Robert Bosch Stiftung: Georg Eckert Institut - Leibniz-Institut für Internationals Schulbuchfroschung
THEMA: Der Nahostkonflikt löst auch in Deutschland immer wieder heftige Debatten aus. In Medienberichten wird in diesem Zusammenhang vor "importierten Konflikten" gewarnt, die durch die Spannungen im Nahen Osten unter Muslimen und Juden in Deutschland ausgelöst werden könnten. Aber auch nichtmuslimische und nichtjüdische Menschen verfolgen den die Ereignisse in Israel und Palästina mit besonderer Emotionalität.
45 Min. Film:
http://www.zwischentoene.info/themen/unterrichtseinheit/materialien/ue/berlin-goes-gaza.html#content
Projektgruppe "Salam Berlin Shalom" 2010
hentoene.info/themen/unterrichtseinheit/praesentation/ue/berlin-goes-gaza.html
Wir lernen über
Gelaal und Ahmed aus Palestinien
Joel, ein Jude in Berlin
Timur, ein Jude neulich Deutscher aus Weißrussland
Zitate aus dem Film:
Zitat 1 „Ich fühle mich als Moslem, aber auch ein bisschen als Deutscher – hat mit Moslem zwar nichts zu tun – und als Palästinenser und ich interessiere mich auch dafür.“
Zitat 2: „Wissen Sie, das ist komisch und wenn ich jetzt zum Beispiel hier bin und dann wenn ich zum Beispiel nach Marzahn gehe und sage: „Ey, ich bin Deutscher!“ – da glaubt mir nicht ein einziger. Wenn ich jetzt rübergehe in den Libanon gehe und dort sage: „Hey Freunde, ich bin Araber!“ – da glaubt mir auch nicht einer, da sagen sie: „Ey, du bist Deutscher, du bist kein Araber.““
Zitat 3 „Deine Leute haben meinen Onkel umgebracht.“ „Wie meine Leu kein Israeli.“ „Ja, du bist doch Jude.“ „Ja, aber das das ist die gleiche Religion, aber... Das finde ich furchtbar, wie manche Leute so verallgemeinern, dass echt viele der Meinung sind, dass Jude ist auch gleich Israeli. Nein! Jude ist Jude. Israeli ist israelischer Staatsbürger.“
Zitat 4 „Ich trenne das, gerade weil ich hier lebe in Deutschland. Für mich ist der Staat Israel Israel-Staat. Und äh – es gibt auch israelische Moslems. Es gibt auch israelische Palästinenser. Es spielt ja in dem Moment keine Rolle. Ich trenne das jüdisch, israelisch, palästinensisch, Moslem, Christ.“
ARBEITSBLATT
„WAS MACHT MICH AUS?“
Das macht mich aus:
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Diese Ereignisse haben mich geprägt oder sind mir wichtig
(zum Beispiel aus der Geschichte, Politik, Familie):
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Rana Göroglu, "Was geht mich Palästina an?" Eine Reise nach Jerusalem, Newsletter Jugendkultur, Religion und politische Bildung, 18/Aug, 2010. (online) (Seite 7)
Seite 10: ,,Menschen ohne Religion verstehen das nicht!"
Hier von ZEIT ONLINE gibt es eine Fernsehsendung über Pakistan, die sich um Sexualität und Gesundheit handelt:
Showing posts with label islam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label islam. Show all posts
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Sunday, November 8, 2015
STERN Fernsehen und die Fluechtlinge: Was denken sie ueber Schwule Ehen, Bier, Hot Pants?
HIER KANN MAN MEHR LESEN, UND AUCH DAS VIDEO ANSCHAUEN
TV-Umfrage
Was sagen Flüchtlinge zu deutschen Werten und Bräuchen?
Die Debatte um die Integration der Flüchtlinge wird teils hitzig geführt und dabei oft die Frage gestellt: Haben die Zuwanderer überhaupt eine Vorstellung vom Leben in Deutschland? stern TV hat 40 Flüchtlingen in Berlin symbolische Bilder gezeigt - und ihre spontanen Reaktionen eingefangen.
Am Montagabend hat stern TV auf der eigenen Facebook-Seitedrei Fotos gepostet: Mädchen in Hotpants, ein schwules Paar, das sich küsst und Angela Merkel. Dazu hat die Redaktion drei einfache Fragen gestellt:
Was denkt ihr, wenn ihr dieses Foto seht?
Wie findet ihr dieses Foto?
Was fällt euch zu diesem Bild ein?
"Das ist ein freies Land und ein sehr schönes Leben, die wissen das Leben zu genießen. Wir sind hierhergekommen, weil es ein freies Land ist, das will ich auch genießen. Ich finde das sehr schön", formulierte einer der befragten Flüchtlinge den Konsens der meisten.
"Schweinefleisch und Alkoholkonsum können nicht verpflichtend sein"
Und zu Discos?
