Diversity and Inclusion

2024 World Refugee Day - Food Bazaar

Join us on June 20th, 2024 for a heartwarming celebration of World Refugee Day! Let’s honor the resilience and strength of those forced to flee with a delightful culinary journey. Indulge in the rich flavors of Syrian, Afghan, and Senegalese cuisine at Sanctuary Kitchen, savor authentic Ethiopian dishes at Lalibella, and treat yourself to heavenly sweet delights and refreshing hibiscus tea at Havenly Treats. Let’s come together, share stories, and support our refugee communities with love and compassion.

Southeast Asia Studies Seminar Series: “Strange but Familiar: Connected Histories between Poland and Vietnam after 1955”

My talk will chronicle the cultural, personal, and educational contacts between Poland and Vietnam by examining how these interactions developed over the course of the second half of the twentieth century—after decolonization, amid the Second Indochina War and against the backdrop of global socialism. Drawing on a diversity of sources from Poland and Vietnam, this talk will excavate these robust, but largely forgotten shared histories.

Wine Tasting at The Well

Indigenous Wine: Exploring some of the very cool, off the beaten track indigenous grapes from around the globe.
Taught by New Haven local sommelier Janine Sacco, Fine Wine and Sales Representative with Skurnik.

Be able to impress any group after learning about wine in this first-ever fine wine tasting in The Well.

Documentary Film: I Am Free...But Who Is Left?

I Am Free…But Who Is Left? (Joanne W. Rudof, 2021, DCP, 92 mins)

Joanne W. Rudof in person! Reflective, first-person accounts of the Nazi invasion of a small Polish town are supplemented by family photos and historical documents in this recent documentary by a long-time archivist at Yale’s Fortunoff Archive. Presented by the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies and the Yale Film Archive. Co-sponsored by the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism.

Screening of The Land of Azaba & Q&A with director and protagonist

Screening of the award-winning documentary The Land of Azaba, a Spanish-language film set in Western Spain that closely observes the largest land preservation and ecological restoration project in Europe. Followed by a Q&A with the film director Greta Schiller, an Emmy-Award-winning veteran documentary filmmaker based in New York, and Carlos Sanchez, the film protagonist and President of Fundación Naturaleza y Hombre.

Decolonizing Europe Lecture | Reparations, the Refugee Crisis and European Neocolonialism

The Decolonizing Europe Lecture Series presents Dr. Maurice Stierl, Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies at Osnabrück University, on “Reparations, the “Refugee Crisis” and European Neocolonialism”
Hosted by Professor Fatima EI-Tayeb
Location: HQ Rm 136
Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/Yale-MauriceStierl
Bio:

Decolonizing Europe Lecture | Colonially Bound - Immateriality Free. On the Expanded Distance Between Object and Image

The Decolonizing Europe Lecture Series presents Dr. Eunsong Kim, Associate Professor in the Department of English, Arizona State University, on “Colonially Bound/ Immateriality Free: On the Expanded Distance Between Object and Image”
Hosted by Professor Fatima EI-Tayeb
Location: HQ Rm 136
Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/Yale-EunsongKim
Bio:

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