From 4 to 6 September 2025, the final networking event of the Voices from the margins project took place in Belgrade. During the three-day visit to Belgrade, the programme participants—young activists from all over Serbia—had the opportunity to tour several relevant non-governmental organizations, meet other activists including Matija Stefanović (from Da se zna!), Lenka Rabasović (from the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia), and Tijana Đuknić (from the Youth Initiative for Human Rights), as well as attend various theatre performances and cultural events.
The participants also attended the ceremonial opening of the photo exhibition There’s Room for Everyone in the foyer of Heartefact House, co-created by the photographer Anja Ivanović and graphic designer Jelena Milojević, together with models who are also co-authors, who are programme participants of Voices from the margins. Later that evening they saw the play All Good Barbies, based on the novel by Katarina Mitrović, at Heartefact House. The photographs depict various marginalized communities in Serbia, staged in an elevator scene, accompanied by the personal testimonies of participants in Voices from the margins, which point out that diversity must not be a reason for exclusion, but an opportunity for solidarity.
The next day, the participants visited the Belgrade Open School, where they were welcomed by the Executive Director Vladimir Pavlović; and the Trag Foundation, hosted by Ivana Marković and Milica Đorđević. They also visited the Centre for Queer Studies and the RYCO office in Belgrade, as well as the House of Human Rights, where Sonja Biserko received them. As part of Pride Week, the participants had the opportunity to see the performance Glatka by Eva Voštinić at Heartefact House, which addresses the position of marginalized communities in Serbia, with a particular focus on trans women. On the last day of their visit to Belgrade, the participants visited the exhibition Labyrinth of the Nineties, with expert guidance by Ivana Anđelković, at the Museum of the Nineties, and later took part in the Pride Walk.
The exhibition is implemented with the support of the regional project SMART Balkans – Civil Society for a Connected Western Balkans, implemented by the Center for Civil Society Promotion (CPCD), Center for Research and Policy Making (CRPM), and the Institute for Democracy and Mediation (IDM), and financially supported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Norway.







