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MetziAgenda october

Exclusive activities for Metzineres:

  • Guerrilla sewing
  • XADUD (Xarxa de Donxs que Usen Drogues) meetings at the Ateneo del Raval
  • Assembly
  • Monologueando
  • DIRD (Donxs Impulsores de Reducció de Danys) meetings
  • Pa’ella at MACBA
  • Kosmetikin: Natural cosmetics workshop
  • Metzituning: Let’s get pretty together!
  • Crispelis

These are the special activities for october:

Save your calendar!

  • Thursday 24: International Day for the Elimination of Colonialism

Also, always available:

  • MetziSpa
  • Express Naloxone Workshop
  • Health, social and educational support
  • Sleeping during the day
  • Clothes, shower and washing machine
  • Computers and Internet
  • ArtiSana: Art therapy space

Hours:

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday from 2pm to 9pm.

Tuesday and Friday from 6pm to 9pm.

Closed on Sunday.

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Tearing Down Walls and Uniting Our Voices on International Overdose Awareness Day

By Sophia Vargas

August 31 marked a momentous day dedicated to reflection, remembrance, and action on a topic that remains a global challenge: overdose. This date, known as International Overdose Awareness Day, seeks to break the stigma surrounding substance users, promote prevention, and remember those who have lost their lives due to this cause.

The day originated in Australia in 2001 and has since grown into a global movement. Community organizations, NGOs, health centers, and consumer groups around the world have embraced this date to hold events aimed at reducing stigmatization and providing essential information on how to prevent overdoses and support those at risk.

This year, Metzineres joined forces with the Xarxa de Dones que Usen Drogues (XADUD), Catalan Network of People who Use Drugs (CATNPUD), and Red de Feministas Antiprohibicionistas en el Ámbito de las Drogas (REMA) to create a significant event in memory of those who died from overdoses at Emili Vendrell Square. During this day of advocacy, we raised our voices with key messages. Among them, the need to create more supervised consumption rooms was highlighted: safe spaces where people can consume, which significantly reduces overdose deaths.

Another important point addressed was the need to improve the first responder’s reaction. Many of us users have witnessed or experienced overdoses, making us the first responders in such emergencies. It was emphasized that both we and our friends and family must be informed. Also highlighted was the need for the over-the-counter sale of Naloxone and the availability of nasal Naloxone, an antagonist to reverse opioid overdoses.

The commemorative activities also included an urgent call to break the social stigma surrounding drug users. Stigma not only isolates us but also contributes to many people dying alone, without support or assistance. It was stressed that stigma continues to claim victims, and eliminating it is a shared responsibility of society.

During the day, badges in memory of the victims of the war on drugs, made by Metzineres, were distributed, and texts that resonated with those present were read. Jordi Parramon from CATNPUD and Manu Benedetto from XADUD shared words that reminded us of the importance of the anti-prohibitionist struggle, while Tania Quintana from Metzineres presented a rap titled “Spread Your Wings,” full of strength and hope.

The day concluded with a Mapping by Kostia, where the logo of International Overdose Awareness Day illuminated the walls, along with the names of all those who have died from overdoses. It was a moment of silence, respect, and reflection, where each projected name represented a lost life but also a call to action.

On this day, voices were raised to demand legality, awareness, and distribution of Naloxone for all substance users, along with more testing and supervised consumption spaces.
 
“Fewer deaths, more information” was the slogan etched in the collective memory at the end of the day. A reminder that the struggle continues and that empathy, knowledge, and action are our best tools to prevent further loss of friends, family, or neighbors.

Photographs: Andre Gaetano, Metzineres Photographer.
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MetziAgenda September

Exclusive activities for Metzineres:

  • Guerrilla sewing
  • XADUD (Xarxa de Donxs que Usen Drogues) meetings at the Ateneo del Raval
  • Assembly
  • Monologueando
  • DIRD (Donxs Impulsores de Reducció de Danys) meetings
  • Pa’ella at MACBA
  • Kosmetikin: Natural cosmetics workshop
  • Metzituning: Let’s get pretty together!
  • Crispelis

These are the special activities for September:

Save your calendar!

