Veranstaltungskalender
The week's events
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30. Januar 2023(1 Veranstaltung)
19:00: Human rights and civil society under Israel's new government19:00: Human rights and civil society under Israel's new government – Webinar - please register here For questions please contact info@nif-deutschland.de About the event: In December 2022 Benjamin Netanyahu formed the most right-wing government in the history of the State of Israel. The New Israel Fund (NIF) Germany invites you to a talk with The event will be moderated by Dr. Amir Theilhaber, co-chair of the New Israel Fund Germany. The discussion and the Q&A will be held in English. About the event series: Israel at 75 - civil society speaks up is a new series of monthly events hosted by New Israel Fund (NIF) Germany and its partners. In the 75th year of Israel’s existence, this series aims to amplify voices from civil society in Israel among audiences in Germany and to thus provide more nuanced and complex perspectives on Israel’s history and society. Events will be held online and offline, in Englisch and Hebrew. Online-Veranstaltung via ZOOM |
31. Januar 2023
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1. Februar 2023(1 Veranstaltung)
19:30: Palestinian Bedouin and their future in Naqab/Negev19:30: Palestinian Bedouin and their future in Naqab/Negev Presentation and a follow-up Discussion (both in English) with Nadia Alatawneh, Palestinian architect and activist.
The Bedouin village, al-‘Araqib, situated eight kilometers north of Biʾr al-Sabʿa/Be'er-Sheva city, has been so far demolished 208 times. Its residents resist by rebuilding it again and again. In her activism, Nadia Alatawneh, architect by profession, focuses on securing the right of Palestinian Bedouin to remain on their land. She reports on their situation in Naqab/Negev desert - persecuted by the Israeli state, whose citizenship they carry - as well as the role that the Jewish National Fund plays in the destruction of their land, their villages, their homes and their permanent eviction.
On 19 th July 2022, Amnesty International stated its concern that “the housing rights of Bedouin citizens in Israel are not respected, and that they are discriminated against with regard to other economic, social and cultural rights” linking it to “a policy aimed at maintaining Israel’s system of oppression and domination over Palestinians”.
Heba Morayef, Amnesty International’s Regional Middle East and North Africa Director said: “Instead of demolishing homes, the Israeli authorities should dismantle discriminatory planning and building policies that have put Bedouin citizens in the absurd situation of being labelled trespassers on their own lands”.
There are 35 unrecognized villages in the Naqab/Negev region – almost all of them are older than the State of Israel. Their ‘unrecognized’ status means that they are under imminent threat of destruction and their 100,000 Palestinian inhabitants at the threat of eviction and homelessness.
The event is hosted by:
Palestine Speaks, Palestine Committee Stuttgart, and Jewish Voice for Peace,
in cooperation with Mozaik. Berlin |
2. Februar 2023(1 Veranstaltung)
19:00: Bashir Bashir, Amos Goldberg, Charlotte Wiedemann: Understanding the Pain of Others The Holocaust, the Nakba und German Memory Culture19:00: Bashir Bashir, Amos Goldberg, Charlotte Wiedemann: Understanding the Pain of Others The Holocaust, the Nakba und German Memory Culture Podiumsdiskussion
Gesprächsleitung: Susan Neiman, Potsdam
Live im Einstein Forum. Das Tragen einer medizinischen Maske wird empfohlen. In her book Understanding the Pain of Others, the author Charlotte Wiedemann pleads for a new inclusive memory culture that promotes solidarity instead of competition among victims. Doing justice to the victims of colonial crimes and their descendants does not call into question the specificity of the Shoah. On the contrary: the importance of human rights for all is a central lesson from the Holocaust. But tragically, Holocaust memory has not brought us much closer to such universal values. In their co-edited volume The Holocaust and the Nakba: A New Grammar of Trauma and History Amos Goldberg, Bashir Bashir, and the contributors to the volume explore the possibility of creating a shared language for discussing the memories of two entangled, but entirely different historical events: the genocide of European Jews and the displacement of Palestinians. At the center of this new language is the concept of empathic unsettlement which challenges the mutual denial of the suffering of the Other, recognizes the political asymmetries in Israel-Palestine, and gives rise to an egalitarian binationalism. This debate was originally scheduled to take place in the Goethe Institute Tel Aviv but was cancelled due to political pressure. Charlotte Wiedemann is a journalist and author. She has published numerous books on international topics, most recently Den Schmerz der Anderen begreifen. Holocaust und Weltgedächtnis (2022). Afflicted by silence in her own family, she has followed debates about German responsibility for National Socialism for four decades. Amos Goldberg is associate professor of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For decades he has researched Holocaust memory at the intersection of history, critical theory, and literature. His publications include Trauma in First Person: Diary Writing during the Holocaust (2017) and his co-edited volume Marking Evil: Holocaust Memory in the Global Age (2015). Potsdam |
3. Februar 2023
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4. Februar 2023(1 Veranstaltung)
14:00: Kundgebung: Israels neue ultrarechte Regierung verschärft Terror und Mord zur Vertreibung der Palästinenser!14:00: Kundgebung: Israels neue ultrarechte Regierung verschärft Terror und Mord zur Vertreibung der Palästinenser! Die Palästinensische Gemeinde Deutschland – Bonn ruft mit Unterstützung der BDS-Gruppe Bonn zu einer Kundgebung auf
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5. Februar 2023
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