On Friday, 30 October, the first workshop entitled “Faces of Change – A Women’s Vision for Trstenik” was held in Trstenik, bringing together a group of women leaders from this municipality. The workshop was organised to gather the authentic voices, experiences, and real needs of women from Trstenik and translate them into concrete proposals for drafting the Local Action Plan for Gender Equality.
This activity was carried out within the project “From Life to Policy: Strengthening Competences and Mechanisms for Gender-Responsive Local Development and Reducing Gender-Based Violence,” implemented in partnership with the Municipality of Trstenik and with the support of the Cabinet of the Minister without Portfolio in charge of coordinating activities in the area of gender equality, prevention of violence against women, and economic and political empowerment of women. The workshop was opened by Milena Turk, President of the Municipality of Trstenik.
The participants – women leaders from different spheres of social life – led an open and constructive discussion on the deeply rooted challenges women in their community face. Through an analysis of the impact of patriarchal values, they highlighted how imposed gender roles and expectations are passed down across generations. They cited examples of attitudes they had heard from older women in the community such as “you have to swallow it,” “you have to be silent and endure,” alongside messages like “you don’t have to endure as I did,” which point to a complex process of intergenerational transmission of values.
During the workshop the participants shared their experiences of the barriers women in Trstenik, or they themselves, face. Based on the discussion, the following were identified among the key issues that the forthcoming Local Action Plan must address:
The problems identified are not isolated; they are symptoms of an outdated value system rooted in patriarchy that no longer matches today’s reality. The participants agreed that women are not asking for privileges but for the fundamental right to the same starting position and equal opportunities as men, the right to equal chances and the freedom to choose their roles without the pressure of tradition. What Trstenik, and society as a whole, needs is to redefine traditional gender roles and to create a new social compact based on partnership, shared responsibility, and equality, rather than on subordination and imposed expectations. It is the responsibility of the entire community to translate this voice into concrete action through the forthcoming Local Action Plan.