dimanche 27 juillet 2008

Gedicht von Marina Zwetajewa

Bist fort: ich schneide
Das Brot mir nicht mehr.
Alles ist Kreide,
Was ich berühr.

…Warst, duftend heiß,
Mein Brot. Warst mein Schnee.
Und der Schnee ist nicht weiß,
Und das Brot tut weh.


Marina Zwetajewa: Liebesgedichte

Ausgewählt und mit einem Nachwort versehen von Ilma Rakusa;



ladyfest berlin 6-10 august 2008


http://ladyfest.lautr.com/

Femmes 'R ' Us im RADIALSYSTEM

DO 07. August, 20:00 Uhr
Vernissage, Dubstep-Lounge mit DJ Spoke & MC Ladykay

FR 08. - SA 16. August, täglich 14:00 bis 00:00 Uhr
Ausstellung
Beteiligte Künstlerinnen: Pauline Boudry (Berlin), Sonia Boyce (London), Patty Chang (New York), Antye Greie (Berlin / Hailuoto), Klub Zwei (Jo Schmeiser / Simone Bader, Wien), Christine Lang (Berlin), Jill Magid (New York), Elke Mark (Köln), NEID (Berlin), Pipilotti Rist (Zürich), Ina Wudtke (Berlin) u.a.

http://www.femmes-breaks.com/

"FEMMES 'R' US" widmet sich zeitgenössischen feministischen Positionen in aktuellen Kulturproduktionen. Das 10-tägige Festival verlinkt dabei Theorie und Praxis in Kunst, Film und Clubkultur und präsentiert neben einer Ausstellung ein Filmprogramm, Vorträge, Podiumsdiskussionen und verschiedene Workshops. "FEMMES 'R' US" geht aus dem Berliner Projekt "Femmes with Fatal Breaks" hervor - ein "all female" DJ-MC-Netzwerk - und wurde von den Mitgliedern Ina Wudtke und Christine Lang kuratiert.

JE SUIS TROUBLÉ, MON POULET!

dimanche 6 juillet 2008

Antisexistische Praxen II - 12./13. Juli 2008 im Mehringhof


Einladung zur Konferenz "Antisexistische Praxen II". Willkommen sind wie letztes Jahr Menschen jeden Geschlechts, also all gender. Einzelne Workshops und Veranstaltungen können bei Bedarf auch nur für bestimmte Geschlechter stattfinden. Die Konferenz bietet einen Ort des Kennenlernens und des Austausches von Erfahrungen zwischen verschiedenen Städten und Regionen.

Alltagssexismus, Möglichkeiten antisexistischer Intervention und antisexistischer Politik, Unterstützungsarbeit bei Sexismus und sexualisierter Gewalt, Definitionsmacht und Parteilichkeit, all das soll wieder Thema sein. Dieses Jahr würden wir aber gerne sowohl noch theoretischer werden und stärker die Strukturen, die Sexismus zu Grunde liegen, durchleuchten, als auch noch praktischer werden, mit konkreten Aktionen.

Reden über Sexismus und Antisexismus ist nicht einfach und potenziell verletzend. Deshalb bemühen wir uns einen Rahmen zu schaffen, in dem ein möglichst sicheres Reden gegeben ist, als auch Orte des Auffangensvorhanden sind.

http://www.antisexist-perspectives.so36.net/einladung.html

Italy Attacked Over Plan to Fingerprint Roma and Sinti

A plan by the Italian government to fingerprint undocumented Roma and Sinti has sparked outrage among human rights groups and the EU who warn identifying people based on ethnicity can set a dangerous precedent

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's plan to take a census of all Roma and Sinti people living in some 700 camps in Italy as part of a broader crackdown on crime was slammed by rights groups on Thursday, July 3.

"We are very worried about discrimination according to race or religion," Marco Impagliazzo, president the Community of Sant'Egidio, said at a press conference in Rome on Thursday. "This approach violates Italian and European law and calls to mind painful memories, such as the Vichy regime of (Nazi-collaborating, World War II) France," Impagliazzo said.

He handed out a copy of one camp dweller's form, which contained his photograph, his fingerprint, and the words "Roma from Serbia" and "Orthodox" filled in under the headings "ethnic origin" and "religion."

On Wednesday, members of the European Parliament attacked the scheme.

"It is inconceivable in a member state of the EU (that) a specific social group is targeted by collecting fingerprints, including of minors, as it is happening now in Italy with Roma communities," German member of the EU parliament, Alexander Alvaro said. "This brings us back to dramatic periods of European history and we appeal to the Italian government to step back from this racist exercise of ethnic profiling," he said.

Escalating tensions

The latest measure comes a month after several gypsy camps in southern Italy were torched forcing Roma inhabitants to flee under police protection.

The arson attacks were triggered by violent protests after a Roma youth was accused of trying to kidnap an Italian baby.

The Italian government has evoked a "Roma emergency" in large cities like Milan, Rome and Naples and said it plans to close unauthorized camps by May 2009 and repatriate people who are in Italy illegally.

About half of the estimated 160,000 Roma and Sinti people living in Italy are Italian citizens, another 20 percent are citizens of other EU countries while the remainder come from the countries that once made up Yugoslavia.

Last month, some 3,000 Roma and Sinti took to the streets of Rome to protest against alleged xenophobia against them amid widespread anger among Italians who blame them for rising crime and insecurity.

This week, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, a member of the right-wing Northern League party in Berlusconi's centre-right coalition, said the idea behind the census was to put an end to illegal camps and guarantee security to Italian citizens.

Children would also be fingerprinted "to prevent phenomena such as begging," Maroni said, adding that in many cases, people are living in camps in "sub-human conditions where children are forced to live with rats."

The Italian government has defended its actions, saying it is within the realm of existing Italian laws and EU directives.

"Europe's forgotten citizens"

But a study released by the European Commission this week on the discrimination faced by the Roma found their life expectancy is 10-15 years lower than those of other Europeans.

Roma are particularly exposed to high poverty and unemployment, and those who work usually do so illegally, the report said.

"Roma are one of the largest ethnic minorities in the EU, but too often they are Europe's forgotten citizens," said EU Equal Opportunities Commissioner Vladimir Spidla.

"They face persistent discrimination and far-reaching social exclusion. The EU and member states have a joint responsibility to end this situation."

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3461334,00.html