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Letter from the Editors: 1 June 2023

No Deportations from BER airport, benefit concert for Palestine, and author of book on Modi and Israel visits Berlin


01/06/2023


Hello everyone,

Today is the first day of the Stop Deportation! Protest Camp. At the Berlin-Brandenburg Airport, the government plans to build a massive deportation prison. Already now, mass deportations via charter flights silently take place there every month. To help break the silence, the “Stop Deportation! Protest Camp” is being organised in Schönefeld from June 1-6 2023. You can find a full programme of Events here. The Stop Deportations Protest Camp is our Campaign of the Week.

On Saturday, theleftberlin supporter Rohit will be organising 2 Events – a Decolonising Yoga session at 9am, and a BIPOC only Rest as resistance workshop at 2pm. Readers of theleftberlin have also set up a Telegram channel so that they can visit the Camp together. You can join the channel here.

Tomorrow (Friday), at 6:30pm, there will be a free screening of the film Dictionary of Waste. This year marks the 30-year anniversary of the garbage explosion in Ümraniye (Istanbul) that left 39 people dead. Rather than focusing on the political leaders and their play that is unfolding in Turkey the director shed light on the lives of those that are most affected by the politics of the ruling class. After the screening, there will be an open microphone for exchange and discussion with the audience. Alper Şen, the filmmaker, is also planning to join us via Zoom. The Event is organised by the POC ART Collective and will take place at Bona Peiser, Oranienstraße 72.

Also tomorrow night, from 8pm there will be a No Justice No Pizza Concert and DJ Set for Palestine. This year the repression against solidarity with Palestine in Berlin reached a new level: a month before and a week after the 75th anniversary of the Nakba on 15 May, the right of assembly was suspended, demonstrations were banned, arrests were made. This is the second year that the bans hit the Palestinian community in the city and those who support it. Once again, police and many media have worked hand in hand and created a campaign of criminalisation and delegitimisation of a movement in which Palestinians, Jews and internationalists fight side by side. This benefit concert will take place at the Rote Insel, Mansteinstr. 10, near S-and U-Bahn Yorckstraße.

On Monday, there will be a demonstration- Abolish Deportations. As part of the Stop Deportation! Protest Camp, we will march together upon the infrastructure of deportation that is spread around Berlin airport. The demo will start at the Protest Camp at “Kiekebusch See” at 1.30 pm, and there will be shuttle transport arriving at City Hall Schönefeld for 2pm. The demo will then visit the Planned Site of the Deportation Center.

On Tuesday, at 6.30pm, there will be a screening of All Eyes on You, a film based on and exploring the topic of the use of artificial intelligence in CCTV surveillance. Mannheim is the first German city that experiments with this technique and more than 60 new cameras all over the city center, installed to detect ‘suspicious movements’. What is a suspicious movement, how do Mannheimers feel about this new technology and does being watched all the time really help? The film will be shown at the TU Halle 4, Institut für Architektur, Straße des 17. Juni 152. It will be followed by a discussion with director Michaela Kobsa-Mark.

Also on Tuesday evening, the LINKE Berlin Internationals and the India Justice Project are organising a reception for Azad Essa, senior reporter at the Middle East Eye. Azad Essa is be in Berlin to promote his new book Hostile Homelands: The New Alliance Between India and Israel, and will be speaking at a Book Presentation next Friday (more information in next week’s Newsletter). Tuesday’s reception is at Café Karanfil, Weisestraße 3, and will start at 8pm.

Remember that the Berlin LINKE Internationals Summer Camp starts in 9 days’ time. If you are going to Summer Camp, please fill in this form. even if you think you have registered. If you don’t fill in the form, there may not be enough food available – you can also use the form to register for free accommodation. You can see a full programme for Summer Camp here. There will be much more information in next week’s Newsletter.

There are many more activities this week in Berlin, which are listed on our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed, list of Events which we are directly involved in here.

In News from Berlin, more Turks in Berlin voted Erdogan than in other European capitals, and the source of the data leak at Tesla is still unclear.

