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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251130T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251130T180000
DTSTAMP:20260617T051532
CREATED:20251028T113531Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T182652Z
UID:708-1764518400-1764525600@mhasberlin.com
SUMMARY:The Birth of River Snake - Book Launch and reading by joy maps
DESCRIPTION:*** Update: Now Fully Booked! ***Register below to be put on waitlist (we will email you should a space be available 1-2 days before the workshop 🙂 )  “We Feed Those Who Came Before Us”:A Workshop by Rabiga MarxSaturday\, 25 April\, 4-6pm  This workshop-ritual approaches food as an act of caring and as a form of a living archive. Structured as a collective action\, a shared tea gathering with baursaks (traditional Kazakh bread)\, participants assemble a symbolic archive of recipes\, understood not as instructions but as carriers of history\, loss\, transformation\, and displacement. Through storytelling\, taste\, smell\, and remembrance\, we address our ancestors and acknowledge their presence within everyday practices. The ritual foregrounds intergenerational transmission and explores how embodied memory preserves what remains absent from institutional archives. The act of sharing baursaks and stories becomes a form of collective remembrance and a ritual of honoring those who came before us. For this workshop\, we will sit together around a table and share tea with baursaks. The bread will be offered as a gesture of hospitality as an act of welcoming and care. If participants like\, they can also bring something with them: e.g. a recipe\, or an object connected to their family history. The workshop will be a collective action – we will sit together\, share stories\, remember recipes\, and speak about food as an act of caring and as a living archive. We will reflect on how recipes change over time\, and how missing or replaced ingredients can tell stories about migration\, loss\, or scarcity. We will talk about how food carries history and memory\, and how certain recipes changed in Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomadic culture during the Soviet period. For example\, how cooking practices shifted and how these changes reflected larger political and social transformations.   Rabiga Marx is a curator and researcher working at the intersection of memory\, trauma\, and cultural practices in post-Soviet and postcolonial contexts. With a background in visual culture and roots in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan\, she explores how memory is preserved or fragmented across generations\, particularly under regimes that have disrupted cultural continuity. She works through a decolonial lens\, questioning the lasting cultural and intellectual frameworks inherited from empire. Her curatorial practice focuses on embodied memory\, ritual\, and alternative forms of archiving. Through exhibitions\, interviews\, and collaborative research\, she investigates how histories are carried through bodies\, gestures\, domestic spaces\, and oral storytelling. She is particularly attentive to the nuances of sisterhood and communal experiences\, examining how solidarity\, care\, and shared vulnerability shape collective memory and cultural resilience. Marx approaches curation as a practice of care and dialogue\, creating spaces where overlooked\, silenced\, or marginalized narratives can surface\, resonate\, and be reimagined.This community gathering workshop takes place as part of the project “Caring Histories: Asian Caregivers in Berlin – Migration\, Memory\, and Social Change (1950–present)) at Mental Health Arts Space from March to December 2026.All are welcome\, but spaces are limited\, so please register using the form below. You will receive confirmation of your registration at least three days in advance of the event. 🙂								\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n						\n					\n			\n						\n							\n			\n			\n			\n\n							\n			\n			\n								\n												\n								Name							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Email							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any accessibility requirements? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any food allergies? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Is there anything else you would like us to know?							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you identify as Kazakh\, Kyrgyz or of Central Asian heritage? (Please select one)							\n								\n			\n							\n			\n									Yes\n									No\n									I don't know\n							\n		\n						\n								\n												\n								I confirm that I am registering for this in-person event and will attend only if I am not feeling unwell/experiencing medical symptoms (e.g. cough\, cold\, fever\, etc.).							\n								\n			\n				\n							\n		\n						\n								\n					\n						\n																						Send
URL:https://mhasberlin.com/event/the-birth-of-river-snake/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251127T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251127T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T051532
CREATED:20251013T135828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251013T182221Z
UID:672-1764266400-1764273600@mhasberlin.com
SUMMARY:"How to Tend Grief?: Collective Grief Tending – A Ritual to Ground in Times of Chaos" (BIPOC-only offering)
