Pedro Kadivar and Suleman Taufiq in speech

Die Iranian Community in Germany e.V. (IGD) organizes together with others at 18.02.2021, 6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m as part of the value dialogue project "Your Values ​​- My Values ​​- Our Values" a storytelling salon on the subject: "Culture as a constitutive element of international understanding - about migration, integration and identities".

We want to talk about these and other topics with the German-Syrian writer and editor Suleman Taufiq and the Iranian theater director and author Pedro Kadivar. Kadivar, who was born in Shiraz/Iran and later emigrated to Paris, uses his essay "Little Book of Migrations" deal with the topic of internal and external migration. Born in Beirut, the Paris of the East, Suleman Taufiq writes poetry that transcends the experience of being at home in two different worlds. Taufiq emigrated to Germany in 1971 and publishes his short stories "Joseph's Birthday" before.

Registrations via veranstaltungen@iranischegemeinde.de until February 15th, 2021.

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on email

Related articles

Nassir Djafaris “Mahtab” im taz and hr2

For a new article in the taz, Nassir Djafari met Shirin Sojitrawalla in Frankfurt's Palmengarten to talk about himself and his book "Mahtab". Here's a little foretaste: “Djafari tells the story exclusively from Mahtob's perspective. He modeled it on his own mother, he says in an interview. It's not her biography, but she is similar in type to her: reserved and quiet. Her husband Amin also reminds a little of his own father. He is a very

Read More »

Gerrit Wustmann: World Literature Activist

In an interview with UnterEins, Gerrit Wustmann talks about why "world literature" often only means "Western literature", who is to blame and what can be done about it. An interview worth reading that makes you think: Here is a small excerpt from the interview: Your book says: Whenever “world literature” is mentioned somewhere, for example in university lectures or on lists of the best, it is mostly about Western literature: European and Anglo-Saxon books. Perhaps some of you are also wondering: Is it enough? Why do we absolutely have to read Arabic literature, for example? what do you say

Read More »

A podcast on the Munich Kirchradio | Fariba Vafi: To the rain

In the book podcast by Gabie Hafner from the radio program of the Munich church radio, Fariba Vafi's "An den Regen" was presented as a book tip. The podcast focuses on women in Iran. Here is a small excerpt from the podcast: Iranian author Fariba Vafi aims to create female characters and make voices audible that would otherwise remain silent. It is certainly also the authors of their generation who paved the way for younger women to articulate themselves openly. Here you can

Read More »