Andrea von Treuenfeld in conversation with Nelly Kranz and Daniel Grossman.
What does Jewish life in Germany look like today? How do Jews feel in this country? And what does Jewish mean to them? For their new book "Jewish Now! Young Jews on Their Lives in Germany," Andrea von Treuenfeld spoke with 26 people who answered these questions from very different perspectives. In a conversation with Nelly Kranz and Daniel Grossmann, the author presents her project.
Andrea von Treuenfeld lives as a freelance journalist and author in Berlin. Her most recent books are "In Deutschland eine Jüdin, eine Jeckete in Israel," "Zurück in das Land, das uns töten wollte," "Erben des Holocaust," "Israel. Moments of its Biography" and "Living with Auschwitz."
As a founder and networker with German-Israeli roots, Nelly Kranz organizes professional delegation trips and brings together German and Israeli representatives from politics, business and academia. Kranz has been living in Munich since 2017.
Musician and conductor Daniel Grossmann has conducted numerous concerts in Germany and abroad. In 2005, he founded the Jewish Chamber Orchestra Munich. As artistic director of the orchestra, the Munich resident addresses the question of how Jewish culture can take its place in the collective social consciousness.
An event organized by the Cultural Center of the Jewish Community Munich and Upper Bavaria and the Association of Jewish Students in Bavaria in cooperation with the Jewish Museum Munich.
Registration through the IKG at 089 202400491 or karten(at)ikg-m.de, remaining tickets at the box office.