In News from Germany, police throughout Germany raid Last Generation activists, 3.5 million people in Germany have at least 2 jobs, strikes cause a rise in union membership, politicians commemorate the fatal arson attack at Solingen, and affordable changes to make heating environmentally friendly need new practises in industry.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin this week, we interview Udi Raz from the Jüdische Stimme about press representation of their Nakba protest. Hossam El-Hamalawy writes the first of several articles on the Egyptian Left – this time from the 1919 Revolution to Nasser, Ivan Fradejas de la Vega writes about racism in Spanish football, Mimi Magill asks who profits from deportations from Berlin’s new detention centre, and Partho Sarothi Ray looks at worrying results from recent elections in India.

Today’s Video of the Week is the English language version of the recent Jewish Bund video about attacks on commemoration of the Nakba.

You can follow us on the following social media:

If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors: 25th May 2023

Protect Asylum Rights, 9 Years 100% Tempelhofer Feld, and Marxismuss


24/05/2023

Hello everyone,

This evening (Thursday), the Berlin Worker Center and BEMA (the Beratungszentrum Migration und Gute Arbeit) are organising a Community conversation about your rights at work as an immigrant in Germany. They are offering an opportunity to connect with other workers and immigrants over food and drinks, to learn more about the Berlin Worker Center and BEMA, and to speak to legal counsellors about worker rights. It’s at Siegfried-Hirschmann-Park 1, and starts at 5:30pm.

Also this evening, at 6pm, there’s a rally No displacement at this address!, at Hermannstraße 48. Residents of Hermannstraße 48 are calling on Tina Sahr, manger of “Hermannshof 48 Grundbesitzgesellschaft GmbH” to: stop the displacement of residents in their house, and to sell to a state-owned housing association or to a cooperative! They also call on the state of Berlin to finally withdraw their house from the speculative real estate market and create safe, social housing in the middle of Neukölln!

Tomorrow is the start of the Marxismuss Conference in the Neues Deutschland building, Franz-Mehring Platz 1. Hundreds of activists from throughout Germany and beyond will come together in Berlin to discuss and network. The Marxismuss conference begins on Friday with a seminar day. During which, we take a full day to introduce different aspects of Marxist theory. On the following days, the conference offers over 100 meetings – a diverse and exciting programme of presentations, debates and panel discussions, including a range of meetings in English. Marxismuss is our Campaign of the Week.

Tomorrow also sees a demonstration No Asylum Compromise 2.0. Thirty years ago, tens of thousands demonstrated in Germany against the so-called asylum compromise. The aim was to stop changes in basic law which would have led to a massive limitation of the right to asylum. Today there could be an even worse asylum compromise. The EU is planning a reform of the Common European Asylum System, which would drastically restrict the right to asylum and legalise pushbacks. The demonstration against the new law starts at 5:30pm at Willy Brandt Haus – the SPD headquarters.

On Sunday, there’s a celebration of 9 years since the referendum which stopped building on Tempelhofer Feld – a referendum result which in part led to Deutsche Wohnen & CO Enteignen. The free festival includes music and takes place on the Western edge of the field, between the Paradestraße and Tempelhof entrances. It will take place from 2pm till 4pm, and again from 8pm till 9:30pm. You can book free tickets here. Donations are welcome.

Next Thursday is the start of the Stop Deportation Camp at BER airport. We’re planning an article on theleftberlin.com at the beginning of next week with more information, and there’ll be plenty in next week’s Newsletter.

You can still book accommodation and, if needed, inform us of any dietary restrictions you may have for the Berlin LINKE Internationals Summer Camp by using this link to register. Summer Camp is on 10th-11th June in the Naturfreundehaus Hermsdorf on the edge of Berlin. Note: initially we planned on hosting a meeting on Trans Rights, but this unfortunately is no longer available. Instead, activists from Sudan Uprising will be talking about the current situation in Sudan. You can see a full updated programme here.

There are many more activities this week in Berlin, which are listed on our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed, list of Events which we are directly involved in here.

