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Letter from the Editors, 11th January 2024

How we can Stop Apartheid Israel


11/01/2024


Hello everyone,

Our Palestine Reading Group continues tomorrow (Friday). This week, we’ll be trying to answer the question: Who are the Agents who can bring about change? So far, our discussions have been focused on what changes we would like to see in Israel/Palestine, and our vision of what the region could look like at the future. This week we want to be more concrete and ask how we can enforce change. With Palestinians excluded from the Israeli economy and the rulers of the Global North (and elsewhere) actively or passively supporting Israel, how can people who want justice become strong enough to liberate Palestine? As usual, it’s at 7pm in Nansenstraße 2. Follow the link above to find the recommended reading and to register (which helps us know how many people we should expect).

oyoun lives (for now). Tomorrow morning (Friday) at 10pm, there will be a live broadcast in Lucy-Lameck-Str. 32 of South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice. At 2pm, Israelis for Peace have called a demonstration Stop the War at the German foreign ministry, Werdescher Markt 1. At 3pm, students at the FU are live screening a Conversation with Ilan Pappe, at Mosaic Center, Grünewaldstraße 87. And at 7pm there’ll be an mass sit-in for Gaza in Berlin Hauptbahnhof. On Saturday, at 2pm, there’s a demonstration Solidarity with Palestine. Join us and stand up for Palestine! The demo starts at Neptunenbrunnen by Alexanderplatz. On Monday there’s another demonstration Strike is Resistance! Stop the Genocide in Gaza!Join us at the events to help give out leaflets for our coming meeting on Apartheid Israel (see below).

On Saturday, it’s the Rosa Luxemburg Conference, which is held under the motto “Who owns the World?”. This question will reflect the fundamental change in the global balance of power, the upheaval in international relations caused by the rise of the global South – above all the People’s Republic of China as the second largest economic power. It is a shift of hegemony that the previous masters of the world, the US-led NATO states, are trying to counter with increased militarism, the drumming up of war and the instrumentalization of fascism Speakers include Jeremy Corbyn, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Julia Wright. This year’s conference will be in the larger venue of Berlin’s Tempodrom.

On Sunday morning, it’s the annual Luxemburg.Liebknecht Demo against war and crisis, and for peace and solidarity! Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht were murdered in Berlin on 15th January 1919 by right-wing Freikorps with the approval of the Noskes and Scheidemanns. This is the 105th anniversary of their death. Their fight obliges us to stand up against war and rearmament, against exploitation and social impoverishment. Upholding the legacy of Rosa and Karl – standing up for peace, social justice, the protection of the environment, for internationalism and solidarity – we, leftists of different currents, will jointly and peacefully express our positions and demands on 14th January 2024. The demo starts at 10am at Frankfurter Tor.

We are pleased to announce a third speaker for our meeting on Apartheid Israel. Barbara Schreiner, Executive Director of the Water Integrity Network. Barbara recently reported on visiting Occupied Palestine.  Barbara will be joined by South African activist and academic Patrick Bond, and Palestinian lawyer Nadija Samour. South Africa’s current case against Israel in the International Court of Justice makes the meeting all the more relevant. The meeting is at Café MadaMe, on Mehringplatz 10, just next to U-Bahn Hallesches Tor. It is on Wednesday, 17th January at 7pm. After Barbara, Patrick and Nadija speak, there will be plenty of time for debate. For those of you who can’t make it to the meeting, we will be livestreaming the event at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zBGFvXUUuaY.

There is much more going on in Berlin. To find out what’s happening, go to our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed list of events in which we are directly involved in here.

This week’s Campaign Of The Week, Arts and Culture Alliance Berlin (ACAB) organised a demonstration this week outside the Berlin Abgeordnetehaus protesting against the Berliner Senat’s decision to refuse funding to any artist who does not support the problematic AHRA definition of antisemitism. This effectively means that any artist in Berlin who criticises Israel risks losing all state funding. ACAB unites artists and their supporters against the recent escalations in the censoring, silencing, defaming, and deplatforming in Germany of those standing up for Palestinian liberation and human rights

In News from Berlin, Berliner Senat denies funding to artists which it accuses of “extremism”, subsidies for Berlin transport are cut because of inadequate service, the state of Berlin uses celebrities to call on people to vote … for a third time, and Berlin teacher fined for comparing COVID shots to the Holocaust.

