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Bird: An Ecopoetics Reading

The role of ecology in the new film by the director of Fish Tank and Wuthering Heights


19/02/2025

Analysis of Andrea Arnold’s latest film

Andrea Arnold’s films often feel like an exceptional foray into the ordinary, and Bird is no different. Bird seeks to demonstrate the depth of connection between filmmaking and the environment, both behind and in front of the camera. In this essay, I’ll carry out an ecopoetic reading of the film to show how the environment shapes the characters’ destinies and offers a new vision for filmmaking. I’ll first analyse the positive effect of technological communications in the film, and specifically how they bring humans closer to the natural environment. Next, I’ll pick out several process cinematography techniques and that show the organic nature of filmmaking itself. Finally, I’ll explore John Skinner’s translation of the term ‘eco-poetics’ as ‘housemaking’ and how it applies to the film. 

For those less familiar with Arnold and her work, I’ll briefly run through her trajectory and themes that crop up repeatedly in her films. She first worked in television, before making three short films, the third of which, Wasp (2003), earned her an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short. Her next two feature films, Red Road (2006) and Fish Tank (2009) both won the Jury Prize at Cannes. Since then, she’s adapted Wuthering Heights for the screen in 2011; the feature film American Honey and documentary, Cow were released in 2021. Many of her films cast newcomers in the lead roles —Fish Tank, American Honey and Bird included, painting expansive, emotional portraits of young, often working-class people. Socio-economic problems, class struggle and sexual desire are ruminated on, often in the form of coming-of-age films. 

Now, a brief definition of ecopoetics: ecopoetry attempts, through form and theme, to offer insights into interrelationships between nature and culture, language and perception. Writers investigate how syntax, or the shape of the poem may express an ecological ethics. C.A. Conrad’s Ecodeviance: (Soma)tics for the Future Wilderness offers a ‘subversive syllabus for a queer ecopoetics.’ Other brilliant examples of ecopoetry include My First Black Nature Poem™ by LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs and Daisy Lafarge’s collection Life Without Air. I’d also point you towards Māori poet Robert Sullivan’s work, and Craig Santos Perez, but of course there are many, many more writers to find. Ecopoetry has many foci, from the legacies of colonialism and capitalism on land, water and bodies, to activism and archiving. 

So, how does Bird engage with an ecological ethics? Communications, in this essay referring to man-made technology that exchanges or imparts information about oneself, plays a noticeable role in the film. First, tattooing: Bug’s body is covered with tattoos of a worm, spider, dragonfly, beetle, and the words ‘Bug Life’, thus enmeshing him in the natural world. The physical body of the main character is inscribed with insects: looking at him requires us to acknowledge the simultaneous existence of all the bugs on him and living in the world, and also how he may interact within this world. 

Naming in the film is also illuminating, not just in the denotive ‘Bug’. The choice speaks to how nicknames can be used to tell more about a person’s character. It’s not just him: there’s Bird, Bug’s son Hunter, and even Bailey sounds like ‘bay leaf’. These human activities of naming and self-ornamenting communicate their affection for the natural world, and demonstrate ways in which we strive to connect with the environment in the modern day. 

There are many tender moments in the film, and often these feature animals interacting with humans, for example, when Bailey wakes up in a field with many horses. The close-up shots are used for both Bailey and the horses, and the sound of pleasure she makes echoes their snuffling. She films them on her personal device, and in doing so, highlights how phones can hold memories and preserve this encounter for her. She continues to film the animals around her throughout the film. She records the butterfly that lands on her figure, again a very special moment that she can relive. The high-definition camera presents this act in a positive way, because it gives her the space to absorb the creatures, rewatch them and understand them.  

Indeed, the myriad ways of capturing the moving image in this film offers an ecological ethics of filmmaking itself. The handheld shooting technique emulates the way in which ecopoetry often adopts a more ‘organic form’: a language of the body and the natural rhythms of thought. The handheld camera draws an equivalence between the wheeling birds in the sky, and the erratic movements of humans: running, chasing one another, riding an electric scooter. Bailey’s own projector enables her to watch a human-sized Bird standing on top of a building. It gives her the opportunity to reflect on her memories of him, and enables her to perhaps change her understanding of Bird and of the moments shared between them. 