In News from Berlin, people with disabilities still face restrictions in the labour market, and climate activists block Deutsche Bank to protest at its Greenwashing,

In News from Germany, retail workers strike throughout Germany, over 20% of people in Germany live in poverty, a new study shows inadequate reporting of police violence, German children’s reading skills have dropped dramatically, and Germany has a new finance minister.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin this week, we interview Palestinian Artists Rasha Al Jundi and Michael Jabareen about the discrimination they have suffered in Germany, the European Legal Support Centre opposes the ban of Palestinian demonstrations in Berlin,  Pablo Abufom Silva asks why Chilean President Gabriel Boric just lost an important referendum, Dimitra Kyrillou in Athens looks at the politics behind Greece’s election last weekend, John Mullen looks at how anti-racist struggles in France have merged with the demonstrations against pension reforms, and the Jüdische Stimme responds to police and press lies about the rally which they organised last weekend.

You can follow us on the following social media:

If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors: 18th May 2023

Nakba demonstration and exhibition, Marx’s Berlin, and Neuköllner Mayday


18/05/2023

Hello everyone,

The Berlin police have banned this Saturday’s planned demonstration to commemorate the Nakba – the expulsion of over 700,000 Palestinians from their land and homes 75 years ago. This is the second year running that such a ban has been enforced, and is an attack on the freedom of assembly which has implications way beyond our solidarity with Palestinians. Nakba75, the organisers of the demonstration, are going to court to try to get the ban overturned.

Whatever happens, there will still be a full programme of Nakba-related events this Saturday. With the exception of the Jüdische Stimme rally, which will be at Oranienplatz, all events will be in a venue by the river, entrance via Köpenicker Straße 40, Kreuzberg.

  • 10am – 10pm Art exhibition – Kunstkollektiv M20, entrance via Köpenicker Str. 40
  • 12:00: Talk about the repression of (pro)Palestinian voices in Germany, entrance via Köpenicker Str. 40
  • 15:00: Rally organised by the Jüdische Stimme, Oranienplatz, Kreuzberg. This rally, in solidarity Palestinian victims of German state repression, has not been banned yet.
  • 17:00: Activist meeting to discuss the ban, entrance via Köpenicker Str. 40
  • 19:00: Concert, entrance via Köpenicker Str. 40

Things are still in flux, which means that the programme may still change. We therefore recommend that you follow the instagram accounts of Nakba75 and theleftbelin to stay informed of the latest development. We call on everyone who can to attend the events to show the Berlin police and politicians that such repression will not go unchallenged.

Apologies for a false link in last week’s Newsletter. If you are planning on going to the Berlin LINKE Internationals Summer Camp please use this link. This registers you for accommodation and lets the organisers know what food requirements attendants may need. Summer Camp is on 10th-11th June in the Naturfreundehaus Hermsdorf on the edge of Berlin.

Speaker news: Katalin Gennburg, who will be speaking about the crisis of die LINKE was elected deputy leader of die LINKE Berlin last weekend. Other speakers include Ramsis Kilani, Farah Maraqa, Ingar Solty and representatives of many international social movements in Berlin (full programme here). The venue is close enough to Berlin centre to commute, but 30 beds and camping facilities are available on site. Beds are allocated on a first come first served basis with priority for families.

This afternoon and evening (Thursday), Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen, 100% Tempelhofer Feld and DIDF are organising a Neukölln Mayday on Tempelhofer Feld. The motto is: lots of commotion around the Field and socialisation. At 1.45pm there will be a short demonstration for socialisation, for a free Tempelhofer Feld and for financing the social. This will be followed by different musical live acts and pefformances including the DWE Cheerleaders and bands Arte Bella & the Fellas, bowhouseduo, Manu Luis and Esels Alptraum. Stalls, political speeches and popcorn are also promised.

Sunday sees the world premiere of a new Walking Tour on Karl Marx’s Berlin. In 1836, a very young Karl Marx moved to Prussian capital to study philosophy. He stayed here for only four years, until he finished his PhD, and he hated the city for the rest of his life. Two decades later, he recalled the “sand” and the “ennui that reigns supreme at that place.” For Marx, Berlin remained a “metropolis of tschakos (i.e. police helmets) without heads.” The tour starts at 2pm at Luisenstraße 60, next to the Charité tower and end at the Marx-Engels-Forum, near Alexanderplatz. NOTE: this tour is limited to 40 places, so please book early.