In News from Germany, Germany’s carbon emissions drop, but experts are cautious, the union for train drivers announces further strikes, large farmers’ demonstration expected in Berlin next Monday, and farmers say that right wingers are not welcome on their demos,

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

New on theleftberlin, an interview with former MP Christine Buchholz about the current state of Die LINKE, Phil Butland reports a row of cases of racism in the German Art Scene, we look at the most viewed articles on theleftberlin last year, retired doctor John Puntis defends the NHS, we talk to Majed Abusalama from Palästina Spricht about strategies to build the Palestine solidarity movement in Germany, and we publish a speech by Maria Cofalka from Right2TheCity / Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen from the recent Anmledung für Alle conference.

Last Saturday, the Palestine Museum in the USA had a first screening of the film Germany’s Palestine Problem. Our Video of the Week is the post-screening discussion withe film director Jad Salfiti and a panel of Anna Younes, Sami Khatib, and Maria Fatafta.

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 please do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting,

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors, 4th January 2024

January’s Palestine Reading Groups and a meeting on Apartheid Israel


04/01/2024


Hello everyone,

Happy New Year, and welcome to the first theleftberlin Newsletter since our Winter break. There are a number of demonstrations for Palestine this week, starting this afternoon:

Our weekly Palestine Reading Group continues on Friday at 7pm. In The Arab States and the Arab Street we will be talking about the role of the Arab governments and of the Arab masses for the liberation of Palestine. As usual, the meeting will be in the AGIT rooms at Nansenstraße 2, 5-10 minutes’ walk from Hermannplatz. Please try to read the recommended reading in advance, and register so we know how many people we should expect (you can find both recommended and supplementary reading and registration details here).

We have also announced the topics for the next few reading groups (all at 7pm in AGIT, recommended reading to follow):

On Saturday, at 11am, there is a demonstration Jin jîyan Azadî. 11 years ago, Sara, Rojbin und Ronahî were murdered by the Turkish secret services in Paris, This was deliberate femicide with a clear message: the Turkish state sees organised revolutionary woman as a particular threat. Last year, on 23rd December, 3 more comrades were murdered in Paris: Evîn Goyî, Mîr Perwer and Abdurrahman Kizil. These massacres are not just an attack on the Kurdish Freedom Movement, but on all people world wide who are fighting for a free life. Come to Hermannplatz to demand justice and stand against the fascist massacre.

On Saturday evening, the Palestine Museum in the USA is organising an online screening of the short film Germany’s Palestine Problem, followed by a Q&A discussion with film director Jad Salfiti and post-colonial scholar Anna-Esther Younes. ‘Germany’s Palestine Problem’ – a micro-documentary for The New Arab (@thenewaab) – uncovers the underlying causes of the frightening status quo. The film won the best use of video prize at the WAN-IFRA Digital Media Awards Middle East 2023. The film was commissioned for The New Arab website. The film starts at 6pm CET. Participation is free, but you should register online in advance.

On Monday, at 7pm it’s the kick-off meeting for the annual Berlin LINKE Internationals Summer Camp. Summer Camp will take place in the Naturfreundehaus Hermsdorf on the edge of Berlin on 29th-30th June. On Monday, after a short organisational section, you can join the discussion about Keynote Speakers (on After the EU Elections: What kind of Left do we want? and The role of Palestine in the neighbouring Arab countries), Workshops, Culture Programme, and Financing. Please note: because the usual meeting place is not available, this meeting will be in room 205 of Karl Liebknecht Haus on Rosa Luxemburg Platz.

One for your calendars – on Wednesday, 17th January veteran campaigner against Apartheid in South Africa Patrick Bond, and Palestinian lawyer Nadija Samour will be speaking about Apartheid Israel. 7pm in Café MadaMe. More information in next week’s Newsletter.

