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Photo: Maria Vlachou |
This year, I had the
opportunity to spend three days at FOLIO – Óbidos International Literary
Festival. I attended, among other things, the launch of “Voltas e Reviravoltas
- A Cidadania”, by Ana Maria Magalhães and Isabel Alçada, with illustrations by
Mantraste. This is the second of 12 books in the children's collection “Missão: Democracia” (Mission: Democracy), an initiative
of the Portuguese Parliament, curated by Dora Batalim SottoMayor.
At this event, Isabel
Alçada said that, for young people today, democracy is as natural as turning on
the tap and water coming out. I wrote this statement down in my notebook. It caused
me a certain discomfort at that time and I later returned to it on several
occasions. Because, from an empirical point of view, I don't see anything like
that around me. Because the opposite of political repression is not necessarily
a democracy of quality, a healthy democracy, a democracy as natural as water
coming out of the tap.