From interviews with the cast and with Arnold herself, even the logistics of making the film seem ecologically-minded. In an interview with Franz Rogowski who plays the titular character, he recounted that ‘“[Arnold] would wait for the right moment to come, like a hunter, for hours and hours to wait for a bunch of kids to calm down until they could walk across a meadow and own the meadow and be in their own territory instead of being forced to pretend to do something naturally. And that’s her message.” There are many ways to direct, to cast, to film, yet Arnold appears to prioritise more instinctive methods in order to bring a deeper sense of sincerity to her characters and their worlds.

One of the things the film does so incredibly well is to quietly, but firmly, build the characters into flourishing, intricate and large universes that crash and swirl with one another, with ups and downs, idiosyncrasies, dreams and realities, struggles and successes. Jonathan Skinner translates the terms of ecopoetics as ‘house making’, and I think is what much of the film is about: showing lives weaving in and out of one another, both animal and human. 

I’d go as far as to suggest that animals, amphibians and insects shape the plot of the film just as much as the humans themselves. The hallucinogenic, slime-producing toad and its moneymaking potential pushes Bug to get married to Kayleigh, as he believes he’ll be able to afford that and more through selling the slime. Not only that, but as Bug and his friends try to initiate the slime production, they play music for it. Bug learns that the toad appreciates sincere music more, and as Coldplay rings out, a different tone settles over the film, more contemplative and caring. Bug’s demeanour changes, and it pushes him to be more present in Hunter and Bailey’s personal tales in the film.

The animals begin to act in mysterious ways that border on the magical, almost as if they understand what’s going on with the humans. It’s a crow that picks up Hunter’s note and drops it on his girlfriend’s balcony. After Bailey screams into the wind, it rushes back at her, announcing Bird’s surprising arrival, and it’s he, changed into a bird, who removes Peyton’s abusive partner. Or, is it Bailey’s imagination? Perhaps the animals’ attention to the humans and the magic in the film leaks out through Bailey’s eyes.  However, this makes it no less meaningful. Rather, the power of humans to connect with the animals and manifest a reality in which they interrelate more closely than, perhaps, they do in the so-called real world. As Bird blurs the boundary between avian creature and human, so Bailey begins to notice the birds, butterflies and foxes around her, and her final fox-eyed glow at the end signals a metamorphosis, a potential capacity to become an animal, or a hatching of a new being who’s enveloped in the animal world. With her greater emotional depth and closer relationship to her surroundings, I believe this is a beautiful, ecopoetic finish. 

To summarise, the film leans into the intricate, vivid inner worlds of its characters, from their big dreams to their fantasies. The inclusion of magic, which is sparked by animals in the film, develops into an expanded consciousness of the film populated by many creatures. Frogs, butterflies, horses and the wind —all influence the plot just as much as the humans do, and it’s a messy, interconnected, quarrelling group that can’t be divided from one another in the making of their futures. 

The Migrant Perspective on the German Federal Elections

Statement by the Bloque Latinoamericano on the upcoming Bundestagswahl

Introduction

The Bundestag elections will take place on 23rd February. For those who look with horror, and often a sense of powerlessness, at the advance of the far-right, the question of who to vote for is especially fraught. The majority of members of our organisation, just as the migrant community in general, do not have the right to vote. However the election results will impact us more than almost any other group of the population; we are the central theme of this electoral campaign, all the politicians talk about us; but it seems no one is really interested in talking with us. In spite of this, or more precisely because of this, we’ve taken the liberty of expressing our opinion; analysing our situation, considering the global and national context in which the elections are taking place, and finally addressing who we should vote for, and why.

We also want to point out the limitations of parliamentary politics, and we call for debate and joint action between organisations of the left, where struggles over the living and working conditions of migrants are strategically important. We’ve seen in history how neglecting this leads to failures of the workers’ movement, as for example with the Turkish workers strikes at Ford Germany in the 1970s.