  • Tuesday 24: Festival of Mercè

Also, always available:

  • MetziSpa
  • Express Naloxone Workshop
  • Health, social and educational support
  • Sleeping during the day
  • Clothes, shower and washing machine
  • Computers and Internet
  • ArtiSana: Art therapy space

Hours:

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 2pm to 9pm.

Tuesday from 6pm to 9pm.

Closed on Sunday.

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Social educator

Metzineres is a nonprofit cooperative based in the Raval neighborhood (Barcelona), creating safe environments for women and gender-diverse individuals who use drugs and survive multiple situations of vulnerability and violence.

We are looking for a social educator to join our intervention team full-time. This person will be responsible for managing the daily operations of the space with the women. We encourage women with lived experience as migrants, lesbians, bisexual, trans, gender-diverse, racialized, Indigenous, and Afro-descendant women, or women with functional diversity to apply for this position.

Interested individuals should send a motivation letter and resume or LinkedIn profile to admin@metzineres.org

Your day-to-day…

Your daily activities will involve direct attention to the personal needs of the women participants, accompaniment, and leadership in the activities and workshops held in the space.

You will work from a peer-based approach, which involves promoting participation channels and strategies in conflict management.

You will also participate in community actions aimed at creating social connections within the neighborhood. Additionally, you will be actively involved in the design and implementation of advocacy events related to political activism.

Metzineres operates with involvement and horizontality. Participation in decision-making is genuine, and every professional actively contributes from their area of responsibility. Therefore, time is dedicated to meetings and gatherings to reflect together and make collective decisions in various decision-making spaces.

You are a person who…

  • Is empathetic and maintains a positive attitude in any situation. You know that with humor and wit, things are managed better!
  • Has patience and practices active listening.
  • Enjoys sharing knowledge with others.
  • Is passionate about sustainably maintaining and strengthening coherence within your organization.
  • Is resourceful and capable of improvisation. Challenges are opportunities for you.
  • Enjoys learning and innovating, and is curious by nature.
  • Values authentic and honest interpersonal relationships.
  • Takes initiative, has critical thinking, and provides solutions.
  • Feels comfortable trying, failing, and learning from mistakes and experiences to improve next time.

What we need

  • Education: Diploma, Degree, or Bachelor’s in Social Education.
  • Experience: At least 1 year in harm reduction; addressing gender-based violence; working with people in multiple situations of vulnerability; community and/or street work.
  • Knowledge in: harm reduction in the use of psychoactive substances, transfeminism, gender-based violence, human rights.

What we value

  • Master’s/Postgraduate degree in gender, drug policy, and/or working with people in situations of social vulnerability.
  • Experience in activism for drug policy change, human rights, harm reduction, and intersectional feminism.
  • Experience in networked work and community action.
  • Knowledge of a third language, mainly spoken and written English or other Eastern European languages.
  • Lived experience in surviving situations of multiple vulnerability.

Competencies

  • High proficiency in Catalan and Spanish
  • Initiative and problem-solving attitude
  • Flexibility and adaptability to the changing reality of Metzineres
  • Teamwork and cooperation
  • Commitment to feminist, anti-prohibitionist, anti-colonialist principles, and human rights advocacy
  • Leadership
  • Analytical and critical thinking
  • Intercultural sensitivity
  • Strategic vision
  • Networking and collaboration

What you will do

  • Take responsibility for direct care and comprehensive support for women and non-binary people who are actively using drugs and surviving multiple situations of violence.
  • Facilitate activities and workshops with women and non-binary people.
  • Record information for each action in the established computer systems.
  • Know and follow protocols, procedures, and work instructions, and communicate through Metzineres’ coordinator and management team, as well as propose improvements you deem appropriate for the services.
  • Prepare social and action reports.
  • Contribute to individual assessments for prioritization proposals.
  • Participate in team meetings.
  • Participate in some community events and activities.
  • Coordinate with other services and resources, both within standard social care networks and other informal community and neighborhood networks.
  • Contribute to the design and leadership of Metzineres’ intervention model, from a holistic and transdisciplinary perspective.

Duration and work conditions

  • Type of contract: Permanent
  • Workplace: Raval neighborhood, with the possibility of travel for support purposes
  • Schedule: 38.5 hours per week, primarily in the afternoon shift
  • Salary: According to the Social Action Agreement and profile

Why Metzineres

  • We are a young cooperative with a horizontal structure, offering opportunities for growth and development.
  • Genuine creativity, transformative passion, and radical tenderness are among our core values.
  • Possibility of becoming a cooperative member in the future.
  • Access to training.
  • Access to services of the Cooperative of Health and Integrative Medicine Cos at member prices.

