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  • 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.

On August 12, 2020,

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