Tanzanian activist Mnyaka Sururu Mboro guides us to the venue of the Berlin Conference of 1884/85 and sheds light on the historical signifi cance of the site, the African resistance, and the demands for apology and reparation.
Regular: 12 euros
Reduced: 5 euros
Children: free of charge until 6 years
Please purchase tickets online in advance. Purchasing tickets at the location will not be possible. Please bring clothing appropriate for the weather as the event will be held outside. Please see our website for the current status of the guided tours.
Meeting point: Subway Station M-Str./Exit Wilhelmstr.
2h
The exhibition section “Remembrance. Apology. Reparation” of the decentralized exhibition project “Dekoloniale – what remains?!” explores the Berlin conference’s dark history, African resistance, and the ongoing push for a Berlin memorial by civil society.
Mnyaka Sururu Mboro, one of the founders of Berlin Postkolonial e.V., leads a tour to this historic site, critically examining the conference’s legacy and discussing the ongoing push for apologies and reparations.
Information
Please purchase tickets online in advance. Purchasing tickets at the location will not be possible. Please bring clothing appropriate for the weather as the event will be held outside. Please see our website for the current status of the guided tours.
Meetingpoint: Mohrenstraße, Exit Wilhelmstraße, 10117 Berlin
“Dekoloniale – what remains?!” is a joint project by Berlin Postkolonial e.V., Each One Teach One (EOTO) e.V. and the Initiative Schwarze Menschen in Deutschland (ISD-Bund e.V.), the learning and remembrance space Kolonialismus Erinnern [Remembering Colonialism], and the Stiftung Stadtmuseum Berlin in the context of the model project Dekoloniale Memory Culture in the City. The project is funded by the Senatsverwaltung für Kultur und gesellschaftlichen Zusammenhalt [Senate Department for Culture and Social Cohesion] and the Kulturstiftung des Bundes [German Federal Cultural Foundation].