DESCRIPTION:*** Update: Now Fully Booked! ***Register below to be put on waitlist (we will email you should a space be available 1-2 days before the workshop 🙂 )  “We Feed Those Who Came Before Us”:A Workshop by Rabiga MarxSaturday\, 25 April\, 4-6pm  This workshop-ritual approaches food as an act of caring and as a form of a living archive. Structured as a collective action\, a shared tea gathering with baursaks (traditional Kazakh bread)\, participants assemble a symbolic archive of recipes\, understood not as instructions but as carriers of history\, loss\, transformation\, and displacement. Through storytelling\, taste\, smell\, and remembrance\, we address our ancestors and acknowledge their presence within everyday practices. The ritual foregrounds intergenerational transmission and explores how embodied memory preserves what remains absent from institutional archives. The act of sharing baursaks and stories becomes a form of collective remembrance and a ritual of honoring those who came before us. For this workshop\, we will sit together around a table and share tea with baursaks. The bread will be offered as a gesture of hospitality as an act of welcoming and care. If participants like\, they can also bring something with them: e.g. a recipe\, or an object connected to their family history. The workshop will be a collective action – we will sit together\, share stories\, remember recipes\, and speak about food as an act of caring and as a living archive. We will reflect on how recipes change over time\, and how missing or replaced ingredients can tell stories about migration\, loss\, or scarcity. We will talk about how food carries history and memory\, and how certain recipes changed in Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomadic culture during the Soviet period. For example\, how cooking practices shifted and how these changes reflected larger political and social transformations.   Rabiga Marx is a curator and researcher working at the intersection of memory\, trauma\, and cultural practices in post-Soviet and postcolonial contexts. With a background in visual culture and roots in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan\, she explores how memory is preserved or fragmented across generations\, particularly under regimes that have disrupted cultural continuity. She works through a decolonial lens\, questioning the lasting cultural and intellectual frameworks inherited from empire. Her curatorial practice focuses on embodied memory\, ritual\, and alternative forms of archiving. Through exhibitions\, interviews\, and collaborative research\, she investigates how histories are carried through bodies\, gestures\, domestic spaces\, and oral storytelling. She is particularly attentive to the nuances of sisterhood and communal experiences\, examining how solidarity\, care\, and shared vulnerability shape collective memory and cultural resilience. Marx approaches curation as a practice of care and dialogue\, creating spaces where overlooked\, silenced\, or marginalized narratives can surface\, resonate\, and be reimagined.This community gathering workshop takes place as part of the project “Caring Histories: Asian Caregivers in Berlin – Migration\, Memory\, and Social Change (1950–present)) at Mental Health Arts Space from March to December 2026.All are welcome\, but spaces are limited\, so please register using the form below. You will receive confirmation of your registration at least three days in advance of the event. 🙂								\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n						\n					\n			\n						\n							\n			\n			\n			\n\n							\n			\n			\n								\n												\n								Name							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Email							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any accessibility requirements? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any food allergies? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Is there anything else you would like us to know?							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you identify as Kazakh\, Kyrgyz or of Central Asian heritage? (Please select one)							\n								\n			\n							\n			\n									Yes\n									No\n									I don't know\n							\n		\n						\n								\n												\n								I confirm that I am registering for this in-person event and will attend only if I am not feeling unwell/experiencing medical symptoms (e.g. cough\, cold\, fever\, etc.).							\n								\n			\n				\n							\n		\n						\n								\n					\n						\n																						Send
URL:https://mhasberlin.com/event/how-to-tend-grief/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251106T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251106T193000
DTSTAMP:20260617T051532
CREATED:20251013T135057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251013T182253Z
UID:654-1762452000-1762457400@mhasberlin.com
SUMMARY:“How to Gather Warmth?: Healing as a Collective\, Embodied Practice” with Rositsa Mahdi
DESCRIPTION:*** Update: Now Fully Booked! ***Register below to be put on waitlist (we will email you should a space be available 1-2 days before the workshop 🙂 )  “We Feed Those Who Came Before Us”:A Workshop by Rabiga MarxSaturday\, 25 April\, 4-6pm  This workshop-ritual approaches food as an act of caring and as a form of a living archive. Structured as a collective action\, a shared tea gathering with baursaks (traditional Kazakh bread)\, participants assemble a symbolic archive of recipes\, understood not as instructions but as carriers of history\, loss\, transformation\, and displacement. Through storytelling\, taste\, smell\, and remembrance\, we address our ancestors and acknowledge their presence within everyday practices. The ritual foregrounds intergenerational transmission and explores how embodied memory preserves what remains absent from institutional archives. The act of sharing baursaks and stories becomes a form of collective remembrance and a ritual of honoring those who came before us. For this workshop\, we will sit together around a table and share tea with baursaks. The bread will be offered as a gesture of hospitality as an act of welcoming and care. If participants like\, they can also bring something with them: e.g. a recipe\, or an object connected to their family history. The workshop will be a collective action – we will sit together\, share stories\, remember recipes\, and speak about food as an act of caring and as a living archive. We will reflect on how recipes change over time\, and how missing or replaced ingredients can tell stories about migration\, loss\, or scarcity. We will talk about how food carries history and memory\, and how certain recipes changed in Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomadic culture during the Soviet period. For example\, how cooking practices shifted and how these changes reflected larger political and social transformations.   