About Metzineres

Women and gender-diverse people who use drugs and survive multiple forms of violence and vulnerability often struggle to access or engage with social and health care networks, and are frequently excluded from specialized services, both for drugs and gender-based violence.

In response to this situation, Metzineres was established in 2018 to create Safe Environments exclusively for them, integrating the full spectrum of harm reduction, intersectional feminism, and peer-based approaches into its intervention model.

After three years under the umbrella of other organizations, Metzineres became an independent nonprofit cooperative in 2020, completing a process of independence that is currently being finalized. This, combined with years of work and experience, has led to stability and maturity as a project, allowing us to envision an exciting future.
After a long journey of learning and growth, today we can say that Metzineres is composed of a cohesive group of people involved in decision-making, participatory and responsible, where companionship, solidarity, and mutual support prevail.
Thanks to this social ecosystem that has developed, and the need to consolidate it, along with the recent approval of some projects for future development, Metzineres is expanding its team! We aim to grow in diversity, heterogeneity, and complexity without losing unity.

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MetziAgenda August

Exclusive activities for Metzineres:

  • Guerrilla sewing
  • XADUD (Xarxa de Donxs que Usen Drogues) meetings at the Ateneo del Raval
  • Assembly
  • DIRD (Donxs Impulsores de Reducció de Danys) meetings
  • Paella at MACBA
  • Excursions and outings
  • Kosmetikin: Natural cosmetics workshop
  • Metzituning: Let’s get pretty together!
  • Crispelis

These are the special activities for august:

Save your calendar!

  • Saturday 31: International Overdose Awareness Day

Also, always available:

  • MetziSpa
  • Express Naloxone Workshop
  • Health, social and educational support
  • Sleeping during the day
  • Clothes, shower and washing machine
  • Computers and Internet
  • ArtiSana: Art therapy space

Hours:

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 2pm to 9pm.

Tuesday from 6pm to 9pm.

Closed on Sunday.

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Offensive Against Cannabis Clubs: A Regression that Threatens the Rights of Individuals Using Cannabis and Its Derivatives

The Metzineres raise our voices against the closure of cannabis clubs.

The Metzineres firmly oppose the decision by the Barcelona City Council, which, through its prohibitive and regressive policies, has imposed economic sanctions and shut down various cannabis social clubs (CSCs) in the city, jeopardizing an internationally recognized model as a safe and responsible alternative to the unregulated cannabis market.

CSCs have been operating in Barcelona for over 25 years. Since then, they have established themselves as a safe place for consumption, providing reliable information to their members, reducing the risks associated with the unregulated market, and promoting an anti-prohibitionist and stigma-free approach.

The equation is simple: cannabis use will not disappear by prohibiting it; consumption will continue, bringing with it criminalization, stigmatization, and the promotion of violent and abusive policies and practices against us.

CSCs have the potential to support and enhance public policy aimed at improving the health and well-being of consumers and their communities. They allow for a comprehensive approach that, in our case, helps to cope with situations of vulnerability and survive the violence faced by women. While the clubs offer objective information and a safe space providing necessary support in case of consumption-related problems, the city council criminalizes us and forces us to resort to illegal and opaque markets.

While countries such as Uruguay, South Africa, Malta, and Germany already have regulatory legal frameworks for CSCs, the Barcelona City Council makes the arbitrary decision to regress, ignoring robust evidence of the benefits of this pioneering model.

The Metzineres assert that it is urgent to develop drug use policies that respect the human rights of consumers and repair the harm caused by prohibition and criminalization, such as gender violence, imprisonment, and economic and social injustice. It is impossible to build, through prohibitionism, a society where the structural causes of exclusion are eliminated and where everyone has the right to a full, dignified, and violence-free life.

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Thousands of voices shouting “Support. Don’t Punish” shook the Rambla del Raval

By Sophia Vargas

On Wednesday, June 26, Metzineres shouted “Support. Don’t Punish,” as part of the Global Day of Action “Support Don’t Punish.” This is how the Rambla del Raval became a vibrant scene of resistance and solidarity where drug users advocated for more humane policies focused on public health and human rights instead of criminalization and punishment.