On Monday, there will be a meeting about QueerYiddish. This is a 90-minute presentation in English with original and translated Yiddish examples. You can expect: a son with two moms, cruising in 1930s Vilnius, transitioning in the shtetl, a gay bullfighter from Brooklyn, a Yiddish remix of Marlene Dietrich, sapphic bagels, AIDS activism, a ritual spanking, and much more. It starts at 8pm in B-Lage (Mareschstraße 1).

This week, the European Trade Union Congress will be meeting in Berlin. As part of the conference, there will be a fringe event: Building Solidarity with Palestinian Workers. Representatives of various European trade unions and Palestinian speakers will present the current situation of Palestinian workers under occupation, their ongoing struggle and the role of European trade unions in building support for Palestinian freedom and rights, and discuss what trade unionists can do in solidarity with Palestinian workers. The meeting is on Wednesday at 12:30pm at the Holiday Inn East Side Meeting Room I and II, Wanda-Kallenbach-Straße 2. It is organised by the European Trade Union Network for Justice in Palestine, who are our Campaign of the Week.

There are many more activities this week in Berlin, which are listed on our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed, list of Events which we are directly involved in here.

In News from Berlin, Berlin police ban demonstrations for Palestine, court rules that police are allowed to inflict pain on protestors, Queer Berliners need housing support, and policeman accused of kissing man in the face.

In News from Germany, rail strike called off, EU promises Zelenskyy €2.7 Billion’s worth of weapons, Green environment minister resigns to take corporate post, and cannabis clubs will be restricted.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin this week, John Mullen asks who is winning in Macron’s fight with French workers, the Bloque Latinoamericano Berlin look at the Sisyphean task of Anmeldung for non-Germans in Berlin, Nour Al-Abed says what the Nakba means for Palestinians, and Turkish socialist Memet Uludağ gives his first impressions of the results of the recent election.

In this week’s Podcast of the Week, Delivery Charge peels back the layers of the case filed by Duygu, Ronnie, and Fernando against their firing from Gorillas. The workers in these platform delivery companies are part of the 46% of employees in Germany who are not covered by collective bargaining agreements. We hear from Duygu about her campaign for a strike right that is unconnected with mainstream unions and collective bargaining processes.

The Video of the Week remembers Nakba Day by showing extracts from Rasha Al-Jundi’s project “when the grapes were sour“. This is a collaboration with the National BDS Committee (IG: @bdsnationalcommittee, TW: @BDSmovement, FB: BDSNationalCommittee)

You can follow us on the following social media:

If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors: 11th May 2023

Remember the Nakba, No politics but Class Politics, and Defend Healthcare


11/05/2023

Hello everyone,

This evening (Thursday), at 7pm, Clifton West, founder of Black Lives Matter Seacoast will be speaking on Black US Americans and Palestinians: Two united fights of liberation. From leading figures in the civil rights movement in the 1960s like Malcolm X and Angela Davis, to Black Lives Matter activists and Black athletes, Black US Americans have supported the Palestinian civil rights movement. Clifton will be giving a more clear look at this alliance – why it happened, where it stands today – given the actual political situation in the USA, and the fight against racism there. Clifton will be speaking in English, and the meeting will be in the Neues Deutschland building, Franz-Mehring Platz 1.

Tomorrow is the International Day of Nursing, where several actions are being organised. The central action is a Demonstration of young and other healthcare workers. It assembles at Invalidenpark at 3:30pm and will form a human chain around the health ministry. The demo must be fun. DJs and bands will be present from the start. Come together in solidarity to demonstrate loudly and to show that a better system is possible. All actions are being organised by Walk of Care, who are our Campaign of the Week.

Tomorrow evening, at 6pm, Podemos Berlin is organising a meeting with Spanish residents in Berlin with Rafa Mayoral Member of Congress. Secretary of Horizonte Republicano y Profundización Democrática de of Podemos. Rafa will be talking about the achievements of the first progressive Spanish government in history. The meeting will be at Mehringhof, Gneisenaustr 2a and will be in Spanish.