Rabiga Marx is a curator and researcher working at the intersection of memory\, trauma\, and cultural practices in post-Soviet and postcolonial contexts. With a background in visual culture and roots in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan\, she explores how memory is preserved or fragmented across generations\, particularly under regimes that have disrupted cultural continuity. She works through a decolonial lens\, questioning the lasting cultural and intellectual frameworks inherited from empire. Her curatorial practice focuses on embodied memory\, ritual\, and alternative forms of archiving. Through exhibitions\, interviews\, and collaborative research\, she investigates how histories are carried through bodies\, gestures\, domestic spaces\, and oral storytelling. She is particularly attentive to the nuances of sisterhood and communal experiences\, examining how solidarity\, care\, and shared vulnerability shape collective memory and cultural resilience. Marx approaches curation as a practice of care and dialogue\, creating spaces where overlooked\, silenced\, or marginalized narratives can surface\, resonate\, and be reimagined.This community gathering workshop takes place as part of the project “Caring Histories: Asian Caregivers in Berlin – Migration\, Memory\, and Social Change (1950–present)) at Mental Health Arts Space from March to December 2026.All are welcome\, but spaces are limited\, so please register using the form below. You will receive confirmation of your registration at least three days in advance of the event. 🙂								\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n						\n					\n			\n						\n							\n			\n			\n			\n\n							\n			\n			\n								\n												\n								Name							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Email							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any accessibility requirements? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any food allergies? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Is there anything else you would like us to know?							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you identify as Kazakh\, Kyrgyz or of Central Asian heritage? (Please select one)							\n								\n			\n							\n			\n									Yes\n									No\n									I don't know\n							\n		\n						\n								\n												\n								I confirm that I am registering for this in-person event and will attend only if I am not feeling unwell/experiencing medical symptoms (e.g. cough\, cold\, fever\, etc.).							\n								\n			\n				\n							\n		\n						\n								\n					\n						\n																						Send
URL:https://mhasberlin.com/event/how-to-gather-warmth/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251016T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251108T190000
DTSTAMP:20260617T051532
CREATED:20250917T113808Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251104T150003Z
UID:479-1760637600-1762628400@mhasberlin.com
SUMMARY:"Letters of Healing": An Introspective Exhibition with Vespera Meng and Patricia Fernández
DESCRIPTION:*** Update: Now Fully Booked! ***Register below to be put on waitlist (we will email you should a space be available 1-2 days before the workshop 🙂 )  “We Feed Those Who Came Before Us”:A Workshop by Rabiga MarxSaturday\, 25 April\, 4-6pm  This workshop-ritual approaches food as an act of caring and as a form of a living archive. Structured as a collective action\, a shared tea gathering with baursaks (traditional Kazakh bread)\, participants assemble a symbolic archive of recipes\, understood not as instructions but as carriers of history\, loss\, transformation\, and displacement. Through storytelling\, taste\, smell\, and remembrance\, we address our ancestors and acknowledge their presence within everyday practices. The ritual foregrounds intergenerational transmission and explores how embodied memory preserves what remains absent from institutional archives. The act of sharing baursaks and stories becomes a form of collective remembrance and a ritual of honoring those who came before us. For this workshop\, we will sit together around a table and share tea with baursaks. The bread will be offered as a gesture of hospitality as an act of welcoming and care. If participants like\, they can also bring something with them: e.g. a recipe\, or an object connected to their family history. The workshop will be a collective action – we will sit together\, share stories\, remember recipes\, and speak about food as an act of caring and as a living archive. We will reflect on how recipes change over time\, and how missing or replaced ingredients can tell stories about migration\, loss\, or scarcity. We will talk about how food carries history and memory\, and how certain recipes changed in Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomadic culture during the Soviet period. For example\, how cooking practices shifted and how these changes reflected larger political and social transformations.   Rabiga Marx is a curator and researcher working at the intersection of memory\, trauma\, and cultural practices in post-Soviet and postcolonial contexts. With a background in visual culture and roots in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan\, she explores how memory is preserved or fragmented across generations\, particularly under regimes that have disrupted cultural continuity. She works through a decolonial lens\, questioning the lasting cultural and intellectual frameworks inherited from empire. Her curatorial practice focuses on embodied memory\, ritual\, and alternative forms of archiving. Through exhibitions\, interviews\, and collaborative research\, she investigates how histories are carried through bodies\, gestures\, domestic spaces\, and oral storytelling. She is particularly attentive to the nuances of sisterhood and communal experiences\, examining how solidarity\, care\, and shared vulnerability shape collective memory and cultural resilience. Marx approaches curation as a practice of care and dialogue\, creating spaces where overlooked\, silenced\, or marginalized narratives can surface\, resonate\, and be reimagined.This community gathering workshop takes place as part of the project “Caring Histories: Asian Caregivers in Berlin – Migration\, Memory\, and Social Change (1950–present)) at Mental Health Arts Space from March to December 2026.All are welcome\, but spaces are limited\, so please register using the form below. You will receive confirmation of your registration at least three days in advance of the event. 