Program - rosa luxemburg stiftung nyc
Transcription
Program - rosa luxemburg stiftung nyc
OFFICIAL OPENING ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG NEW YORK OFFICE Wednesday, November 14, 2012 2-9 PM The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen 20 West 44th Street, New York A B OUT THE ROSA LUX EM BUR G F O U N D A TION The Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung is an internationally operating, progressive non-profit institution for civic education affiliated with the German Left Party (Die Linke). Active since 1990, the foundation has been committed to the analysis of social processes and developments worldwide. In cooperation with organizations around the globe, it works on democratic and social participation, empowerment of disadvantaged groups, alternatives for economic and social development, conflict prevention, and peaceful conflict resolution. Its international activities aim to provide civic education by means of academic analyses, public programs, and projects conducted together with partner institutions. In order to be able to mentor and coordinate these various projects, the foundation has established 17 regional offices around the world. The foundation’s New York Office, located at 275 Madison Avenue, opened its doors in 2012. It serves two major tasks: to work on issues concerning the United Nations, including collaboration with people and political representatives from the Global South, and to work with U.S. and Canadian progressives in universities, unions, social movements, NGOs, and think tanks. The office’s co-directors are Stefanie Ehmsen and Albert Scharenberg. AB O UT TH E GENER AL SO C IETY OF MECHANI CS AND TR AD ES M EN Founded in 1785, the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York was established to provide cultural, educational, and social services to the families of skilled craftsmen. In 1820, the Society founded one of the first free schools in New York City, and also the city’s second-oldest library. To this day, the General Society continues to provide tuition-free technical education. The building currently housing the General Society Library was constructed in 1892. SCHED ULE OF EVENTS 2:15-2:20 WELCOME Stefanie Ehmsen and Albert Scharenberg, co-directors of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation New York Office 2:20-2:30 INTRODUCTION Wilfried Telkämper, director of the foundation’s Center for International Dialogue and Cooperation 2:30-3:45 INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE POLITICS A discussion with foundation directors: - Joanna Gwiazdecka (Warsaw) - Torge Löding (Mexico City) - Armin Osmanovic (Johannesburg) - Klaus Sühl (Brussels) 3:45-4:15 THE ECONOMIC CRISIS AND THE EU An interview with Helmut Scholz, member of the European Parliament, and Klaus Sühl, head of the RLS Brussels office 4:15-4:45 Coffee Break 4:45-5:30 PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE OF GERMANY’S LEFT PARTY A conversation with Cornelia Möhring and Stefan Liebich, members of the German Federal Parliament 5:30-6:30 KEYNOTE SPEECH: Opportunities and Challenges for Left Politics in Germany and Europe, by Gregor Gysi 6:30-7:30 Reception 7:30-8:00 THE LETTERS OF ROSA LUXEMBURG (ACT I) performed by Kathleen Chalfant 8:10-8:15 Intermission Piano by Stephanie Wu 8:15-8:45 THE LETTERS OF ROSA LUXEMBURG (ACT II) KE YN O TE SP EECH by GR EG OR G Y S I Gregor Gysi is the chairman of the Left Party (Die Linke) in the German Federal Parliament, the Bundestag. He holds a doctoral degree in law from the Humboldt University in Berlin and has for many years worked as an attorney in Berlin. Gysi played a critical role in the democratic transition of East Germany in 1989/1990, when he was elected chairman of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) that would later, in 2007, merge with the Electoral Alternative (WASG) to become Die Linke. From 1990 to 2002, as well as since 2005, he has been a member of the Bundestag. Gysi is the best-known left politician from East Germany and popular for his witty critiques of the failures of the German government, in particular with respect to German unification, the deindustrialization of East Germany, the various “reforms” of welfare policies, as well as German and European austerity policies. SP EAKERS Stefanie Ehmsen, PhD, Co-Director of RLS Office in New York Before her appointment in 2012, Ms. Ehmsen was guest professor of gender and diversity at the Beuth Hochschule in Berlin. From 2006 to 2011, she was a member of the executive board of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation. Joanna Gwiazdecka, PhD, Director of RLS Office in Warsaw Ms. Gwiazdecka obtained a doctoral degree in philosophy from the University of Warsaw. Last year, the Association of Jewish Ex-Combatants and Victims of World War II awarded her the Honorary Medal of the “Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.” Stefan Liebich, Member of the German Federal Parliament (Bundestag) Mr. Liebich is a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the German Bundestag. He was the Berlin chairman of the “Party of Democratic Socialism” (one of the two parties that merged in 2007 to become “Die Linke”), as well as its state representative. Torge Löding, Director of RLS Office in Mexico City Mr. Löding, director of the Mexico City office since 2010, is a professional journalist and editor. Cornelia Möhring, Member of the German Bundestag Ms. Möhring is deputy chairman of the parliamentary group of Die Linke in the German Bundestag. She used to work as a consultant for workers’ councils (Betriebsräte). Armin Osmanovic, PhD, Director of RLS Office in Johannesburg Mr. Osmanovic was lecturer for geography, political science and African studies at the University of Hamburg, as well as a research assistant for development policy for Die Linke. Albert Scharenberg, PhD, Co-Director of RLS Office in New York Mr. Scharenberg was lecturer for politics and North American studies at the Free University of Berlin. From 2004 to 2011, he worked as an editor and associate of the monthly journal “Blätter für deutsche und internationale