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Welcome to te AICafé in Beit Sahour
Cafes have
traditionally functioned as factories for ideas. It is likely that numerous
important decisions which have altered history were taken over a cup of tea or
coffee. Nowadays, the value of “being together” is rapidly changing as people
communicate more and more through new media. However, the practice of meeting
in a cafe has not died out; indeed, it has evolved with the appearance of
“topical” cafes.
To enhance
communication between people from different cultures and experiences in a
region in which information is often hindered, is one of the goals of the newly
established AICafè, a political café run by volunteers of the Alternative Information
Center.
The
AICafè is meant to foster political information, and to advance ideas, which
may start alternative ways of knowledge and communication in order to achieve
awareness in all spheres of daily life, such as politics, economics and
international issues. Without denying
the importance of the most important and significant cultural traditions, the
AICafè strives to promote change and to enhance new social and political
practices by creating a wide range of events and activities centred on dialogue
and mutual understanding.
In accordance
with the AIC though, which promotes responsible co-operation between
Palestinians and Israelis based on the values of social and political justice,
equality, solidarity and community involvement, the AICafè provides an open
space for local and international people to endorse a joint struggle for
Palestinian people rights, against Israeli policy of occupation.
The AICafè,
hosted in the AIC historic office building in the heart of Beit Sahour, holds
political material, guides, reports, the AIC’s numerous publications and a
library. The café serves primarily local and fairly traded products from the
area.
The AICafè is
starting a networking process with other political cafés around the world and
is currently linked with the Dutch political café Averechts in Utrecht (www.averechts.nl).
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Written by kristel
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Monday, 31 March 2008 |
Tuesday 1st April,
7.30pm
Filmscreening: Divine
Intervention
Followed by time for analysis and
discussion
Divine Intervention is a 2002 film by the Israeli
Palestinian director Elia Suleiman, which may be described as a surreal black
comedy. The film consists largely of a series of brief interconnected sketches,
but for the most part records a day in the life of a Palestinian living in
Nazareth, whose girlfriend lives several checkpoints away in the West Bank city
of Ramallah.
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Written by kristel
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Thursday, 27 March 2008 |
Saturday 29th March, 7.30pm
Lecture by Arthur Neslen about
his book: Occupied Minds
A journey through the Israeli
psyche
Arthur Neslen, a Jewish Londoner and former international editor
of Red Pepper magazine wrote the book 'Occupied Minds' which consists of
interviews with some 50 Israelis from an incredibly diverse range of
backgrounds, secret servicemen and those who risked their lives supporting
Palestinians, rabbis and secularists, racists and those who have married Arabs,
and many more. Topics discussed range from the status of Yiddish to the
treatment of gays, Kabbalistic theology to the rock scene, the Holocaust to
football.
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Written by kristel
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Sunday, 23 March 2008 |
Tuesday 25th March, 7.30pm
Documentary film: My Land, by Tone Andersen
Followed by talk with Trees Kosterman, who appears in the film, about their struggle in Saknin and about Palestinian Land Day (which is on Sunday 30th of March)
My Land documents the threat that husband and wife Ali and Trees in the town of Sakhnin (Galilee region, north Palestine) face from the Zionist occupation authority to destroy the home the family built on their own land. About 1.3 million Palestinians who were issued 'Israeli citizenship' are still struggling 57 years after the imposition of the Zionist state for their rights to their own property and land. The film shows one of those many struggles.
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Written by KRISTEL
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Friday, 21 March 2008 |
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Saturday 22nd March,
7.30pm
Lecture about 'The cemeteries of numbers'
by Yahea Abed El Azziz
The cemeteries of numbers are cemeteries where 'unidentified
dead bodies' of Palestinians are burried by the Israelis. There are four
cemeteries in different parts of Palestine. The first is near the village of
Fasail, the second is near Al Jeftlik in the Jordan Valley, the third is in the
village Wadi Al Hamam near Tiberius on the slopes of the mountain where the
famous Hiteen battle took place and the fourth is in a military closed area
where the boarders of Lebanon, Syria and Palestine meet.
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Written by ahmad
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Friday, 14 March 2008 |
Saturday 15th March,
7.30pm
Presentation by the people of 'The Freedom Theatre' in
Jenin
Using the arts as a model for social change, The Freedom Theatre is developing the only professional venue
for theatre and arts in the north of the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The
aim of this project is to empower and give voice to the children of
Jenin Refugee Camp through a unique programme of workshops and
activities in theatre, supporting arts and multi-media, ranging in their
emphasis from the largely therapeutic and healing, to the presentation of
high-quality artistic products
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Written by ahmad
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Sunday, 09 March 2008 |
Tuesday 11th March,
7.30pm
Filmscreening: Paradise Now, a film by Hany Abu
Assad (2005)
Followed by time for discussion and
reflection
In Nablus on the West Bank, Said and Khaled, who
have volunteered to be suicide bombers, receive word it will be tomorrow - the
cell's first operation in two years. They're shaven and shorn, in black suits to
pose as settlers in Tel Aviv for a wedding
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