Also tomorrow evening, there is a Film premiere: The Radicals: Commons and the Housing Crisis in Berlin. The short film will be followed by a group discussion that will look at how the Right to the City & Housing activism are enduring in the aftermaths of the DWE referendum, and open a conversation on how to build local power and allyship in the face of the new political conservative context of Berlin. It’s at Spreefeld, and will start at 6:30pm. Keep an eye out for an interview with the director on theleftberlin.com, coming soon!

Friday is a very busy evening. You can also go to a book presentation: No Politics but Class Politics. Denouncing racism and celebrating diversity have become central to progressive politics. For many on the left, social justice seems to consist of an equitable distribution of wealth, power and esteem among racial groups. But as Adolph Reed Jr. and Walter Benn Michaels argue, the emphasis on discrimination is misplaced. Not only does the focus on the gap between white and black leave the gap between rich and poor untouched, it actually works to legitimate it. Reed and Michaels make the case for a genuinely egalitarian politics: a politics which aspires not to the establishment of a demographically representative elite, but to economic justice for everyone. Come and hear them at Hopscotch Reading Rooms, Kurfurstenstraße 14, at 7pm.

Monday is the 75th anniversary of the Nakba, the expulsion of Palestinians from their homeland. Last year, all demonstrations in Berlin on Nakba Day were banned. This may happen again this year. For this reason, Nakba 75 have called an action on Monday: They Ban, We Dabke (based on the Palestinian Dabke dance). You are invited to gather 5 people or more, go to any public space, wear black, green, red and white, bring a soundbox to play Dabke music, hang out and Dabke, and be visible! Ensure that Berlin remembers the Nakba. Nakba 75 have also called a demonstration on Saturday, 20th May –  4pm at Hermannplatz. This demo has not been banned (yet!). More information in next week’s Newsletter.

There are many more activities this week in Berlin, which are listed on our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed, list of Events which we are directly involved in here.

Book now for accommodation and food for Summer Camp

The Berlin LINKE Internationals Summer Camp takes place in about a month, on 10th-11th June. Speakers include Katalin Gennburg, Ramsis Kilani, Farah Maraqa, Ingar Solty and representatives of many international social movements in Berlin (full programme here). It all takes place at the Naturfreundehaus Hermsdorf, which is close enough to Berlin centre to commute, but 30 beds and camping facilities are available on site. Beds are allocated on a first come first served basis with priority for families. To reserve your accommodation and to help the organisers provide enough food for everyone, please fill out this form, even if you have registered already.

A mail will be sent out this week-end to everyone who has registered. If you have any questions, please contact the Summer Camp organisers at lag.internationals@die-linke-berlin.de.

In News from Berlin, the Aquadom will not be rebuilt, and news of a Zelenskyy visit to Berlin was leaked.

In News from Germany, judges rule that CDU politician was wrong to call a Jewish woman an antisemite, Baerbock sees no problem in moving the Benin bronzes, national shortage of 378,000 day care places, Germany eats less meat, and States demand more money for looking after refugees.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin this week, Ali Khan looks at recent political developments in Pakistan, Laura Miles takes a balance of Trans Rights in the UK, Sudan Uprising appeal to the German government to help the hundreds of people trapped in Sudan because their passports are being processed, and Shuruq Josting looks at the implications of increased arms trade between Israel and Africa.

You can follow us on the following social media:

If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors: 4th May 2023

Stop Green warmongering, support Palestinians in court, and BLM and Palestine


04/05/2023

Hello everyone,

This evening (Thursday), at 7pm, the LINKE Berlin Internationals have their latest organising meeting to plan future events. There’s plenty to organise – from the Nakba demonstration, political walking tours, a visit from Azad Essa, Senior Reporter for Middle East Eye, and a film showing. Above all, there’s preparation for Summer Camp on 10th-11th June. The meeting is open to anyone who’s interested and will be in Erif Eralp’s office, Zeughofstraße 22, Kreuzberg (or in Görlitzer Park if the weather is good, so please be punctual).