There is much more going on in Berlin. To find out what’s happening, go to our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed list of events in which we are directly involved in here.

For this week’s Campaign Of The Week, people have been asking us where they can send money to Gaza where the fundraising is organised by, locals, not Western NGOs. The NoI collective in Ramallah recommends The One Body Initiative for Gaza. Your donation to this fund will go towards the purchase and distribution of medicine, blankets, sleeping bags, diapers, food and building tents to those who have been left in need in the wake of this genocide. It costs 200$ to build a tent and provide a mattress and pillows, these fees include transporting the materials and labor.

In News from Berlin, Berlin police fail to process 10 cases of bodily harm and grievous bodily harm resulting from racist violence, and employment stagnates in Berlin and falls in Brandenberg.

In News from Germany, predicted AfD success in 3 State elections in Eastern Germany this year, the German economy shrunk in 2023 and doesn’t look much better in 2024, and has the online shopping boom burst?

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

Published on theleftberlin since the last Newsletter, Sanaz Azimipour explains why she refused to let the Böll Stiftung publish her article on feminist resistance in Iran after they withdrew support from Masha Gessen, Liad Hussein Kantorowicz celebrates the few Berlin cultural institutions which provide a home for Palestinian voices, Nathaniel Flakin argues that Olaf Scholz’s measures “against antisemitism” are actually hurting Jews, FU students protest against censorship on Palestine, Qian Sun gives a Chinese journalist’s analysis of the Palestine debate in Germany, we publish statements from both oyoun and the Jüdische Stimme about the closure of the multicultural culture centre, Nathaniel Flakin sheds no tears for Wolfgang Schäuble, who recently died, a New Year’s cartoon from Hari Kumar, Phil Butland remembers when Yannis Varoufakis visited Berlin on 7th October, and Nathaniel Flakin looks at the racism behind the debate around New Years Eve in Berlin.

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 please do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting,

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors, 14th December 2023

Support oyoun’s fight against closure – festival this week-end


13/12/2023


Hello everyone,

This evening (Thursday) at 7pm, it’s the first of a series of films organised by the Jüdische Stimme. Shot over 25 years, Two Blue Lines examines the human and political situation of Palestinian people from years prior to the creation of Israel, to the present day. By primarily featuring the narratives of Israelis whose positions run counter to their country’s official policy, the documentary provides a portrait of the ongoing conflict which is not usually depicted in the mainstream media. The film starts at 7pm in Café MadaMe near Hallesches Tor. Further films will be shown on 21st December and in January.

Today also sees the start of the 3 day Threads of Resilience festival. Given the current situation and urgency to express, oyoun has decided to co-organise a community-led and collectively curated XNUMX-day festival. The festival includes a press conference, bazaar, panels, film screening, talks, exhibition, workshops, concerts, healing session, theater, puppet show for children, and parties. Admission is based on free donation (nobody will be denied entry if they cannot donate). All proceeds will be given to organizations in support of victims of racially motivated police violence and to organizations providing legal support to people threatened with deportation.

Friday sees the latest discussion in our Palestine Reading Group. This week, we will be talking about The One and Two States Solutions. You can register and find the suggested reading here. Please try and read at least the main texts before you go to the Event. This is the last Reading Group before the holidays. We will use the break to ask you on which day(s) of the week we should meet in the New Year, and which subjects we should discuss. You can join the debate by joining our Telegram group.

On Saturday, marks the fifth anniversary of the Sudanese revolution, six Sudanese organizations* have joined forces in Berlin to organize For Sudan, a day of solidarity, visibility and fundraising. Since April, Sudan has been experiencing a devastating war that has left tens of thousands dead or injured and 6 million displaced. The conflict is not only destroying countless livelihoods, but is also threatening the progress made by five years of revolutionary struggle under the slogan “Peace, Freedom, Justice.” The event takes place in Moosdorfstrasse 7-9 from 4pm till 10pm. United for Sudan is our Campaign of the Week.