Early in the morning, Metzineres, along with the Catalan Network of People Who Use Drugs (CATNPUD), the Network of Feminist Antiprohibitionists in the Field of Drugs (REMA), the Ámbit Prevenció Foundation, ABD, and the Network of Women Who Use Drugs (XADUD), gathered to make our message visible: prohibition only serves to punish, stigmatize, and penalize those of us who use drugs, perpetuating various forms of violence on our bodies and our lives, fostering exclusion that leaves us on the margins of society and without our rights.

The activities began with a warm welcome from the neighbors of the Raval neighborhood, who joined in various actions, such as the gymkhana, which consisted of recreational activities involving the community in crucial issues such as antiprohibitionism, institutional violence, sex work, drug use, and the situation of homeless people.

One of the most outstanding activities was the painting of a collective mural, where messages and symbols of resistance and support for people who use drugs and live with HIV/AIDS were captured. The famous mural located at the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA), “Together We Can Stop AIDS” by artist Keith Haring, was collectively replicated. This iconic artwork conveys a powerful message of unity and collective action, symbolizing the capacity to unite and face challenges together.

Meanwhile, a live radio broadcast gave us the opportunity to learn about the history of prohibitionism in Barcelona. The controversial Plan Endreça, promoted by the city’s public administration, was also discussed, and the negative impact it has on homeless people and drug users, as its measures expose them to more situations of vulnerability and violence.

The radio also served as a platform for the voices of those who have been marginalized to be heard loud and clear. A trans, queer, and bisexual comedian hosted the event, filling the atmosphere with laughter and reinforcing the spirit of inclusion.

The fact that this event took place in a public space had profound significance because the people who are usually on the margins of society occupied the Rambla del Raval, making visible that we deserve and can occupy these spaces, enjoying and expressing ourselves freely without stigma, weaving ties with the community. The neighborhood’s response was very positive.

The day concluded with the conviction that together we can achieve real and significant change to end the criminalization, stigmatization, and violent policies and practices against our communities. As well as ensuring reparation and building a world where the structural causes of exclusion are eliminated and where all people have the right to a full, dignified, and violence-free life.

The global “Support Don’t Punish” day has been held for more than a decade. Since then, it has empowered a global and decentralized network of change agents in drug policy and Harm Reduction.

Photographs: Andre Gaetano, Fotografa Metzineres.
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MetziAgenda July

Exclusive activities for Metzineres:

  • Guerrilla sewing
  • XADUD (Xarxa de Donxs que Usen Drogues) meetings at the Ateneo del Raval
  • Assembly
  • DIRD (Donxs Impulsores de Reducció de Danys) meetings
  • Paella at MACBA
  • Excursions and outings
  • Kosmetikin: Natural cosmetics workshop
  • Metzituning: Let’s get pretty together!
  • Crispelis
  • Curiosities suitcase workshop

These are the special activities for July:

Save your calendar!

  • Friday 12th: Raval Festival

Also, always available:

  • MetziSpa
  • Express Naloxone Workshop
  • Health, social and educational support
  • Sleeping during the day
  • Clothes, shower and washing machine
  • Computers and Internet
  • ArtiSana: Art therapy space

Hours:

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 2pm to 9pm.

Tuesday from 6pm to 9pm.

Closed on Sunday.

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Balance Anual Metzineres 2023: Creando entornos de cobijo para mujerxs que usan drogas y sobreviven a múltiples situaciones de vulnerabilidad y violencia

Las mujeres y personas de género no binario que usamos drogas sobrevivimos a múltiples situaciones de vulnerabilidad y a una amplia gama de violencias. El estigma impulsado por los estados, la criminalización y la corrupción provocan daños sustanciales en materia de salud, seguridad y actúan como barreras entre quienes usamos drogas y los servicios de reducción de daños de espectro completo y de atención en la violencia de género, encontrándonos con barreras y vacíos institucionales que vulneran sistemáticamente nuestros derechos.

