CPPD | Plural Remembrance Calendar 2026 – Order now

The Plural Remembrance Calendar 2026 will be available soon and can now be pre-ordered.

The calendar brings together events of remembrance and places them within the context of plural memory. Continuously updated, process-oriented, and expandable, it includes both official days of remembrance and plural commemorative events. Contributions by CPPD members and guest authors take the form of journalistic, academic, and creative pieces. The calendar points to “gaps of memory” and fills blind spots in public remembrance.

If you would like to receive the Plural Remembrance Calendar 2026, you can order it here by 1 December 2025. Distribution will start soon after – so make sure to get your copy in time!


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Dagesh On Tour | Visit in Bad Oeynhausen: Local newspapers report

Dagesh On Tour | Visit in Bad Oeynhausen: Local newspapers report

The Westfalen-Blatt newspaper on 21 June and the Neue Westfälische newspaper on 24 June 2025 both reported twice on our DoT workshops in Bad Oeynhausen: ‘We are delighted that we were able to bring this fantastic project to Bad Oeynhausen,’ emphasised Claudia Jenkes from the municipal cultural department and history teacher Kai-Uwe Klatz from the Europaschule school. The young people had a choice of two workshops: In the ‘Magazine of Ideas’ workshop, which took place on the premises of the multi-generational house, the young people designed their own journal under the guidance of installation artist Sonia Knop. In the Sonderfahrt youth café, the ‘Let’s talk music’ workshop with musician Yael Gat focused on Jewish music and its languages. The two artists were each supported by an art teacher.”

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CPPD | Podcastepisode 48 „ERINNERUNGSFUTUR“: Nicole Schweiß in conversation with Gilda Sahebi

CPPD | Podcastepisode 48 „ERINNERUNGSFUTUR“: Nicole Schweiß in conversation with Gilda Sahebi

In this episode of our series on cooperation, a constructively critical view of school and education and thoughts on plural cultures of remembrance meet the diverse expertise of Gilda Sahebi. The Berlin-based political scientist, doctor and freelance journalist combines many socially relevant topics in her work. In her new book, ‘Verbinden statt spalten – Eine Antwort auf die Politik der Polarisierung’ (Connecting Instead of Dividing – A Response to the Politics of Polarisation), she exposes the (media-generated) narrative of division and shows how social myths about social benefits, migration, gender debates, Corona and the so-called ‘Middle East’ work.

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