On Sunday, it’s the latest  Berlin LINKE Internationals political walking tour postponed from last week to allow people to join the demonstration for Palestine. Red Wedding on the March visits Wedding, which was once Berlin’s most left-wing district. In the German elections of November 6, 1932, 47.1% of Weddingers voted for the communists. Wedding had tenements and terrible poverty, but also reform schools, socialist art, and a proud proletarian culture. Our tour will be meeting at 2pm at Badstraße 38, right where Badstraße crosses the Panke, near U-Bhf Pankstraße. The U8 is currently not running between Alexanderplatz and Osloerstraße, however there is a replacement bus service–but it does require extra travel time. Please plan accordingly. If you register (follow the link above), you will receive a E-mail on Saturday with more detailed information. The tour will finish near S-Bahn Humboldthain between 4pm and 4.30pm.

There is much more going on in Berlin, it’s another very busy week. To find out what’s happening, go to our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed list of events in which we are directly involved in here.

This is our last Newsletter of the year, but we will still be posting occasional new articles and Events on theleftberlin.com- Enjoy your holiday. The next Newsletter will be sent on Thursday. 4th January.

In News from Berlin, Berlin misses its target of building new flats, and builds fewer than last year.

In News from Germany, Interior Minister Faeser (SPD) considers making the questioning of Israel’s right to exist a criminal offence, wage rises do not compensate for cuts in recent years, Hamburg court rules that spontaneous demonstrations for Palestine are not illegal, far right in Gera protests against refugee homes, and after 5 year delay, trial of right wing extremists starts in Chemnitz.

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

This week on theleftberlin, Tareekh Yaadgar looks at the racialisation of Arab men, Phil Butland reports from the first few Palestine Reading Groups, and we look at the current state of oyoun cultural centre’s fight against victimisation by the Berliner Senat.

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 please do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting,

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors, 7th December 2023

Join our open editorial meeting (followed by a party)


06/12/2023


Hello everyone,

We have a new venue for our Palestine Reading Group. From tomorrow (Friday), we will be meeting at 7pm at AGIT on Nansenstraße 2, located 5 minutes from U-Bahn Hermannplatz by foot. This week’s discussion will be on German Memory Culture. You can find the suggested reading here. Please try and read at least the main texts before you go to the Event. You can also register on the same page, which helps us know how many people to expect. The Reading Group on 15th December will be discussing the One State and Two State Solutions. The suggested reading has already been made available.

After that we’ll take a break for the Holidays. We will use that time to better understand which day(s) of the week work best for everyone, and which topics to address going forward. You can join the debate by joining our Telegram group.

On Saturday, we would like to welcome anyone who is interested in our editorial “theleftberlin” website to an open editorial meeting. The editorial board holds a weekly, brief online meeting, and semi-annually meets in-person to discuss the medium- and long-term plans for theleftberlin. If you would like to meet the people behind the website, and especially if you are interested in getting involved, you can meet us in Bilgisaray, Oranienstraße 45, between 2pm and 5pm. After the meeting is over, our friends in the Berlin LINKE Internationals will be having their not-Christmas party. also taking place in Bilgisaray.

On Sunday, there is a demonstration No Weapons for Genocide, starting at 1pm at the SPD headquarters Willy-Brandt Platz near Hallesches Tor. We are all Palestinians – every day, steadfast, with raised heads until there is freedom, dignity, and a return for the Palestinian people. NO WEAPONS FOR GENOCIDE!! NO PROFITS ON THE BACK OF SUFFERING, MISERY AND EXPLOITATION!! Every day we see pictures of horror from Gaza, the West Bank, Jerusalem and we need everyone everywhere involved in movements and marching in the streets.