Ein Mann sagte aber auch: "Ich gehe nicht in eine Disco. Ich mag das nicht", sagte ein Mann. "Da ist Porno drin, unsaubere Sachen." Ein anderer: "Vor zwei Jahren war ich mal da. Wenn es Gottes Wille ist, werde ich noch mal hingehen. Ich fand es schön."
Alle Flüchtlinge fanden Mädchen in Hotpants in Ordnung
37 von 40 Flüchtlingen zeigten sich religiös tolerant
Ein Foto war von einem Juden mit Kippa vor dem Brandenburger Tor, also in Berlin. Wie wir es uns wünschen, zeigten sie sich tolerant. "Ich persönlich habe keine Probleme damit. Ich bin zwar Muslim, akzeptiere die aber auch. Auch wenn sie zu mir nach Hause kommen und mein Brot essen. Oder ich ihr Brot esse", so eine Reaktion. Und: "Ich bin hier, in einem Land, das uns so sehr respektiert, ich werde auch dieses Land und die Menschen hier sehr respektieren." 37 von 40 Flüchtlingen akzeptieren Juden in Deutschland.
Aber was denken sie über eine Hochzeit unter Homosexuellen?
"Bei uns im Nahen Osten ist das nicht erlaubt. Das ist keine normale Sache. Aber hier in Europa und in diesem Land ist das eine normale Sache. Das muss man akzeptieren. Wir können hier nicht so weiterdenken, wie wir dort gedacht haben", erklärt einer der Flüchtlinge.
Doch tatsächlich dachten längst nicht alle so: "Diese Heirat ist verboten. In allen Büchern aller Religionen steht, dass das nicht erlaubt ist, deswegen ist es auch bei uns verboten."
Insgesamt wollen nur 25 von 40 Befragten Homosexuelle in Deutschland akzeptieren. Zärtlichkeiten zwischen Mann und Frau in der Öffentlichkeit waren für alle der 40 Flüchtlinge in Ordnung – und schön.
Monday, February 9, 2015
Angela Merkel visits Obama today
USA Today's
German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrived in Washington late Sunday, February 8, for meetings with President Obama that start Monday. Here's what they will talk about:
UKRAINE
"One of the most pressing issues is the crisis in Ukraine," said Peter Wittig, Germany's ambassador to Washington. "All of us are concerned this is a spiraling military conflict. We want to explore the diplomatic options."
Merkel's visit comes as Obama considers providing modern weapons to Ukraine, which has been losing territory in the country's eastern regions to pro-Russian separatists armed with tanks and personnel carriers sporting Russia's most advanced armor.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Saturday asked Western leaders at the Munich Security Conference to push for a quick cease-fire and defensive weapons capable of countering the separatists' armored assaults.
Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed Friday during a meeting in Moscow to draft a peace plan for Ukraine based on ideas proposed by Putin and Poroshenko, but previous agreements have fallen apart even as the conflict has resulted in more than 5,300 dead in Ukraine.
Merkel has opposed sending weapons to Ukraine. On Saturday, she said she "cannot imagine any situation in which improved equipment for the Ukrainian army leads to President Putin being so impressed that he believes he will lose militarily," according to the Associated Press.
Wittig, who briefed reporters in Washington in advance of Merkel's visit, said that if the West delivered weapons to Ukraine, "Moscow would probably reciprocate" by providing separatists with more weapons.
"How far are we willing to escalate that military spiral? I'm not sure that we are," Wittig said.
IRAN
Merkel will also discuss Iranian nuclear negotiations with Obama. The talks face a March 24 deadline imposed by U.S. Senator Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who sent Obama a letter saying he is among at least 10 Democrats who will agree with their Republican colleagues to impose new economic sanctions on Iran if there is no framework agreement over the country's disputed nuclear program by that date. Obama has threatened to veto such a bill.
The deadline has created a new sense of urgency, but, "We feel we should use the window of opportunity we have to come to an agreement," Wittig said.
Germany, the USA, Britain, France, Russia and China have been negotiating with Iran on limits to its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions that have crippled the oil-rich nation's economy. U.S. officials have said they seek to extend the time frame in which Iran could quickly produce enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon from two months to at least a year. Iran denies it seeks nuclear weapons capabilities.
Wittig said any measures Iran may take to satisfy the West would also require an agreement to allow strong monitoring to assure Iran sticks to the deal. And any deal would expire after a time period on which the two sides have yet to agree.
"We're talking about double-digit years until there's complete sanctions relief," Wittig said. "If that's not viable it's not going to work."
ISLAMIC STATE
Obama and Merkel will also discuss a training center Germany is setting up in Erbil, in Kurdish-controlled Iraq, to train and provide arms to Kurdish Peshmerga forces fighting against the Islamic State, which has seized territory in Iraq and Syria.
Merkel will also discuss German interest in pursuing other tracks of destabilizing the militant group, including counter-financing and supporting messages that de-legitimize the group's claims that its actions, including the murder by fire last month of a captured Jordanian pilot, are backed by Muslim religious ideals.
AFGHANISTAN
Merkel will talk to Obama about Afghanistan and Obama's pledge to pull out U.S. troops by 2016, Wittig said.
