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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260506T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260510T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260429T130035Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260429T130037Z
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SUMMARY:Bardot
DESCRIPTION:The screening on 6 May will be followed by a Q&A with director Alain Berliner and Prof. Ginette Vincendeau (King’s College London). \nUsing archival footage together with unique testimonies and reconstructed scenes\, Bardot offers an in-depth portrait of Brigitte Bardot\, the international icon\, the star harassed by the press\, the committed activist who abandoned cinema\, the former star\, isolated\, who flirted with extremist ideas and lost sense of the freedom she had defended for so many years. \nLoved too much or loved poorly\, she moved through the spotlight before retreating to La Madrague\, escaping public scrutiny and scandals. In this documentary\, she reflects on the many contrasts of her life: her meteoric rise\, her status as a feminine icon\, and her sometimes radical statements\, for which she was found guilty\, in her fight for animal rights. Despite some less likeable aspects of her personality\, Bardot redefined the image of women and anticipated ecological battles that remain more relevant than ever today.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/bardot/
LOCATION:Cine Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260505T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260505T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260429T130958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260429T131003Z
UID:10005957-1778007600-1778014800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:BATAstories
DESCRIPTION:BATAstories is a sweeping documentary driven by the voices of ‘Batamen‘ worldwide\, stories from Baťa-built towns\, and reflections from Baťa’s descendants. It traces the extraordinary rise of Czech entrepreneur Tomáš Baťa – the visionary cobbler’s son who transformed a small-town workshop into a global industrial shoe empire. \nDirected by the master documentarist Peter Kerekes\, the film weaves together three strands: Baťa’s memoir (narrated by Bolek Polívka)\, a reflection on the birth of modern global capitalism\, and a mosaic of personal stories. \nSpanning Europe\, South America\, Africa\, and Asia\, BATAstories moves between past and present\, blending archival and contemporary footage. From the industrial city of Zlín to purpose-built communities across the world\, it reveals a bold social experiment where factories became towns and employees became stakeholders. \nAt once intimate and expansive\, BATAstories is a vivid exploration of ambition\, ideology\, and the human stories behind a global empire. \nDir. Peter Kerekes\, France\, Czech Republic\, Slovakia\, 2018\, 78 min\, English subtitles / With Bolek Polívka and Zuzana Stivínová
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/batastories/
LOCATION:Czech Centre\, 30 Kensington Palace Gardens  \, London\, W8 4QY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/11f7af6339764fffee2d04fd79ad541a.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Centre":MAILTO:blues@czechcentre.org.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260501T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260507T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144649Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144650Z
UID:10005941-1777622400-1778173200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:New Release - Primavera
DESCRIPTION:Drawing on the real life of Vivaldi in 18th century Venice\, this beautifully directed musical drama follows Cecilia\, a talented musician whose life changes forever when she meets her orphanage’s new music instructor: Antonio Vivaldi. Under his mentorship and through his music\, she gains courage to break free from the orphanage’s draconian strictures and pursue her passion. 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/new-release-primavera/
LOCATION:Cinema Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260430T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260430T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144609Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144610Z
UID:10005528-1777575600-1777579200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Third Person (Plural): A Cinematic Essay by Aikaterini Gegisian
DESCRIPTION:Third Person (Plural) is Aikaterini Gegisian’s feature-length cinematic essay\, built from over 200 postwar U.S. informational films and newsreels drawn from the Library of Congress and the National Archives. What begins as an exploration of early European integration history unfolds into a feminist re-reading of the masculine gaze that shaped the ‘new world order’.   \nThis layered work unfolds across a multi-screen installation\, a feature-length essay film\, and an artist’s book. Originating as a quest to source documents of early European integration processes in the post-war United States\, the project unfolds into an expansive feminist re-reading of the hegemonic masculine gaze and its manifestation in material images. The work is a bracing encounter with the gaze that produced the ‘image’ of the world as the new\, Western order\, bound by the notion of a united Europe\, the delirium of the Cold War\, and decolonisation processes. Casting a female gaze upon this history\, Third Person (Plural) reclaims the unseen perspectives that haunt the margins of official narratives\, making visible a collective ‘third person’.  \nGegisian will be joined by Shoair Mavlian\, Director of The Photographers’ Gallery\, for a discussion and Q&A.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/third-person-plural-a-cinematic-essay-by-aikaterini-gegisian/
LOCATION:The Hellenic Centre\, 18\, 16 Paddington St\, London\, W1U 5AS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Art,Film
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ORGANIZER;CN="The Hellenic Centre":MAILTO:info@helleniccentre.org
GEO:51.5206899;-0.1537246
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260424T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260424T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144500Z