The migration debate as a smokescreen

For years now the political parties have competed to see who has the hardest line against us migrants. With the BSW or the FDP, with Merz’s 5 point plan, Scholz’s mass deportation plans, or Habeck’s (morally painful, of course) detention camps outside EU frontiers, all have added to the racist discourse which converts migrants into the scapegoats for bad economic management, the shortage of housing, insecurity, and even the difficulty of getting an appointment with the dentist. At the same time, our existence is used to justify the expansion of state repression and the simultaneous reduction of the welfare state. We are excluded from democratic participation, we can’t vote, we can rarely go on strike as trade unions don’t usually make policy around the needs of migrants, and we have to live with the fear of being attacked or criminalised by the police when we take part in demonstrations, or as we go about our our daily lives; this can lead to the loss of residence permit and, if Merz and company have their way, in the future the loss of the right to dual nationality, which is already difficult to achieve. Meanwhile physical attacks on migrants are increasing. If policy announcements made during this electoral campaign are implemented, this deprivation of rights, and the precariousness of migrants’ lives in Germany, will only increase in the future.

But why has incitement to racism against migrants become the main theme of the political parties? It quickly becomes clear that the main issue is not security, if we take into account the little attention paid to the terrifying statistics for gender-based violence in Germany. In the last year alone 360 women were murdered, and the number of hate crimes against LBGTQ people was ten times that of 2017. However this issue is hardly mentioned in the current electoral campaign. The racist discourse is essentially a smokescreen that hides the real interests that lie behind it. The same goes for the narrative put forward by the self-described “centre parties”, who point to the AfD as the cause of this racism, since with its electoral successes it is forcing the other parties to shift towards the right. The AfD is the vanguard of the right in this country; it has succeeded in presenting itself as a radical opposition to the establishment, offering its voters an explanation for their problems and apparent solutions – it uses the methods of the right, which is rising worldwide and is strongly interconnected at the international level, and is boosted by the continuing failure of neoliberal capitalism and the inability of the established parties to provide answers or improve the living conditions of the great majority. That the other parties are now following the AfD down this road has reasons beyond wanting to take seriously the wishes of “concerned citizens” and their fear of migrants. In reality, it’s not about permitting less immigration and deporting all those who don’t hold a German passport until there are only “Germans” living in Germany – rather, it’s about controlling immigration and migrant workers.

The global context

To understand why things are like this, we have to take into account the economic and political conditions both in Germany and globally. We live in a world with multiple crises. Capitalism is a chronically unstable system which has generated cyclical economic crises since its birth. And we are now seeing capitalism being shaken by additional crises, such as the coronavirus pandemic, which are increasingly frequent as ecological systems collapse.

In the context of these crises international conflicts are rapidly intensifying. Although the USA is still the strongest imperial power in the world, reflected, among other things, by its military spending – in 2023, the USA spend of $916 billion was more than double that of China and Russia combined – US hegemony is collapsing. The result is an intensification of conflicts between rival power blocs – above all between China and the US – and the increasing incapacity of the US to take on this confrontation alone. In this context, it is increasing pressure on the EU to ramp up military capacity, without wanting to give up control over its smaller allies. As a result these allies see themselves drawn into the sharpening conflict with China and Russia and therefore more tied to the US. Besides this, and the increased military strike capability, rearmament also serves to boost the use of capital.

Greater economic and military competitiveness requires strong internal control of workers. To be able to compete internationally, bosses want to be sure that workers are willing to work for low wages without complaining or thinking of striking for pay rises. The fear the representatives of capital have of this happening was shown clearly last year during the train drivers’ union (GDL) industrial dispute. Spokespeople for the FDP and the German employers’ association (BdA), among others, demanded restrictions on the right to strike in “critical infrastructure” sectors, and in situations where companies saw their competitiveness affected. Besides, they encourage workers to think that, if necessary, they should be ready to sacrifice their own lives in the trenches in the interests of German capital. But the fine words regarding the defence of democracy and moral responsibility with which this is justified are shown to be hollow when one takes into account Germany’s arms exports to countries like Saudi Arabia, Israel and Turkey.

The national context

But what do racist discourse and politics have to do with the intensification of international competition? The connection lies in their central importance to the German economy and to the control of workers. A racist discourse is not at all incompatible with immigration, rather it serves the purpose of keeping immigration and migrants under control, and being able to use them as a means of pressure against local workers to keep them submissive.