Según datos recogidos a nivel mundial, las mujeres que usamos drogas experimentamos cerca de 25 veces más violencia de género que otras mujeres. Esta violencia incluye, entre otras, asesinatos extrajudiciales, pena de muerte, esterilización y abortos forzados y coercitivos, violación, acoso sexual, pérdida de la custodia infantil, encarcelamiento por posesión o uso personal de drogas y penalización por uso de drogas durante el embarazo, junto con otros tipos de violaciones, estigma y discriminaciones de género.

Es de vital importancia dar cuenta de estas realidades y del impacto de las políticas y prácticas que inciden en la cotidianidad, así como de las propias actuaciones de Metzineres. Para ello, generamos, y damos seguimiento a indicadores diariamente, a partir de elementos significativos para las mujerxs, parte imprescindible del diseño, implementación, monitorización y evaluación de todos los proyectos y prácticas que realizamos y que condicionan sus recorridos vitales.

La responsabilidad de originar información genuina, cuidadosa y actualizada, desde nuestro modelo de abordaje holístico, nos hace dotar de instrumentos de investigación no intrusivos, respetuosos de intimidad, confidencialidad y anonimato. Aplicarlos como proceso rutinario, más que de manera finalista, permite conocer disponibilidad, cobertura, calidad y relevancia de las intervenciones, haciendo una revisión rigurosa y permitiendo tomar decisiones pragmáticas para reconfigurar constantemente Metzineres a coyunturas y poblaciones en las que se quiere repercutir.

Disminuir el prejuicio, estigma y discriminación, perseverando hacer efectivos los derechos pasa por desarrollar prácticas, herramientas de acción, y de investigación que reconozcan la interseccionalidad, aportando datos reales, veraces y actualizados sobre estas realidades complejas y cambiantes, así como de las políticas y actuaciones, exitosas o no, que las encaran.

Es por ello que, cada año, presentamos nuestro balance anual donde podrais conocer al detalle cuál es la situación de las mujerxs usuarias de drogas que acuden a Metzineres, como así también el camino recorrido para poder construir un mundo donde las causas estructurales de exclusión sean eliminadas y que todas tengamos derechos a una vida plena, digna y libre de violencias, independientemente de la raza, la clase, la condición migratoria, la situación laboral o las elecciones en relación al consumo de sustancias.

Para mayor información, podéis descargar nuestro informe aquí

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Lila Fest: Rocking the Stage and Shattering Stigma

By Sophia Vargas

“This world is moving, it’s very violent. Burn the natural, burn the world, burn the system, to start again..,” rapped Tania, a Metzinera, on a wooden stage. Her rhymes piled up one after another, ready to break stereotypes and confront various forms of violence, at the first edition of Lila Fest, last Saturday, May 25th, in the North Station Park in Barcelona.

As an epicenter of resistance, sisterhood, and unity, from eleven in the morning until eight at night, Lila Fest stood as a space dedicated to making visible and combating sexist violence through cultural, artistic, and community activities.

Tania’s connection with the audience came through each rhyme. Her energy and passion spread through her music, followed by Luana, another Metzinera, who took us on a journey through flamenco, reinterpreting pain and stepping into the shoes of thousands of womxn. Her performance was a testimony of resilience and reinvention, reflecting her ability to overcome adversity.

But Luana’s talent is not limited to dance. The artist also designed and made her own outfit for the occasion: a black dress with gold finishes, shiny texture, and large fringes. A Sevillian scarf completed her attire.

Like Luana and Tania, the Metzineres are protagonists in the spaces we inhabit, and this was no exception. We went to Lila Fest with a clear objective: to rock the stage and shatter stigma. Because we dream of a world where the structural causes of exclusion are eliminated and everyone has the right to a full, dignified, and violence-free life, regardless of race, class, immigration status, employment situation, or choices related to substance use, and one way to do this is through art.

Throughout the day, the festival offered a variety of activities including workshops, debates, theater, dance, live music, and exhibitions. We had the opportunity to raise our voice on “Radio Lila Fest,” a space for live programs and podcasts, where we shared with radio hosts and activists from the feminist movement.

The success of this first edition of Lila Fest has generated palpable enthusiasm for future editions. We celebrated the diverse forms of artistic expression, reaffirmed the importance of fighting against sexist violence, and building a more just and equitable world for all.

Without a doubt, Lila Fest has marked the beginning of a cultural and social revolution that will continue to grow.

Photographs: Andre Gaetano, Metzineres Photographer.