Tolerantie: een gevaarlijk goed
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Tolerantie is een van de belangrijkste voorwaarden voor democratie. Maar ze is niet zonder prijs. Want is intolerantie tolereren niet zagen aan de poten van de democratie zelf?
Dat is de...

“Dear stranger. Are you home? Do you feel at home? And for how long?”
Across the world, the number of refugees, exiles, and displaced people continues to rise. More and more individuals find themselves politically homeless, economically excluded, or estranged within their own countries. Over the past decade, Ece Temelkuran has warned that the erosion of democracy does not happen overnight. To those who believed “it can’t happen here,” she has insisted: it will.
In her new book, Nation of Strangers: Rebuilding Home in the 21st Century, journalist Ece Temelkuran – who herself left her home country Turkey because of the authoritarian turn it took after the failed coup of 2016 – turns to the urgent question of belonging. Through a series of intimate letters from one stranger to another, she explores what it means to lose a home — and how we might begin to rebuild one in a fragile and uncertain century.
Part of this programme is a performative intervention by Studio Julian Hetzel inspired by conversations with Ece Temelkuran around the concept of home and her new book Nation of Strangers. The audience is invited to make an appointment at the imaginary Embassy of The Untitled States to experience a series of encounters with strangers.
Appointments are available between 19.00–20.00 and between 21.00–22.00. A valid identification document or passport is required for your meeting with the visa officers.
About the author & project
The installation is created in collaboration with Studio Julian Hetzel, known for undisciplinary art projects that merge theatre, performance, and visual arts. Their work investigates the hidden power structures and invisible economies that shape our world, often exposing the tensions between ethical values and economic systems.
Ece Temelkuran (1973) is an award-winning writer. In 2012, she was dismissed from her position at a Turkish newspaper after writing critically about the Erdoğan government. Her earlier book, How to Lose a Country: The Seven Steps from Democracy to Dictatorship, examined the gradual steps through which democracies can slide into authoritarianism. The Dutch edition of Nation of Strangers will be published in March. She has recently been longlisted for the women’s prize for non-fiction.
Tolerantie is een van de belangrijkste voorwaarden voor democratie. Maar ze is niet zonder prijs. Want is intolerantie tolereren niet zagen aan de poten van de democratie zelf?
Dat is de...
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