At the start of the 2000s under the SPD-Green government of Gerhard Schroeder the welfare state was dismantled through Agenda 2010, and an enormous low-paid sector was created. Combined with an ultra-modern industrial infrastructure, these low wage costs made Germany a very attractive production centre and its capital more competitive internationally. The reduction of wage levels also destroyed demand in the German domestic market, but this wasn’t a problem for German capital, as it specialised in exports and has been able to conquer foreign markets thanks to its competitiveness. To date, this has led to the European customs and monetary unions preventing other EU states with less competitive capital from protecting their domestic markets from German capital, either through tariffs or by devaluing their currency to promote their own exports.

Maintaining this export-driven economic model requires a large pool of cheap labour. However, the birth rate in Germany doesn’t allow for this so there’s not just a shortage of young workers for the export industry, but also a shortage of nursing staff. In order to solve both problems in the most cost-effective way possible, Germany relies on the recruitment of qualified personnel from abroad. This has the advantage that Germany doesn’t have to pay for their training, and it’s also much easier to keep migrant workers under control than German workers because migrants are not unionised nor even politically organised when they arrive in Germany – a situation maintained through the omnipresent threat of deportation, imposing the acceptance of lower wages.

In order to maintain this control even after naturalisation, the possibility of withdrawing German nationality is being discussed. The deprivation of rights of migrant workers also allows capitalists to reduce the wages of German workers, since whenever these demand better working conditions and higher wages they face the threat of being replaced by “cheaper’” foreign workers. This not only puts pressure on wages, but also pits different sections of the working class – migrants and Germans – against each other, and impedes solidarity.

Racist debates on migration, deprivation of rights and the de facto abolition of the right to asylum, as well as cruel and often arbitrary deportation practices, have several functions in this context. They serve to structure migration in such a way that only skilled workers needed by the economy can enter the country, and to keep out asylum seekers and other migrants who are unproductive for capital. In addition, the precarious residence permits and the increasingly repressive laws make it possible to restrict the political activity and organisation of migrants already living in Germany. The resolution on antisemitism, which was criticised for being politically instrumentalised, and which was approved recently in the Bundestag, together with the narrative of “imported antisemitism” is a good example of this kind of politics. Its practical application can be seen in the criminalisation and violent restriction of fundamental rights in the context of the demonstrations against the genocide in Palestine, alongside the militarisation, for racist reasons, of districts with migrant populations. The possibility and speed of naturalisation linked to economic integration, and the possibility of revoking it in case of criminality (for example, if justified by the resolution on antisemitism) is another example of the orientation of migration policy towards the interests of capital. By creating a climate of fear, the aim is to ensure that migrants do not dare to oppose their precarious living conditions (a necessary condition for German capital) and much less to express their opinion on German foreign policy.

Linking residence permits to earning capacity affects women in particular, as they are often the ones who take care of their children at home and take on other reproductive tasks outside the job market. The capitalist system could not exist without this reproductive work, as without it new workers would not be born and raised, and without emotional care work, cooking, washing, cleaning, shopping, etc., the labour force couldn’t be renewed. Yet, for capital, reproductive labour is not “productive”, as it is not integrated into the market and therefore not valued. Moreover, this work is carried out in the private sphere and therefore becomes invisible. In any case, it is unpaid, so women, especially migrant women, are forced additionally to take on market-integrated work to ensure the livelihood of their families. Migrant women are now threatened with expulsion if unable to perform both unpaid reproductive work and precarious wage work – the result, as planned, is that (poorly) paid care work in this country is mainly carried out by migrant women.

In the same way, other people who are unproductive from the perspective of capital, i.e. all those who do reproductive work or who for various reasons are not in a position to do paid work – e.g. the elderly, the disabled and the chronically ill – are branded as useless or even worthy of contempt. The aim is the same as the racist incitement against migrants, and the images of enemies constructed in this way partly overlap.