🙂								\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n						\n					\n			\n						\n							\n			\n			\n			\n\n							\n			\n			\n								\n												\n								Name							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Email							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any accessibility requirements? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any food allergies? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Is there anything else you would like us to know?							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you identify as Kazakh\, Kyrgyz or of Central Asian heritage? (Please select one)							\n								\n			\n							\n			\n									Yes\n									No\n									I don't know\n							\n		\n						\n								\n												\n								I confirm that I am registering for this in-person event and will attend only if I am not feeling unwell/experiencing medical symptoms (e.g. cough\, cold\, fever\, etc.).							\n								\n			\n				\n							\n		\n						\n								\n					\n						\n																						Send
URL:https://mhasberlin.com/event/letters-of-healing/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251002T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20251002T113000
DTSTAMP:20260617T051532
CREATED:20250917T110348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250918T100321Z
UID:466-1759399200-1759404600@mhasberlin.com
SUMMARY:Anxiety Lab x Mental Health Arts Space Online Workshop
DESCRIPTION:*** Update: Now Fully Booked! ***Register below to be put on waitlist (we will email you should a space be available 1-2 days before the workshop 🙂 )  “We Feed Those Who Came Before Us”:A Workshop by Rabiga MarxSaturday\, 25 April\, 4-6pm  This workshop-ritual approaches food as an act of caring and as a form of a living archive. Structured as a collective action\, a shared tea gathering with baursaks (traditional Kazakh bread)\, participants assemble a symbolic archive of recipes\, understood not as instructions but as carriers of history\, loss\, transformation\, and displacement. Through storytelling\, taste\, smell\, and remembrance\, we address our ancestors and acknowledge their presence within everyday practices. The ritual foregrounds intergenerational transmission and explores how embodied memory preserves what remains absent from institutional archives. The act of sharing baursaks and stories becomes a form of collective remembrance and a ritual of honoring those who came before us. For this workshop\, we will sit together around a table and share tea with baursaks. The bread will be offered as a gesture of hospitality as an act of welcoming and care. If participants like\, they can also bring something with them: e.g. a recipe\, or an object connected to their family history. The workshop will be a collective action – we will sit together\, share stories\, remember recipes\, and speak about food as an act of caring and as a living archive. We will reflect on how recipes change over time\, and how missing or replaced ingredients can tell stories about migration\, loss\, or scarcity. We will talk about how food carries history and memory\, and how certain recipes changed in Kazakh and Kyrgyz nomadic culture during the Soviet period. For example\, how cooking practices shifted and how these changes reflected larger political and social transformations.   Rabiga Marx is a curator and researcher working at the intersection of memory\, trauma\, and cultural practices in post-Soviet and postcolonial contexts. With a background in visual culture and roots in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan\, she explores how memory is preserved or fragmented across generations\, particularly under regimes that have disrupted cultural continuity. She works through a decolonial lens\, questioning the lasting cultural and intellectual frameworks inherited from empire. Her curatorial practice focuses on embodied memory\, ritual\, and alternative forms of archiving. Through exhibitions\, interviews\, and collaborative research\, she investigates how histories are carried through bodies\, gestures\, domestic spaces\, and oral storytelling. She is particularly attentive to the nuances of sisterhood and communal experiences\, examining how solidarity\, care\, and shared vulnerability shape collective memory and cultural resilience. Marx approaches curation as a practice of care and dialogue\, creating spaces where overlooked\, silenced\, or marginalized narratives can surface\, resonate\, and be reimagined.This community gathering workshop takes place as part of the project “Caring Histories: Asian Caregivers in Berlin – Migration\, Memory\, and Social Change (1950–present)) at Mental Health Arts Space from March to December 2026.All are welcome\, but spaces are limited\, so please register using the form below. You will receive confirmation of your registration at least three days in advance of the event. 🙂								\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n						\n					\n			\n						\n							\n			\n			\n			\n\n							\n			\n			\n								\n												\n								Name							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Email							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any accessibility requirements? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you have any food allergies? If yes\, please write them here.							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Is there anything else you would like us to know?							\n														\n											\n								\n												\n								Do you identify as Kazakh\, Kyrgyz or of Central Asian heritage? (Please select one)							\n								\n			\n							\n			\n									Yes\n									No\n									I don't know\n							\n		\n						\n								\n												\n								I confirm that I am registering for this in-person event and will attend only if I am not feeling unwell/experiencing medical symptoms (e.g. cough\, cold\, fever\, etc.).							\n								\n			\n				\n							\n		\n						\n								\n					\n						\n																						Send
URL:https://mhasberlin.com/event/anxiety-lab/
END:VEVENT
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