Obama has declared the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan to be over, but many observers of the conflict there doubt the Afghan military's ability to stand on its own against a Taliban insurgency that has raged since the USA ousted the group from power following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
"We think it's wise to have a pullout accord tied to achievements and bench marks," Wittig said.
TRADE
Finally, the two leaders will discuss a thorny trade pact, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, which would unite the economies of the USA and the 28 nations of the European Union. The deal would eliminate most trade barriers for many products and financial services.
Backers say it could produce free-market prosperity, but the negotiations have also been controversial because the pact would increase competition. Greece's new leftist ruling party, Syriza, has said it opposes the plan.
Georgios Katrougkalos, a Syriza party member and Greece's deputy minister for administrative reform, said Monday that his party is against a proposed dispute settlement provision that would allow companies to sue governments for lost profits.
5 things about German leader's visit to Washington
German Chancellor Angela Merkel gestures during her speech at the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 7.
(Photo: Matthias Schrader, AP)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrived in Washington late Sunday, February 8, for meetings with President Obama that start Monday. Here's what they will talk about:
UKRAINE
"One of the most pressing issues is the crisis in Ukraine," said Peter Wittig, Germany's ambassador to Washington. "All of us are concerned this is a spiraling military conflict. We want to explore the diplomatic options."
Merkel's visit comes as Obama considers providing modern weapons to Ukraine, which has been losing territory in the country's eastern regions to pro-Russian separatists armed with tanks and personnel carriers sporting Russia's most advanced armor.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Saturday asked Western leaders at the Munich Security Conference to push for a quick cease-fire and defensive weapons capable of countering the separatists' armored assaults.
Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed Friday during a meeting in Moscow to draft a peace plan for Ukraine based on ideas proposed by Putin and Poroshenko, but previous agreements have fallen apart even as the conflict has resulted in more than 5,300 dead in Ukraine.
Merkel has opposed sending weapons to Ukraine. On Saturday, she said she "cannot imagine any situation in which improved equipment for the Ukrainian army leads to President Putin being so impressed that he believes he will lose militarily," according to the Associated Press.
Wittig, who briefed reporters in Washington in advance of Merkel's visit, said that if the West delivered weapons to Ukraine, "Moscow would probably reciprocate" by providing separatists with more weapons.
"How far are we willing to escalate that military spiral? I'm not sure that we are," Wittig said.
IRAN
Merkel will also discuss Iranian nuclear negotiations with Obama. The talks face a March 24 deadline imposed by U.S. Senator Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who sent Obama a letter saying he is among at least 10 Democrats who will agree with their Republican colleagues to impose new economic sanctions on Iran if there is no framework agreement over the country's disputed nuclear program by that date. Obama has threatened to veto such a bill.
The deadline has created a new sense of urgency, but, "We feel we should use the window of opportunity we have to come to an agreement," Wittig said.
Germany, the USA, Britain, France, Russia and China have been negotiating with Iran on limits to its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions that have crippled the oil-rich nation's economy. U.S. officials have said they seek to extend the time frame in which Iran could quickly produce enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon from two months to at least a year. Iran denies it seeks nuclear weapons capabilities.
Wittig said any measures Iran may take to satisfy the West would also require an agreement to allow strong monitoring to assure Iran sticks to the deal. And any deal would expire after a time period on which the two sides have yet to agree.
"We're talking about double-digit years until there's complete sanctions relief," Wittig said. "If that's not viable it's not going to work."
ISLAMIC STATE
Obama and Merkel will also discuss a training center Germany is setting up in Erbil, in Kurdish-controlled Iraq, to train and provide arms to Kurdish Peshmerga forces fighting against the Islamic State, which has seized territory in Iraq and Syria.
Merkel will also discuss German interest in pursuing other tracks of destabilizing the militant group, including counter-financing and supporting messages that de-legitimize the group's claims that its actions, including the murder by fire last month of a captured Jordanian pilot, are backed by Muslim religious ideals.
AFGHANISTAN
Merkel will talk to Obama about Afghanistan and Obama's pledge to pull out U.S. troops by 2016, Wittig said.
Obama has declared the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan to be over, but many observers of the conflict there doubt the Afghan military's ability to stand on its own against a Taliban insurgency that has raged since the USA ousted the group from power following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
"We think it's wise to have a pullout accord tied to achievements and bench marks," Wittig said.
TRADE
Finally, the two leaders will discuss a thorny trade pact, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, which would unite the economies of the USA and the 28 nations of the European Union. The deal would eliminate most trade barriers for many products and financial services.
Backers say it could produce free-market prosperity, but the negotiations have also been controversial because the pact would increase competition. Greece's new leftist ruling party, Syriza, has said it opposes the plan.
Georgios Katrougkalos, a Syriza party member and Greece's deputy minister for administrative reform, said Monday that his party is against a proposed dispute settlement provision that would allow companies to sue governments for lost profits.
Friday, October 5, 2012
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