In parallel, the racist discourse offers an explanation for the decline in living standards of German workers and diverts attention from the real causes – the exploitation by the capitalists and the huge investments in the militarisation of society. Moreover, the spectacular and brutal demonstrations of power against migrants and the general repression have plunged workers and civil society into a state of paralysing fear and hatred. Although it is clear that we, as racialised migrants, suffer especially from the daily violence, this is ultimately about crushing the organised social and political forces that dare to confront the power of capital. For a more extensive analysis, read our text Crisis, organizacion popular y futuro

The political context

In line with the needs of German capital, from the AfD to the CDU, through the FDP, the SPD, the Greens and the BSW, there is unanimity in inciting racist hate against migrants and the unemployed. Some parties, such as the Greens, can appear a little less inhuman and put more emphasis on their obligation to human rights – however they also voted in favour of detention camps outside the EU’s frontiers, they emphasise economic integration as the core element of migration policy, and enthusiastically promote confrontation with other capitalist power blocs and therefore militarisation. Robert Habeck’s words after 7th October 2023 directed at Muslims, in which he also called them Germans almost as an afterthought, resonates with us. The same happened with the words of Annalena Baerbock when she declared that hospitals and schools could lose their protected status in some situations, independently of whether the wounded, children, or as is usually the case, wounded children seek refuge there. The Greens are the party that tries to maintain an image of an enlightened Germany, but this is only an image projected so that those who, with reason, are put off by the narratives of the other parties can feel morally comfortable voting Green.

Vote, and much more!

Although we’re now urging people to vote, we’re aware that change won’t come through parliaments. Political decisions are taken there, so the party composition of the debating chamber has some influence, but the biggest influence in these decisions and in social change in general lies in relations of power formed outside parliament. This was shown recently when the CDU’s proposal to limit immigration was voted down following massive demonstrations which had taken place two days earlier in response to majority support for a CDU Bundestag resolution.

To change this balance of power in our favour in a sustainable way it’s essential to counteract the incitement to racism against migrants with a policy recognising that only joint struggle for better living conditions for migrants will also improve the living conditions of the rest of the working population. Recognising the central role of migrants in the class struggle, and being prepared to build appropriate alliances, is, in our view, a prerequisite for the movement against the advance of the right to succeed.

At the moment we don’t see any parliamentary force clearly defending this position. However, it’s important that there is a voice in Parliament opposing the monotone of racist incitement, showing people who are not interested in parliamentary politics, or who simply have no contact with it, that an alternative exists. Currently Die Linke offers the only voice of this type – if it was not present in the Bundestag, this voice would cease to exist and the racist discourse would be carried without opposition in parliamentary debates and media coverage.

We have many differences of opinion and criticisms of Die Linke. For example, the party has repeatedly betrayed workers’ struggles at city level and has participated in, and even led, deportations, notably in Thuringia. In foreign policy the party’s anti-militarist positions have lost credibility and with regard to the genocide in Gaza one can only speak of a total failure.

However, there are sections of Die Linke which have chosen a different path and are taking party renovation seriously. In Neukoelln, Die Linke have put up Ferat Kocak as direct candidate, someone who represents for us a ray of hope inside the party for his attitude towards international solidarity, his vision of working at the grassroots where the voices of migrants have central importance, and his attitude towards Palestine. In the Saxony state elections the electoral campaign for Nam Duy Nguyen showed the potential of these positions for the renovation of Die Linke if they are combined with with a participative and democratic practice. Our support goes to these forces and we hope that they take us seriously as comrades in the struggle.

Only if Die Linke integrates broader parts of different movements, not only in party work, but in seeking dialogue with migrant organisations and other extra-parliamentary social and political organisations to jointly and on an equal footing elaborate projects and political demands, and goes beyond an instrumental relationship with its electorate and especially with those of us who have no voice in elections, will its renewal be sustainable and the interaction between extra-parliamentary and parliamentary forces be fruitful.

In this sense, while being fully conscious of the limitations of parliamentary democracy under capitalism, and of the differences of opinion and criticisms towards the party, we call for a Die Linke vote in the Bundestag elections on 23rd February.

Besides, we call for first vote support for the candidates Ines Heider (Revolutionary Internationalist Organisation) in Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg, and Franziska Thomas (Revolutionary Socialist Organisation) in Tempelhof-Schoeneberg. Their programmes include demands that we too make of Die Linke, such as the right to vote for migrants, the expropriation of big businesses and an end to the genocide in Gaza.

