Warsaw 2010, held in Warsaw An equality march has been held in
Warsaw since 2001, the first gay march in the former
Communist bloc. In 2005,
All-Polish Youth planned to hold a countermarch called "Normality Parade" (); instead, the equality march was cancelled by then-mayor
Lech Kaczyński, who argued that the event promoted a "
homosexual lifestyle". In 2010,
EuroPride was held in Warsaw for the first time in a formerly Communist country. Several thousand people attended, and anti-gay groups collected 50,000 signatures that the event should be cancelled. In 2019, around 47,000 people participated, including (for the first time) the
mayor of Warsaw,
Rafał Trzaskowski.
Kraków , 19 May 2018 The equality march has been held in
Kraków since 2004. Before 2010, it was called a "tolerance march". In 2017, counter-demonstrators from All-Polish Youth directed participants towards a nearby psychiatric hospital, as if
homosexuality is a disease.
Katowice The first Katowice Equality March took place in 2008. After a 10-year old hiatus, new equality marches took place in 2018 and 2019.
Łódź The equality march in
Łódź was first held in 2011. In 2015, vice-mayor
Tomasz Trela was present. In 2019, the march was sponsored for the first time by the city authorities, although the mayor,
Hanna Zdanowska, was not present, the head of the city council , did attend. About 200 people participated and the marchers had to alter their route due to non-existent counter-demonstrations announced in advance by nationalist groups.
Gdańsk The
Tricity Equality March (for
Gdańsk-Gdynia-Sopot) has been held in
Gdańsk since 2015.
Rzeszów The equality march in
Rzeszów was the first to be held in
Podkarpacie Voivodeship, on 30 June 2018. About 1,000 to 1,500 people participated, including the MP
Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus and the actor
Omar Sangare. Clashes with nationalist counter-demonstrators from
All-Polish Youth occurred during the first march, but the police intervened to separate them. There were also
anti-abortion counter-demonstrators. After activists announced plans to hold the rally again in 2019, Law and Justice councillors drafted a resolution to make Rzeszów an "
LGBT-free zone" and ban the event. Some 29 requests for counter-demonstrations reached city hall, which led mayor Tadeusz Ferenc, the opposition
Democratic Left Alliance, to halt the march due to security concerns. The ban was overturned by a court ruling and proposed a resolution against "
LGBT ideology" failed by two votes.
Częstochowa |left Equality march in
Częstochowa was first held in July 2018; the police intervened to prevent counter-demonstrators from blocking the route. Following the demonstration, prosecutors were notified that participants had displayed a version of the
Polish flag in rainbow colors. However, they determined that no crime had been committed. Another march was held on 16 June 2019, attracting controversy due to the proximity of the
Jasna Góra Monastery.
Lublin An equality march was first held in
Lublin in 2018. During the 2019 march, riot police used tear gas to disperse counter-demonstrators, some of whom attempted to throw eggs at pro-equality marchers; 25 people were arrested for attacking participants. No one was seriously harmed during the march, although organizers received
death threats.
Szczecin The equality march in
Szczecin so far has been held in 2018 and 2019.
Białystok Białystok Equality March was first held in 2019. More than 30 people were arrested in connection with a violent counter-demonstration. ==References==