jede Woche werden Nachrichten in verständlicher Sprache auf zwei A4-Seiten online zusammengestellt, von zivilgesellschaftlichen Gruppen vor Ort ausgedruckt und als gefaltetes A5-Nachrichtenblatt verteilt. So finden alternative Online-News analoge Wege in die Diskussionen des ländlichen Ungarns.