Thirdly, we make a call to the organised left to come together to carry out strategic debates which go beyond these elections and can contribute to overcome the sectarian fragmentation and the resulting social irrelevance of the radical left in Germany. These must understand immigration, racism and cis-hetero patriarchy as integral parts of the reproduction of capital and in consequence organise their struggle for peace and dignity for everyone.

The right is strengthening everywhere, from Orban to Trump and Netanyahu, to Bukele, Bolsonaro and Milei, and is organising at the international level in spite of all its political differences. Our struggle must also be at both the national and international level, we must be internationalists!

We are migrants who organise ourselves for a world with neither centres nor peripheries. We are migrants who believe in the freedom to migrate as a right. We are Germans who are raising our voice, we are Germans categorised as migrants, we are those who are persecuted for holding a different opinion, seen as the “other”, as unproductive, undesired. We are the rejected East, we are the Global South in rebellion. We are many, more than they want.

This article is also available in German, Spanish, and Portuguese. Translation from the Spanish: Ian Perry. Reproduced with Permission

 

Dutch Labour Court confirms: Firing of Palestinian employee by Dutch company over solidarity with Palestinian resistance was discriminatory

Statement by the European Legal Support Center

Palestinian employee Nouraldin Alsweirki has won a landmark legal victory over his former employer, Dutch software company Speakap B.V., which fired him in October 2023 over LinkedIn posts in which he supported the right of the Palestinian people to resist the Israeli occupation. This dismissal had significant consequences not only for Nouraldin but also for his family in Gaza. The Court of Amsterdam affirmed on 1 November 2024 that Speakap had discriminated against Nouraldin based on his political beliefs and ordered the company to pay a significant amount of compensation to him. Now, three months later, Speakap has officially let the deadline to appeal the Court’s decision expire, making the judgement final.

On 30 August 2023, Nouraldin, who is from Gaza and lived as a refugee in Turkey at the time, signed an employment contract with Speakap accepting the role of Frontend Engineer. In the days following 7 October 2023, he wrote many LinkedIn posts expressing his support for the right of the Palestinian people to resist the Israeli occupation. At that time, several of his relatives and friends were killed in Gaza by the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF). On 17 October 2023, Speakap informed Nouraldin that he had been dismissed on the ground that some colleagues would experience discomfort at his “strong personal opinions”. Earlier, the company had asked Nouraldin whether he would be willing to remove his LinkedIn contributions whenever requested, which he agreed to comply with.

Significant consequences

The decision meant that Nouraldin’s visa and residence permit were no longer valid to travel to the Netherlands. Having already given up his place and belongings in Turkey, Nouraldin was forced to apply for asylum in the Netherlands. As a result, with its decision Speakap had ensured that the evacuation of Nouraldin’s wife and family from the Israeli genocidal onslaught on Gaza was made impossible since a person who has applied for asylum cannot apply for family reunification until they have their residency permit in the Netherlands.

No impunity for employers like Speakap

Nouraldin decided to fight back. He contacted the European Legal Support Center (ELSC), and through the lawyer Seyma Arikan from Spuistraat 10 Advocaten he filed a claim for unlawful dismissal. Following the decision issued by the Dutch Human Rights Board (College voor de Rechten van de Mens) in June 2024, the Court of Amsterdam in November 2024 ruled that Speakap had discriminated against Nouraldin on the basis of his political beliefs. This is unlawful under Article 7:681 of the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek) and under the Equal Treatment Act (Algemene wet gelijke behandeling). The Court ordered Speakap to pay Nouraldin a significant compensation not only for unlawful dismissal but also for emotional harm inflicted.

A landmark legal victory

The Court’s judgement demonstrates that expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people and criticism of Israel, including speaking out for the right of the Palestinian people to resist occupation also through armed struggle, are protected political beliefs on the basis of which you cannot be discriminated against according to Dutch anti-discrimination law. Resisting the Israeli colonial occupation that has been committing crimes against humanity since at least 1948, the right of the Palestinian people to armed struggle is enshrined in international law in Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and reinforced in UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions such as 37/43 from 1982.

