Jul 1, 2011





June 21st, 2011 @Bratislava, Slovakia
The birth year of Notabene is 2001. “Ten years! Time really flies!” Sandra kind of shouted. “My work is so related to my life. I have learnt almost everything from my work.”
She took one of the examples. Six years ago, there was a social issue here, which was twenty homeless people died on the street. Back then, there was an alcohol test before allowing to stay at the shelter, and the only place where people who rejected could go was frozen street.
“My coworker Nina and I was tackling and campaigning this problem, but some people were so cold-hearted. I almost gave up, but Nina said, ‘How can we allow people to die on the street in 21st century?!’” Sandra said. Nina’s belief moved peoples’ hearts and a shelter permit all the people even under the influence to stay in. “I witnessed your belief would move people and the situation itself. Since then it has been one of my mottos. ‘You need to believe in what you are doing!’”



June 20th, 2011 @Bratislava, Slovakia
March 11th, 2011. An email from Sandra with Notabene, a Slovak street magazine got to The Big Issue Japan, about three hours after the earthquake happened. Next email from her said that she decided a monthly profit of Notabene would be donated to the Japanese one. I wanted to express our gratitude to this Madam Solidarity.
An editor Dagma, fundraiser Zuza, Social worker Ivan and some vendors welcomed me at the door. Talking to a vendor, Ivan, “Thank you so much for your empathy,” and he responsed “The smile of Japanese people encouraged me a lot. I also try smiling at my pitch. I’m so sure that the severe situation will be getting be better, because so my life was!”




June 17th, 2011 @Prague, Chez Republic
Jaroslav has been selling Novy Proster since 2003, at the station of Náměstí Republiky. Having Worked as a gardener, however, he got laid-off in winter when the demand tended to be decreasing.
“I want to get back to a gardener in the future. I really love greenery things,” he said. “And one of my dreams is going to see the ocean someday. I’ve never seen it before…”




June 15th, 2011 Part2 @Prague, Chez Republic
The editor-in-chief of Novy Proster, Tomas joined lunch with Dasha and me. “I’ve watched a documentary ‘Mechanical Love’ by Danish director, Phie Ambo on the other day, and the movie gives me a new Japanese word, ‘Sonzai-kan,’ meaning ‘presence.’” he said. “Do you think homeless people in Japan have Sonzai-kan?” Hmmm…it’s an intriguing question!
Never thought of it, but Sonzai-kan might be a clue to solve all those social problems in Japan, such as 30,000 people killing themselves per a year, Hikikomori, and depression. I sometimes feel pressure to show my Sonzai-kan in the society if I want the membership there. This intangible “aura” thing might make us worn out. The conversation with him brought me a great opportunity to see Japanese society from the different point of view.




June 15th, 2011 Part1 @Prague, Chez Republic
Dasha with her one-month baby girl in her arm welcomed me, when I visited a Chez street magazine, Novy Proster.
The birth of this magazine was a dozen year ago, December 13th, 1999, with a help and an advice from INSP, “Z!” in Amsterdam, “Straat Nieuws” in Utrecht, and “Flaszter” in Hungary.
Most of the media people and social workers said to them the possibility of failure is 100 percent, however, the result was against the odds. The 11.5-year-old street magazine has circulation of 15,000 fortnightly, with 150 vendors in 9 cities.
Similar situation to Gazeta Uliczna in Poznan, drastic change of society in 1989 made many people fall into homelessness here. According to Dasha, at the start, most of the vendors were in their 50s but getting be younger since the global economic crisis in 2008.
Over the yummy Chez lunch and Kofola, the conversation went on and on.





June 11th, 2011 @Poznan, Poland
One of the purposes of this trip is attending THE wedding. Whose? The beautiful lady from Poland, Dagmara’s.
Wedding ceremony at the medieval church was splendid enough to bring me into tears. Wedding reception was unexpected enough to surprise me!
12-hour banquet, bunch of dancing, eating yummy Polish food and drinking vodka, really entertained all the participants.
People kept blessing this new-born couple all night long.



June 10th, 2011 Part2 @Poznan, Poland
The editor-in-chief of Gazeta Uliczna is a poet and journalist, Dominik Gorny. “Everybody who is working here has various backgrounds, however, we have one same passion. It is so amazing to me,” he says. Adding that witnessing vendors’ positive changing are so encouraging. As soon as he told that, Zanetta who was overhearing by the side said jokingly, “Dominik also changed! You tend to think about ‘flying’ all the time but getting to the ground!”
I’ve heard that some of the staff also said that this community brought them positive change. People with various social backgrounds influence each other, that is the very peoples’ power.
The young poet told me earnestly. “I sometimes have arguments with senior poets, saying we need to mention not only trees and sky but also this society too. Poem has a responsibility to be a voice of a society.”