Symposium and reading with Lena Gorelik and others.
Curated together with Lena Gorelik, we invite you to an afternoon dedicated to the future of historical memory in Germany and a reading at night.
In the face of symbolic political ritualization, remembrance in Germany seems to be moving further and further away from its actual content. At a time when neo-Nazis are forging 'remigration plans', the AfD is becoming the strongest opposition party at state and federal level and racist chants and the display of the 'Hitler salute' are becoming a journalistic flash in the pan, we would like to talk about how serious we really are about the cultural imperative of remembrance.
If 'never again' is 'now' and the appeal should not degenerate into a meaningless empty phrase, where is the rebellion? What enlightening value do we still attach to the commemoration of the Holocaust when the consensus of the post-war period - the Basic Law, universal human rights - is increasingly being called into question? What is meant when the lectern speaks of "lessons from history" and "historical responsibility"? What images, voices and testimonies should we repeatedly confront ourselves with in order to shape a culture of remembrance that names terror and trauma and acts as a contemporary guideline for empathy, humanity and peace? What must we expect of ourselves in order not to allow the memories of Nazi crimes to fade before the violence of the present? What can we learn from other countries on the way to such a culture of remembrance?
The panels and discussions will be followed by an evening reading of József Debreczeni's novel Cold Crematorium, which will continue into the night. Report from a land called Auschwitz. The reading will be given by well-known and committed people from Munich and beyond.
Participation free of charge. No registration necessary. Further information at nsdoku.de/program.
Price information:
Participation free of charge. No registration necessary.