On Saturday, there’s the Remembrance Event Book Exchange. This is a memorial event to reclaim the space where the Institute of Sexual Sciences used to stand until May 6 1933. With this 90 years remembrance event the emphasis is on Trans and Jewish perspectives and histories. There will be a book exchange with the option of listening to speeches at the institute’s memorial. You are encouraged to bring queer and Jewish books and Zines to exchange and enjoy on a picnic blanket in the sunshine. The event starts at midday in Tiergarten.

There are 2 more cases this week of Palestinians having to defend themselves in the German courts. On Tuesday, Pary El-Qalqili is appealing a fine of over €300 for taking part in a minute’s silence on Nakba day last year. Then on Wednesday, Palestinian journalist Farah Maraqa is back in court. After a judge found Deutsche Welle guilty on all charges when they sacked Farah, DW have the audacity to challenge the decision. Please go to both court cases to support Pary and Farah.

  • Tuesday 9th May, 10am: Amtsgericht Tiergarten, Kirchstraße 6 (U-Bahn Turmstraße)
  • Wednesday, 10th May; 11am, Room 341, Arbeitsgericht Berlin, Magdeburger Platz 1 (U-Bahn Kurfürstenstraße)

On Tuesday, to mark the anniversary of the Second World War, there will be a rally against war and to thank the liberators. The VVN-BdA is organising the rally from 9am at the Soviet war memorial in Treptower Park with the following demands: “Join with us against war, patriotism and nationalism! Against all historical revisionism! Immediate reparations for all living war prisoners from all republics of the former Soviet Union! Acceptance of all people who flee war and poverty, stop the racist admission practise! Stop the armaments spiral now! Solidarity, not nationalism! Spasibo, thank you, merci!”

Also on Tuesday, at 5pm there will be a demonstration against the warmongering of the Green Party and co. The Green Party, which once regarded itself as a “party of peace” is now driving militarism and celebrating the military escalation in Ukraine. Instead of seriously looking for alternatives to a long-lasting war of attrition with thousands of dead on both side, the Green want to “ruin Russia” (Baerbock). But even more weapons will not end the deaths. Quite the reverse. The demo starts at the Green party HQ at Platz vor dem Neuen Tor 1 * Berlin-Mitte, and will visit the FDP offices, the German army showroom, and the Rheinmetall Büro at Brandenburger Tor. It is organised by Rheinmetall Entwaffnen, who are our Campaign of the Week.

On Thursday, at 7pm, Clifton West, founder of Black Lives Matter Seacoast will be speaking on Black US Americans and Palestinians: Two united fights of liberation. From leading figures in the civil rights movement in the 1960s like Malcolm X and Angela Davis, to Black Lives Matter activists and Black athletes, Black US Americans have supported the Palestinian civil rights movement. Clifton will be giving a more clear look at this alliance – why it happened, where it stands today given the actual political situation in the USA and the fight against racism there. Clifton will be speaking in English, and the meeting will be in the Neues Deutschland building, Franz-Mehring Platz 1.

There are many more activities this week in Berlin, which are listed on our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed, list of Events which we are directly involved in here.

In News from Berlin, mass arrests of Last Generation activists, police prevent the Revolutionary 1st May demo from reaching its end point, and controversy over possible AfD support for new mayor Kai Wegner.

In News from Germany, Islamophobic messages from Springer press CEO Döpfner revealed, fewer Covid vaccinations recommended, simpler gender registration seems to be on its way, and Tübingen’s mayor leaves the Green party after repeatedly using the N- word.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin this week, Miho Soon argues that there should be no stigma in receiving benefits, and Yoav Haifiwi remembers when Palestinians working for the Israeli trade union defied a ban preventing them from striking on Mayday.

This week’s Video of the week is a recording of last Saturday’s meeting 75 Jahre Nakba: Anti-Palästinensischer Rassismus & Repressionen in Berlin. The meeting is largely in German, but Farah Maraqa’s contribution is in English.

You can follow us on the following social media:

If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board