| Home AICafe
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).
|
|
Written by SARA
|
|
Wednesday, 09 July 2008 |
|
Saturday 12th of July,
8pm
Lecture by Nassar Ibrahim
about Political Islam in the Middle East
Nassar Ibrahim is a journalist,
sociologist, writer and the co-director of the Alternative Information
Center
He will present the roots and rise of Political
Islam in the Middle East through its social, political and economic dimensions.
The Islamic Political Movement will
be described with a focus on its connections with the colonial and imperialist
policies in the Middle East and and as an alternative answer to the
globalization. Starting out with a historical
background about Islam and the Islamic Brotherhoods in Egypt
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Written by sara
|
|
Thursday, 03 July 2008 |
|
Saturday 5th
July, 8pm
Lecture by Jamal Darawi,
and Grazia Careccia about the situation of Al-Nu’eman village.
Jamal Darawi is the head
of the Popular Committee against the Wall in Al-Nu'eman village and Grazia
Careccia is a field researcher for Al-Haq.
Al Nu'man is a village
of 200 inhabitants between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. In 1967 Israel annexed its land to the Jerusalem Municipality,
while the residents were issued West Bank
residence IDs.
Since the erection of
the Separation Wall in 2004, this "technical blunder" has turned
their life into a nightmare—they are trapped between Jerusalem, which they are
prohibited from entering, being West Bank residents, and the separation wall, which
severs them from the rest of the occupied West Bank.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Written by kristel
|
|
Sunday, 29 June 2008 |
Tuesday 1st July,
8pm
Presentation: Highlights of a
year in Palestine, a goodbye (but she will be back!)
folllowed by music
concert: Doreen, Johanna and Raed
In October 2006 Kristel (from Holland) arrived to
Palestine for the YMCA Olive Picking Program. After the program she decided to
stay longer and set up a political cafe in the Alternative Information Center.
The opening of the AICafe was in December 2006, a few days before Kristel left
to finish her studies in Holland.
Since July 2007 she is back and she has been
working on the program and publicity for the AICafe events.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Written by kristel
|
|
Friday, 27 June 2008 |
|
Saturday 28th June,
8pm
Filmscreening: 'The Black Panthers
(in Israel) speak', a film by Eli Hamo & Sami Shalom Chetrit
(2003)
To conclude our Trilogy about Israeli
Protest Movements we would like to screen the film about the Black Panthers in
Israel. Last week Reuven Aberjil spoke about the history of the Arab (Mizrahi)
Jews and the struggle of the Black Panther movement. If you want to know and see
more about the Israeli Black Panthers, come and see the film on Saturday.
You can also join the tour of
the Musrara neighborhood in Jerusalem, tomorrow at 10am (see information
below)
The
uprising of the Black Panthers in the early 1970s
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Written by kristel
|
|
Sunday, 22 June 2008 |
Tuesday 24th
June, 8pm
Filmscreening:
Memory of the Cactus, a film by Hanna Musleh (who will be present)
The 2nd public
filmscreening in the Westbank - very new documentary film!
A documentary
film revealing the true story behind Israel’s
“Canada Park” – a story of dispossession,
destruction and continuing displacement.
41 years ago,
the three Palestinian villages of Imwas, Yalo and Beit Nouba in the Latroun
enclave of the West Bank were razed to the ground after Israel occupied
the territory. Today, the residents of those villages remain displaced and
barred from returning, while Israel treats the land as if it were part of
Israel and refuses to acknowledge the Palestinian history of the area. Israeli
citizens enjoy barbecues and picnics in the Jewish National Fund’s “Canada Park”,
oblivious to the crimes perpetrated in their names on that very land.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
Written by kristel
|
|
Wednesday, 18 June 2008 |
Saturday 21st June,
8pm
Lecture by Reuven
Aberjil about the Israeli Black Panther
Movement
Reuven Aberjil is one of the founders of
the Israeli Black Panthers.
The Israeli Black Panthers were one of the
biggest and most important social protest movements to have been created in
Israel. They were a movement of second generation immigrants from Middle Eastern
and North African countries, referred to in Israel as Mizrahi Jews.The
movement began early in 1971 in the Musrara neighborhood of Jerusalem, a
neighborhood whose inhabitants were mostly North
African (Arab) Jews. It was
established in reaction to the state’s
|
|
Read more...
|
|
| << Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>
| | Results 37 - 42 of 77 |
|
|