This legal victory arrives at a critical moment in the Dutch context, amidst growing anti-Palestinian repression and a racist Dutch government increasingly attacking fundamental rights. The ELSC has observed a rise in workplace censorship, including in the Netherlands, where employees expressing solidarity with Palestine face intensified silencing. Although generally lacking any legal grounds, (the mere threat of) disciplinary investigation, dismissal, online surveillance, and harassment can create a chilling effect deterring workers from expressing solidarity with Palestine and standing up against the grave human rights violations in which employers may even be complicit. Often these cases go unrecorded as workers are worried about their employment. This legal victory, however, demonstrates that there can no longer be impunity for employers that repress anti-genocide, anti-apartheid, and anti-colonial voices – and the ELSC encourages employees to speak out, to keep records of the repression by an employer wherever it occurs, and to reach out to the ELSC for legal support or advice.

Nouraldin Alsweirki commented: “Genocide is highly radioactive; no distance keeps you safe from it. People should never feel safe to commit or enable crimes as that creates a very dark and despicable world for all of us, a world where your same justifications to shed blood will be reused to shed yours and other innocent’s. Everybody has a duty to oppose genocide.”

Juul Seesing, from the ELSC, said: “Speakap is an employer like so many in the Netherlands; their business-as-usual will not be inconvenienced by people speaking out against a genocidal occupation. According to companies like Speakap, Palestinians are supposed to do their jobs silently amidst an ongoing genocide against their people because it might make a privileged person or two ‘uncomfortable’. Let this case be a message to all employers complicit in repressing dissent and discriminating against people experiencing and opposing genocide, apartheid, and settler colonialism; your time of impunity is over.”

Lawyer Seyma Arikan, from Spuistraat 10 Advocaten, concluded: “First the verdict of the Human Rights Board and now the ruling of the Court emphasise that dismissal on the basis of one’s political views is unlawful, obviously also when those views oppose the Israeli apartheid regime. These rulings respect the constitutional right to equal treatment and underscore the prohibition of discrimination based on political beliefs.”

Migrant Worker Solidarity Movement

Empowering migrant workers to facilitate transformational change in Berlin

The Migrant Worker Solidarity Movement is an initiative that is committed to empowering migrant workers and activists in Berlin to build resilient communities, advocate for better wages, and ensure equitable representation in the workplace. By building alliances of Berlin migrant workers across low-wage and tech sectors, this project will provide training, workshops, peer-mentoring, assemblies and collective action support to equip migrant communities with the skills to organize, advocate, and lead campaigns for their rights in the workplace. We envision a Berlin where migrant workers have the power to enact systemic change!

The Migrant Worker Solidarity Movement is funded by the Bewegungsstiftung, It is now launching a Migrant Worker Needs Survey to better understand the concerns of the community.

How You Can Contribute:

  • Fill out this survey (you can also use the QR Code below)
  • Encourage fellow migrant workers and organizational members to participate in the survey. The more responses we receive, the better we can tailor our initiatives for collective needs. Share our instagram post on the survey on your story via the link below.
  • Stay engaged! In May, we will host an initial community social gathering, followed by a goal-setting workshop in June, to outline key priorities. From this point, we can begin to organize trainings, workshops, and community support initiatives to strengthen worker rights. We want to hear from you!
  • Take Action Now!

You can contact the Migrant Worker Solidarity Movement via the following channels:

News from Berlin and Germany, 19th February 2025

Weekly round-up from Berlin and Germany

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Berlin: public transport on strike this week

For five weeks, ver.di and BVG havebeen negotiating over pay. In the wage dispute with Berlin’s public transport operators, the trade union has called for another warning strike, affirming that the company “has still not understood that the employees will not accept a real wage reduction.” Following this, next Thursday and Friday (February 20-21), Berlin’s public transport system will be on strike. Metro lines, buses and trams will not be running. The strike is to last for around 48 hours from the start of the shift until the early hours of Saturday morning, as announced by the union. Source: rbb

“The strike affects us all”

