『S4E5 S.W.E.A.T. with Ahmad Badawy』のカバーアート

S4E5 S.W.E.A.T. with Ahmad Badawy

S4E5 S.W.E.A.T. with Ahmad Badawy

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This month’s conversation is with activist, writer, and engineer Ahmad Badawy. I met Ahmad at the protest encampment in front of the German parliament, where we were both calling attention to Germany’s complicity in the ongoing genocide in Gaza. In the middle of a bitter Berlin winter, Ahmad’s warmth and clarity stood out—his presence at the camp was not only political, but deeply personal, grounded in a long history of activism. We first connected when I shared my interest in organizing freelance workers. Ahmad responded with encouragement, sharing insights from his own experience and reminding me that movements often begin with simple, one-to-one conversations. We recorded this episode on the eve of the Unkurzbar demonstration, during which pro-Palestinian activists were forcibly separated from the rest of the march. It’s a moment that speaks volumes about the urgency of solidarity—and about Ahmad’s continued commitment to human rights. Originally from Egypt, Ahmad was deeply involved in the 2011 revolution and in grassroots labor organizing. He was imprisoned for four years in a maximum-security prison for carrying a sign at a protest that read, “No to the constitutional amendments,” opposing legislation that would have allowed President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to remain in power indefinitely. During his detention, he undertook a hunger strike to protest being held without trial. Ahmad has published widely on politics and resistance, and is a contributor to We Were There: Liberal Young Voices from the Egyptian Revolution. In this conversation, we discuss his journey from Cairo to Berlin, the political lessons he’s carried across borders, and his vision for building inclusive, intersectional movements rooted in universal human rights.

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