At 2pm on Sunday, the latest Berlin LINKE Internationals walking tour visits Red Wedding on the March. Wedding was once Berlin’s most left-wing district. In the German elections of November 6, 1932, 47.1% of Weddingers voted for the communists. Wedding had tenements and terrible poverty, but also reform schools, socialist art, and a proud proletarian culture. On May 1, 1929, Kösliner Straße — the reddest street in Berlin’s reddest district — saw the worst police violence in Berlin’s history. Our tour will be meeting at 2pm at Badstraße 38, right where Badstraße crosses the Panke, near U-Bhf Pankstraße. The U8 is currently not running between Alexanderplatz and Osloerstraße, however there is a replacement bus service–but it does require extra travel time. Please plan accordingly. If you register (follow the link above), you will receive a E-mail on Saturday with more detailed information.

Join us on Sunday at 3pm for the Channukah festival organised by the Jewish Bund. Chanukkah against the state II: is soli gathering to collect money for those effected by police repression directed towards Palestine solidarity in the streets of Berlin. The event takes place in Am Flutgraben 3, just behind the Festsaal Kreuzberg.

There is much more going on in Berlin, it’s another very busy week. To find out what’s happening, go to our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed list of events in which we are directly involved in here.

This week’s Campaign of the Week Archive of Silence is a platform showcasing concrete examples of institutions, organizations and workplaces that censor, silence and punish voices that challenge the rigid political mainstream in Germany, regarding Israel-Palestine. The vast spectrum of such silencing highlights a number of examples including, but not limited to, the expression of solidarity with Palestine, the criticism of the current Israeli government, or even a Palestinian cultural event. All stories are anonymous unless it is explicitly indicated that a submitter would like to be identified. If you have multiple stories to share, please submit each story separately through this “Archives of Silence” form. They will not be linked together unless specified otherwise. Typos and grammar corrections will take place as needed.

In News from Berlin, Jewish-owned bar in Lichtenberg suffers antisemitic attack, the BVG is cutting the number of buses in Berlin due to a driver shortage, and thousands attend a demonstration for Gaza, this time in Berlin-Mitte.

In News from Germany, a court rules that Germany’s climate measures are insufficient, 30,000 evictions in Germany last year–nearly 2,000 of them in Berlin alone, German trains record worst figures for punctuality in 8 years, and right wing extremism on the rise.

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

This week on theleftberlin, we publish an open letter calling on the Berliner Senat to save the Sinti and Roma memorial, the speeches by Iris Hefets and Nadija Samour at last Saturday’s anti-war demo, and the launch statement of Anmeldung für Alle.

Meanwhile, the Antifascist Music Alliance explores the Palestine solidarity on the Berlin music scene, Partho Sarothi Ray discussed the lessons of Kristallnacht for today, Alkram Al Deek provides useful perspective about the recent criminalisation of Palestinian life in Neukölln, and Nathanlel Flakin reports from the current strike by Berlin teachers.

In this week’s Video of the Week, activists blockade last week’s Berlin Security Conference.

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 please do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting,

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Letter from the Editors, 30th November 2023

Reading group. demo ands films for Palestine


30/11/2023


Hello everyone,

Yet another very busy week ahead of us in Berlin. Here are some of the highlights.

Tomorrow (Friday) is our latest Reading Group on Palestine. This week’s discussion focuses on Palestinian Resistance. You can view the suggested reading here. We won’t have the time to read the articles together, so please try and read them in advance and arrive on time. If you are coming, please use the same link to register, so we have a rough idea of who’s coming. The meeting starts at 7pm. The venue is once more the H48 Projektraum. For those of you who weren’t there last week, this is in the back courtyard of Hermannstraße 48 on the first floor (ring the buzzer “Projektraum”). Everybody is invited to join the discussion.

On Saturday at 2pm, join the latest demonstration Stop the Genocide in Gaza for Palestine, for justice, for liberation! The German repressive system, the police violence, the ridiculous yet dangerous attempts to defame solidarity with Palestine–has not, and will not stop us to come together. After 47 days of ruthless, ceaseless attacks on the besieged population of the Gaza strip, and with the full and unconditional support of the United states and several EU powers, including Germany, Palestinians in Gaza are still exposed to ethnic cleansing and genocide. The demonstration meets at Blochplatz in Gesundbrunnen. If you would like to march with other internationals, you can meet us between U-Bahn Gesundbrunnen and the main entrance of the Gesundbrunnen Center at 1:45pm.

