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N.B. This collection of news items was begun on Jan. 17, 2006. Please let us know if you discover links that are no longer working. Most recent listed first.
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3/28/04 New US Immigration Law 3/27/06 Maximum cities(by Rana Dasgupta in _New Statesman_)."London, Paris, and New York are dying--the 21st century belongs to the fertile chaos on the third-world metropolis." 3/21/06 Yuri Andrukhovych's acceptance speech "Europe-my neurosis" for this year's Leipzig Book Prize for European Understanding ruffled feathers in Germany. 3/18/06 Berliner Zeitung. Do we want immigrants or not? The questionnaire that the state of Hesse has proposed will even turn a dog away from Germany. Arno Widmann finds the questions simply absurd. "Can Germans to-be answer question 88 (Explain the meaning of the freedom of opinion and freedom of the press) the way Paul Sethe (former publisher of the Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung) did, namely the freedom of 200 rich people to spread their opinion, or do they have to express it more politically correctly in order to be let into the country of Germans? The trick of the democratic constitution of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland lies in the fact that traditions, claims and convictions can be questioned by any citizen. This questionnaire assumes that there is only one correct (and decisive) answer to each question or at least no more answers than the bureaucrat knows. That is the authoritarian, undemocratic and at the same time absurd aspect of this undertaking." See more about the test. 3/16/06- NYT A candid Dutch film may be too Scary for Immigrants. 3/10/06- Spain - El País. "The lifting of entry barriers for Easterners seeking to work in Spain is a fair and intelligent measure, because it allows us to strengthen our relations with 3/10/06 EU steps back, Turkey allows Native Tongue Broadcast.European Union countries prefer the limitation of minority language broadcasts 3/6/06- More on Muslims, Cartoons, and Freedom of Expression. Editorial by Zeki Sariktoprak. 3/6/06-The Nation.What do American cartoon artists make of the worldwide protests ignited by the Muhammad cartoons published by the Danish paper Jyllands-Posten? The Nation's Sam Graham-Felsen posed a few questions by phone to two whose work we hold in great esteem: Joe Sacco, a Maltese-American, the author of Palestine and War's End, and Art Spiegelman, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Maus and In the Shadow of No Towers. http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060306/interview /2/06-Spain - La Vanguardia. Niall Ferguson, a British-born professor who teaches history at Harvard University, demolishes the theory of the clash of civilisations. "In my book 'Colossus', I defend the idea that the conflicts in the Middle East have nothing to do with a clash of civilisations, but rather stem from the 'civilisation of clashes' we see in the Arab world, the propensity of its political culture to resolve conflicts through violence instead of negotiation. And the same theory applies, even more forcefully, to sub-Saharan Africa. ... As a result, it is highly likely that in the future what we will see are local wars, especially ethnic conflicts in Africa, Southeast Asia and the Middle East, as opposed to a global clash of value systems. ... In summary, we are really speaking about a 'failure of civilisations' and not a clash between them." (Article in Spanish). Rejecting the Bad: A Muslim Manifesto"Who are the moderate Muslims, and why do they not speak up?" After being asked theis question over and over again since 9/11, particularly after the Danish cartoon crisis, Muslim intellectuals Akyol and Baran have proposed this Muslim Manifesto.http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,404005,00.html Goodbye Ostalgia! A New Willingness to Criticize East Germany Wanted: Ethnic Minority Cops in Germany. Less than 2 percent of its ethnic minorities are estimated to work in the public service sector, despite making up 13 % of Berlin's 3-million population. (Article in English) 2/24/06 Muhammad cartoons A survey of the European press Viennese philosopher Isolde Charim has given up on the idea of a dialogue between cultures while Wole Soyinka suggests that such a dialogue can only succeed on a new footing. German sociologist Necla Kelek warns against underestimating the forced collectivity of Islamic culture.http://www.signandsight.com/intodaysfeuilletons/628.html 2/23/06"Valley of the Wolves" - a hate film? Der Tagesspiegel, 23.02.2006 2/22/06 Jail sentence for David Irving. Should those who deny the Holocaust like the British Historian David Irving be placed behind bars? Spiegel ONLINE discusses weighing rights like freedom of expression against the historical facts with German historian Hans-Ulrich Wehler. http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,402404,00.html |
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2/18/06 Washington, DC. UPI--A joint Spanish-Turkish initiative backed by the UN is being mentioned as a possible forum for restoring calm between Europe and the Islamic world following the Mohammed cartoon debacle originally triggered by Denmark. | |||
2/7/06 The violent protests against the Muhammad cartoons are spreading and putting the lives of Western Europeans living in the Arab world at risk. Now Muslim intellectuals are also voicing their opinions in European newspapers. They see the confrontation as a chance to modernise Islam. Germany - Die Welt. Irshad Manji, a Canadian and Visiting The Cartoon Jihad: 'Satanic Verses Taught us a Lesson' In her work as a social anthropologist, Professor Pnina Werbner of Britain's Keele University, has written extensively about the "Satanic Verses" affair and the tumult Salman Rushdie's novel created between wetern and Muslim cultures. In an interview with Spiegel Online she compares the greatest literary debate of our time to the outrage over Danish caricatures of Muhammed. |
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1/27/06-"Naturalization in Germany: Not Easy to Become German Naturalization can be generally defined as changing the nationality and getting accustomed to the way of life in the new country. In the context of increasing tension between migrant groups and their host societies, it became one of the most problematic issues nowadays. At first, naturalization was not handled as a problematic concept and the official requirements were not so much difficult to fulfil. However, the policies towards migration have been strictly tightened and are becoming much more restrictive every single day. Nonetheless, the recent implementation of the province of Baden-Wurttemberg, in Germany seems to be the triumph of all such attitudes. "http://www.turkishweekly.net/nermin.php?id=139 |