Politik.” Helmut Scholz, Member of the European Parliament Mr. Scholz is a member of the European United Left/Nordic Green Left in the European Parliament. He serves on the parliament’s Committee on International Trade and is a member of its delegation for relations with the United States. Klaus Sühl, PhD, Director of RLS Office in Brussels Prior to being head of the Brussels office, Mr. Sühl was under-secretary of state for Die Linke in the German states of Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. Wilfried Telkämper, Director of the Center for International Dialogue and Cooperation (CIDC) Prior to becoming the director of CIDC in 2010, Mr. Telkämper worked with Capacity Building International (InWEnt). From 1987-1999, he was a member of the European Parliament for the Green Party. THE LETTER S OF R OSA LUX E M B U R G July 16, 1897. Leo Jogiches (1867-1919): prominent figure in Russian, Polish, and German labor movements; Luxemburg’s lover from early 1890s to 1907; co-organizer of the International Group (Spartacus Group); arrested and murdered in prison. June 23, 1898. Robert Seidel (1850-1933): social democrat, teacher, and journalist; moved from Saxony to Switzerland, where he was active in Zurich politics. October 3, 1901. Karl Kautsky (1854-1938): influential theoretician of Second International; chief editor of journal Die Neue Zeit (18821917); once colleagues and friends, Luxemburg broke from him in 1910 over issues of reform politics. December 17 and October 27, 1904. Henriette Roland Holst (18691952): Dutch writer and socialist; active in proletarian women’s movement; leading advocate of revolutionary socialism during World War I. February 5, 1906. Karl and Luise Kautsky. May 23, 1907. Kostya Zetkin (1885-1980): physician and son of Clara Zetkin; Luxemburg’s lover for several years after her breakup with Jogiches in 1907. August 31, 1914. Paul Levi (1883-1930): Luxemburg’s lawyer and publisher of her book The Russian Revolution; adherent of the Spartacus Group; later expelled from the German Communist Party and rejoined the Social Democratic Party (SPD). October 12, 1914. Karl Moor (1852-1932): Swiss social democrat and communist; supported Luxemburg’s antiwar views during World War I; in 1917 helped Lenin and others travel through Germany; sometime after 1918 became agent for the German government. April 15, 1917. Luise Kautsky (1864-1944): wife of Karl Kautsky and longtime friend of Luxemburg. January 11, 1919. Clara Zetkin (1857-1933): close friend of Luxemburg; leader of proletarian women’s movement and initiator of practice of holding International Women’s Day; in 1932 became chairperson by seniority of the German Reichstag for the Communist Party. PE RFORM ED by KATHLEEN C HA L F A N T A founding member of the Women’s Project, Kathleen Chalfant is a board member of The Vineyard Theatre and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, and an advisory board member of the NY Foundation for the Arts. Chalfant has served as Artist-inResidence at the Weill College of Medicine of Cornell University and as a Beinecke Fellow at the Yale School of Drama. She was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from the Cooper Union in June 2010. In 2009, Chalfant performed in The People Speak, a documentary feature film based on Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States. Chalfant has earned numerous awards for her performances. She won Drama Desk, Obie, Lucille Lortel and Outer Critics Circle Awards for starring in the original Broadway production of Wit. She received a Tony nomination for her role in the New York premiere of Tony Kushner’s Angels in America. Chalfant’s New York stage credits also include the New York premiere of Racing Demon, M. Butterfly, Spalding Gray: Stories Left to Tell, Talking Heads (for which she won a second Obie Award), Great Expectations at Theatreworks/USA, Guantanamo at the Culture Project, and Henry V at the New York Shakespeare Festival. Her film work includes Tony Gilroy’s Duplicity, Whit Stillman’s The Last Days of Disco and Bill Condon’s Kinsey. In addition to her Drama Desk, Obie, and Lucile Lortel honors, Chalfant has received the Drama League and Sidney Kingsley Awards for her body of work, as well as a 1996 Obie Award for Sustained Excellence of Performance. Readings excerpted from “The Letters of Rosa Luxemburg,” edited by Georg Adler, Peter Hudis, and Annelies Laschitza, Verso Books: Brooklyn, NY, 2011 (in cooperation with the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung). ABOUT R OSA LUX EM BU R G The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation bears the name of one of the greatest women of the 20th century. Rosa Luxemburg (18711919) was an outstanding representative of the European socialist movement. As a member of the Social Democratic Party and later of the Spartacus League and the Communist Party, she was deeply committed to changing the world on behalf of the exploited and disadvantaged. Luxemburg was an outspoken critic of German militarism and struggled to prevent World War I, which then raged from 1914 to 1918. She also was a passionate critic of capitalism, drawing strength for radical action from her critique. Luxemburg welcomed the Russian Revolution with hope, but as a revolutionary democrat she remained critical and alert: with great prescience, she attacked the Bolsheviks’ dictatorial policies from very early on. Rosa Luxemburg belonged to multiple disadvantaged, often-persecuted minorities her entire life: she was Jewish—and could not escape anti-Semitism even though she had no interest in religion; she was Polish—and as a Pole she was subjected to both German and Russian rule. But at the same time, her indomitable will led her to determine the course of her own life, contrary to the narrow conventions of her time. The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation is indebted to this brave democratic socialist. www.rosalux-nyc.org R O S A L U XE M B U RG S T I F T U N G , INC . 275 Madison Avenue, Suite 2114, New York, NY 10016 info@rosalux-nyc.org| (917) 409-1040 FOLLOW US on Twitter: @rosaluxnyc and Facebook.com/rosaluxnyc