Events
Center for Jewish History and Jewish Women's Archive present:
Remembering Grace Paley: A panel discussion, with excerpts from Lilly Rivlin's new film, Grace Paley: Collected Shorts
Midnight on the Mavi Marmara: The Attack on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla and How It Changed the Course of the Israel/Palestine Conflict
Book Reading and Discussion with Moustafa Bayoumi (editor), Max Blumenthal, Arun Gupta, Rashid Khalidi, Alia Malek and Phil Weiss
at Alwan for the Arts, 16 Beaver Street (between Broad and Broadway), 4th floor,New York, NY 10004, (646) 732-3261
Free and Open to the Public
Village Voice film critic Jim Hoberman will be signing copies of his newly released classic, Bridge of Light: Yiddish Film Between Two Worlds, and will introduce the only Yiddish film made by the USSR, 1932's The Return of Nathan Becker at the Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street in Manhattan.
6:00pm: Exhibition Tour 16 mm Postcards: Home Movies of American Jewish Visitors to 1930s Poland
6:30pm: Films and Discussion
For further details, click here.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
Beginning in 2003, the West Bank village of Budrus united to nonviolently protest the confiscation of village lands for the construction of Israel's separation wall. The documentary, Budrus, tells the story of that protest. With the support of activists from Israel and abroad, the villagers from Budrus succeeded in getting Israel to alter the route of the wall, saving most of their land.
"What If Antigone Were a Refugee?"
New York City Celebrates Jenin
with Alain Badiou, Slavoj Zizek & The Jenin Freedom Theatre
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Lincoln Center & Church of St. Paul The Apostle
with Alain Badiou, Slavoj Zizek & The Jenin Freedom Theatre
Free of charge
2 p.m.: Symposium: Prof. Alain Badiou, Prof. Slavoj Zizek &
filmmaker Udi Aloni



Podcast
Beyond the Pale has been pre-empted this month during WBAI's spring fund raising marathon. But this Sunday we're back on air with a two-hour fund raising marathon special in collaboration with Janet Coleman and David Dozer of