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Philosophy/ Europe: Europe's languages 1/23/06-Switzerland - Neue Zürcher Zeitung. Europe is no longer identical with the European Union," writes Otfried Höffe, professor of philosophy at the University of Tübingen, in an essay on Europe's viability for the future. "In particular in those areas where language is not a culturally neutral form of communication, it's important to preserve Europe's cultural diversity, or in other words, to publish works in two or three other major European languages, despite the existence of a lingua franca. Linguistic competence, however, is not just a question of practicality. It also serves the principle of reciprocal respect - an attitude which is crucial for Europe. Those who learn other languages are showing that they regard other cultures as being on an equal footing to their own." http://www.nzz.ch/2006/01/23/fe/articleDBQ15.html http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/ La ministra holandesa de Inmigración quiere que en la calle sólo se hable holandés |
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1/23/06 Berlin TAZ "Machos mit Herz" Daniel Bax presents the next big thing: Turkish-German Arabesque music! The stars are Murat "Muhabbet" Ersin ("Sie liegt in meinen Armen" - she lies in my arms) and the duo Mehmet and Murat who have "already won themselves a large fanbase in the Internet". (...) "In Turkish chat forums there are scores of devotional hymns of praise from mostly female fans. This no doubt stems from their fearless expression of their emotions, not to say kitsch. Because lines like 'Where are you / you know very well, I love you / Where are you / you know very well, I need you / Where are you / don't leave me alone / I love you and no one else' could not gush more pathos. So this is what it sounds like when Turkish men love too much!"http://www.taz.de/pt/2006/01/24/a0173.1/text | |||
Die Welt, 18.01.2006 Sven Felix Kellerhoff has visited the new permanent exhibition at Berlin's House of the Wannsee Conference, where the final solution was decided on. "The exhibition, supervised by historian Peter Klein, summarises current knowledge on the preparation of the genocide. Research in this area has taken huge strides in the past 15 years above all thanks to the opening of numerous archives in Eastern Europe. For this reason the new exhibition has little in common with the previous one, although the same tragic story is being documented." |
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Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. The whole of Spain is preoccupied with the question of "whether the region of Catalonia will one day be allowed to call itself a 'nation' and make its division from the rest of Spain slightly more visible," Paul Ingendaay reports. He goes on to describe the grotesque impact attempts to achieve autonomy have on everyday life in Barcelona. "The language police have indeed stepped up their activities and are subjecting the populace of Catalonia to intense surveillance. In 2004, four times as many businesses,bars and restaurants as in 2003 were fined for failing to offer their services and wares in Catalan as well as Spanish. How about a little foreign flair, like in New York or Berlin? Well, not in Barcelona. Here, customers are entitled to complain if the staff doesn't speak Catalan when serving them. This means that people who speak Spanish only have a hard time finding jobs in Barcelona, despite the fact that Catalonia is part of Spain." http://www.faz.net | |||
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Gazeta Wyborcza, 14.01.2006 (Poland) The third part of Maciej Zaremba's series of articles on nomadic labour in Europe focuses on Poland and not just the famed "Polish plumber." Zaremba spoke with Polish families in which all siblings work in different European countries. "There's work in Poland but if I don't have to, I don't work for the money. If I can earn 1,100 euros here, I have to earn twice as much to do business abroad," says one of the many construction workers who earn their money in Sweden. Zaremba accuses the Swedish construction unions, which are going after eastern European workers particularly aggressively, of selective amnesia. "In the 1970s, thousands of Swedes worked in the Eastern Bloc countries. They weren't 'guest workers', they were 'delegates' like the Latvians in the North are today. At the time, they were earning twenty times as much as the local workers, they paid no taxes, they went to the best restaurants and themost expensive brothels. Some even took cheap Polish 'replacements' to do their work for them. That these were risking their own lives when they stood up for their employee's rights didn't seem to interest the 'delegates' at all, much as it doesn't interest the Swedish unions today." |
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The Boston Globe (1/16/2006 7:11:22 AM) "For Muslim women, a deadly defiance 'Honor killings' on rise in Europe By Colin Nickerson, Globe Staff | January 16, 2006 BERLIN -- Life was just starting to look up for 23-year-old Hatun Surucu when the bullets cut her down. After four years of grueling courses in vocational school, coupled with the demands of single motherhood, she was only weeks away from receiving certification as an electrician, a trade that would give her the independence she desperately craved." For Muslim women, a deadly defiance - Turkish Daily News Jan 16, 2006 (1/16/2006 7:13:30 AM)"Painting exhibit Footprints of Women featured in Norway Monday, January 16, 2006 ANKARA - Turkish Daily News Gallery 2000 in Norway's province of Skedsmo is hosting a painting exhibition as part of the ongoing Turkish Week held there, sponsored by the Norwegian-Turkish Friendship Society. The week kicked off on Friday with the opening of the "Kad&Mac245;n&Mac245;n Ayak ?zleri" (Footprints of Women) exhibit by Turkish painter Ülkü Bart&Mac245;nl&Mac245;o?lu, who says the art depcts women's rights, freedom and success. Turkish Ambassador to Oslo Mehmet Kaz&Mac245;m Görkay, who delivered a speech in the opening, said he was very pleased to see the collaboration of Norwegian authorities to develop relations between Norway and Turkey. Görkay also thanked the Norwegian-Turkish Friendship Society for organizing the weeklong activities." |
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