The union ver.di has called for a strike in Berlin on Thursday and Friday in the wage dispute in the public sector at federal and municipal level. Among those taking part: employees of Berlin’s municipal waste disposal service (BSR), water company (BWB) and swimming pool company (BBB). A demonstration on the issue took place in Berlin-Mitte, where demonstrators marched from Leipziger Straße via Alte Jakobstraße up to Spittelmarkt. However, in response to a suspected attack in Munich, the union called off the demonstration early. Beyond the workers, organization such as “Berlin Stands Together” support the industrial action. Source: berliner Zeitung

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

BSW calls for a minute’s silence in the Bundestag for victims of the Gaza war

After the Bundestag honored the many innocent victims of the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2024, Sahra Wagenknecht’s alliance party (BSW) is now proposing to commemorate the tens of thousands of Palestinians killed in the Gaza war. In the related document, the BSW also condemns the US President Donald Trump’s plans to resettle the inhabitants of the Gaza Strip and criticises the fact that the German government “has not imposed an arms freeze on the Israeli government even after Trump’s resettlement plans”. The BSW is once again calling for a halt to armsdeliveries to Israel in view of the announced breaches of international law by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. Source: spiegel

Transport and public sector strikeshit cities across Germany

A wave of transport and public sector strikes hit Germany last week as ver.di continues pay negotiations on behalf of thousands of workers. There was, for instance, a public transport “warning strike” in Frankfurt on February 12. In Essen and Mülheim an der Ruhr, employees at the Ruhrbahn company also went on strike on the same day. One day later, in Hamburg, travellers were also affected by strikes at the airport. It wasn’t just public transport affected by the industrial action, as employees in several public services, including Kitas, hospitals and rubbish collection, also in multiple federal states. Source: iamexpat

Muslims have little trust in German politics

A recent study by the DeZIM Institute reveals a worrying trend: Muslims’ trust in politics fell drastically between 2022 and 2024. Indeed, only 28% of Muslim women surveyed in 2024 said they had confidence in the German government – a drop of 13% compared to 2022. This loss of trust is not only a political problem, but also an indicator of the growing political alienation of marginalised groups who increasingly no longer feel represented by the government and political institutions. These feelings are particularlyheightened in times of social polarisation, which have been exacerbated by political crises and migration issues. Source: islamiq

Number of right-wing extremist offences rises

The number of right-wing extremist offences registered in Germany rose to a record high in 2024. The total number was at least 41,406 offences, according to the federal government’s response to a question from the Bundestag Vice President Petra Pau (Left Party). The figures are still preliminary and might increase due to late reports. Nancy Faeser (SPD) said in January, when the rise in figures became apparent, that “all the instruments of our constitutional state are being used to protect people in our country.” She considered that the increase also shows there are more investigations being carried out. Source: msn

What’s next for the climate movement in Germany?

Climate protection is hardly an issue before the general election, coming on February 23. The mood currently prevailing in Germany is very different from the optimistic momentum that Pit Terjung, a spokesperson of the environmental group “Fridays for Future”, experienced during the mass demonstrations in 2019. Back then, an estimated 1.4 million people took to the streets for more climate protection. In contrast to the 2021 federal election, where the issue was at the top of the agenda, climate protection is being overshadowed in the current election campaign by heated debates about immigration, a weakening economy and the rise of the far right. Source: dw

Federal Public Prosecutor Generaltakes over investigation

Following the attack in Munich, where a 24-year-old had driven into a group of demonstrators from the ver.di trade union last Thursday leaving two dead and more than thirty injured, the Federal Public Prosecutor General has taken over the investigation. The Federal Public Prosecutor General is the supreme federal prosecution authority. The investigators have evidence that the man had an Islamist motive. He remains in incustody. So far, there is no proof that the man was part of a network. The investigators also have no leads to connections to the terrorist organisations such as Islamic State (IS) nor to any other people involved. Source: tagesschau

Does Germany have to choose between climate and economy?

Jobs, income and Germany’s weakening economy are important topics in the election campaign for the early federal elections in February – and some of the parties’ promises are at the expense ofclimate protection. Economic issues seem to be taking precedence over climate ones, even though, according to the Climate Alliance Germany, the majority of the population do not want this. Climate protection measures are nevertheless not responsible for this recession, says Gunnar Luderer, energy expert at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research., adding “The problems of the German economy are of a structural nature and they run deeper.” Source: dw