On Saturday at 6pm, Ararat Berlin and Cafe Arakil have organised an event, They didn’t know we were seeds: An Armenian, Palestinian, Kurdish Soliküche. The fire burning across our ancestral lands is raging anew and by no coincidence all at once: Artsakh, Gaza, Rojava, Rojhilat. Behind each of these names—and many more—are people who have refused to be torn out by the roots. Join us for an evening of nourishment and exchange. We’ll bring our cuisines and music together and raise funds for each of our causes. The event takes place at @cafe_arakil in @spore.initiative Hermannstr. 86.

On Sunday at 4pm, the Berlin LINKE Internationals has organised a Küfa and Palestinian Film Evening. The event takes place at Bilgisaray, Oranienstraße 45 and offers Palestinian dishes. Between 7pm and around 9:30pm a series of films about Palestine will be shown (you can see a list in the Event description). All money raised will be split equally between covering the costs for the demonstration for Palestine on 2nd December in Berlin and supporting Oyoun’s fundraiser against losing all their funding because they hosted an event by a Jewish organisation. Please join, have fun, and donate generously to support two important causes.

On Monday at 7pm, it’s the Berlin LINKE Internationals again with their monthly planning meeting followed by a discussion on Die LINKE – benefits, problems, and alternatives. The LINKE Internationals group receives some funding from the party. At our last meeting we decided to stay in the party and fight for radical politics, but to continue to monitor the state of the party and our relationship to it, including possible alternatives. On Monday, we will continue this discussion, with an input by Freek Blauwhof, Dutch socialist who works for MP Pascal Meiser in the Bundestag. Everyone is invited to join this discussion, which takes place in Ferat Kocak’s office, Schierker Straße 26.

On Tuesday at 7pm, the campaign Anmeldung für Alle will be launched at a meeting in the Grüner Salon, Rosa Luxemburg Platz 2. The commodification of living space in Berlin affects everyone, in particular migrants. Alongside housing speculation, rising prices, and the resulting competition, limitations like “no Anmeldung possible” to a vicious circle. Without Anmeldung there’s no work, and without work you can’t get the Anmeldung you need to get an Anmeldung. The event will be in English, but we will simultaneously translate in Spanish, Portuguese and German. Anmeldung für Alle is our Campaign of the Week.

There is much more going on in Berlin, it’s another very busy week. To find out what’s happening, go to our Events page. You can also see a shorter, but more detailed list of events in which we are directly involved in here.

Remember that we are also involved in organising a few events next weekend.

More information in next week’s Newsletter.

In News from Berlin, thousands protest in Berlin against war, childcare workers and teachers strike for better pay and working conditions, and controversy around the Olympiastadion continues around Germany’s bid to host the Olympics.

In News from Germany, Jewish artist’s video installation about prostitution is cancelled, Peng! Collective protests against Amazon on Black Friday, train strike is back on after employers show no will to negotiate, insolvencies in Germany reach a record high, and car summit to discuss “electromobility”.

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

This week on theleftberlin, Ferat Kocak argues that the fights against racism and antisemitism must be united, we print the text of the JK Langford performance at the Jüdische Stimme 20th anniversary, we argue why Palestine is a trade union issue, Eleri Connick argues that we must recognise Palestinian agency, and Berlin-based Israeli poet Mati Shemoelof grieves for what is happening in his homeland.

Outside the discussion around Palestine, the Bloque Lateinamericano Berlin look at Argentina’s new right-wing president Javier Milei. we argue that more police is no solution to address the problems around Görlitzer Park, and Nathaniel Flakin recalls when Germany’s Green vice-chancellor glorified a mass murderer.

This week’s Video of the Week shows Letzte Generation’s mass occupation of the Straße des 17, Juni last Saturday.

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 please do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting,

The Left Berlin Editorial Board