The Association for the Development of the Romanian Social Forum (AD FSR), with the support and participation of the transform! europe network and of the GUE/NGL Euro Parliamentary Group represented by Ms. Gabi Zimmer MEP, are organizing the Seminar “The National Question in Central-Eastern Europe” from 21 to 22 April 2012 in Bucharest, Romania.
Apparently, people have been questing for their identity, both as individuals and groups, since time immemorial. In turn, the concept of identity has been perceived in a multitude of forms, varying from individual to national, from cultural to religious or political.
It is notorious that the national question in Central-Eastern Europe has caused political, social, economic, cultural and religious clashes ending in social disruption, ethnic hatred, geopolitical fragmentation and, eventually, in wars followed by neo-liberal “regulatory” interventions.
The revival of extreme nationalism, ethnocentrism and chauvinism in Romania after 1989, the falling apart of former Yugoslavia following the Civil War in the 1990s ending in frozen conflicts, the unresolved Hungarian-Romanian ethnic issues in Transylvania, the Romanian-Moldavian-Russian-Ukrainian frozen disputes, the rise of neo-fascism, neo-Nazism, and racism in Hungary, Germany, Austria, and in other Central-Eastern European countries lately, all more than justify the need for such an initiative.
What could be the responses of progressive social and political actors to the challenging questions deriving from the situation sketched above which has been unfolding on the set stage of a failing and ever more aggressive neoliberal European paradigm?
The seminar tackles the controversial issue of the national question in Central-Eastern Europe viewed in a complex interrelated perspective, i.e. as related to the historical-political past (cause-effect relation) and to the European project.
The Objectives of the Seminar include (without being limited to):
Links:
Overview
Moldavia-Romania-Russia-Ukraine. Present Time situation vs. Soviet Time situation vs. Past Time situation;
Hungary-Romania/Transylvania-Austria-Czechia-Slovakia-Poland. Present Time situation vs. Before 1989 Time situation vs. 1848-1918 Time-line situation;
The Balkans and former Yugoslavia. Present Time situation vs. Yugoslavian Civil War Time situation vs. Before 1989 Time situation;
The Roma and the Sinti in Central-Eastern Europe. Present Time vs. Past Time situation.