UID:10005538-1777055400-1777060800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:The Song of the Cosmos – Attila József Selected Poems (Shearsman Books\, 2026)
DESCRIPTION:Book Launch and Conversation with Editor and Translator Ágnes Lehóczky and Adam Piette \nThe translations by Piette and Lehóczky form a five-year-long project with an ambition to translate a significant selection of the poems of the modernist\, socialist\, working-class Hungarian poet\, Attila József (1905-1937). József lived a poverty-stricken\, passionate\, and unstable life as a wanderer\, a bohemian\, a poet\, a thinker\, a non-conformist\, a hobo\, and a lover till his untimely death by suicide\, struck by a train\, in Balatonszárszó on Lake Balaton\, aged only 32. His poetry is surrealist\, existentialist\, Villonesque\, tough-minded\, quasi anarchist\, deeply drenched in Hungarian folklore and the folk song\, passionate\, lyrical\, elegiac\, marked by his solitary wandering\, his keen observation of the lives of the people\, by his psychoanalytically inflected gaze into the unconscious\, into the mind and body of lovers\, his philosophical focus on dialectic and social injustice. \nThe lyrics\, free verse and formal\, in an astonishing number of experimental forms\, range from the metaphysical to the memoir\, have filiations to French medieval\, post-symbolist and surrealist poetry\, fuse Nietzsche\, Marx\, Hegel and Freud in daring raids on the inarticulate\, sing with haunting vernacular and ancient beauty and rise to extraordinary heights and flights of the imagination\, yet are always grounded in the real\, in the concrete particulars of the metropolis\, the dark streets of the underclasses of this world. \nThis bilingual volume presents a chronological selection of József’s poetry\, featuring both English translations and the original Hungarian texts. With introductions and afterwords by Ágnes Lehóczky\, George Szirtes\, György Tverdota\, Aranka Kemény and Adam Piette\, the book aims to recreate ‘The Song of the Cosmos’\, an unpublished collection József envisioned in the early 1920s. ‘Cosmos’ here isn’t the physical universe but rather the soul expanded to cosmic proportions\, a ‘universe imbued with a political subject’. The volume incorporates a faithful and playful reconstruction of the original graphic design\, conceived by József’s artist friend György Békeffi in the 1920s. \nÁgnes Lehóczky \nÁgnes Lehóczky’s poetry collections published in the UK are Budapest to Babel (Egg Box\, 2008)\, Rememberer (Egg Box\, 2012)\, Carillonneur (Shearsman\, 2014)\, Swimming Pool (Shearsman\, 2017)\, Lathe Biosas\, or on Dreams & Lies (Crater Press\, 2023) and Apropos Paradise Square (Pamenar Press\, 2025). She also has three full poetry collections in Hungarian published in Budapest: Ikszedik stáció (Universitas\, 2000)\, Medalion (Universitas\, 2002) and Palimpszeszt (Magyar Napló\, 2015). \nShe is the author of the academic monograph Poetry\, the Geometry of Living Substance – comprising four essays on the poetry of Ágnes Nemes Nagy (2011). Her pamphlet Pool Epitaphs and Other Love Letters was published by Boiler House Press (2017). She co-edited major international anthologies: the Sheffield Anthology (Smith/Doorstop\, 2012) with Adam Piette\, The World Speaking Back to Denise Riley (Boiler House\, 2018) with Zoë Skoulding\, Wretched Strangers (Boiler House\, 2018) with J. T. Welsch and most recently the ‘Monk Collective’ with Adam Piette (Blackbox Manifold\, 2023). Fission of Being – Endnotes on Earthbound was commissioned by The Roberts Institute of Art\, London in 2021. She is Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing and Director of the Centre for Poetry and Poetics at the University of Sheffield. Lehóczky edited The Song of the Cosmos – Attila József Selected Poems (Shearsman Books\, 2026) which she co-translated with Adam Piette. \nAdam Piette \nAdam Piette is Professor of Modern Literature at Sheffield. He is the co-editor of the international contemporary poetry journal Blackbox Manifold with Alex Houen. He is author of Remembering and the Sound of Words: Mallarmé\, Proust\, Joyce\, Beckett; Imagination at War: British Fiction and Poetry\, 1939-1945\, and The Literary Cold War\, 1945 to Vietnam. He edited the special issue of Translation and Literature on “Modernism and Translation”\, The Salt Companion to Peter Robinson with Katy Price (2007) and The Edinburgh Companion to Twentieth-Century British and American War Literature with Mark Rawlinson (2012). His poetry collections are: nights as dreaming (Constitutional Information / earthbound press)\, CCCLXV with Crater Press (October 2025)\, and Lies Blurring Here with Broken Sleep (2026). He is the co-translator\, with Ágnes Lehóczky\, of The Song of the Cosmos: Selected Poems of Attila József (Shearsman Books\, 2026). He is currently co-editing an edition of Australian poet Catherine Vidler’s work with Amelia Dale and A.J. Carruthers for Puncher & Wattman.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/the-song-of-the-cosmos-attila-jozsef-selected-poems-shearsman-books-2026/
LOCATION:Hungarian Cultural Centre\, 10 Maiden Lane\, London\, London\, WC2E 7NA\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature,Talks
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ORGANIZER;CN="Liszt Institute Hungarian Cultural Centre London":MAILTO:info@hungary.org.uk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260424T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260430T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T143212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T143214Z
UID:10005516-1777017600-1777568400@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:New Release - The Wizard of the Kremlin
DESCRIPTION:Director Olivier Assayas adapts to the screen Guiliano da Empoli’s best-selling novel. \n In early 1990s Russia\, amid post-Soviet chaos\, young Vadim Baranov\, soon becomes the spin doctor to a rising KGB agent: Vladimir Putin (played by Jude Law). At the heart of power\, he navigates between the truth and lies that shape the new Russia. Years later\, Baranov finally opens up\, revealing the dark secrets of the regime he helped build. 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/new-release-the-wizard-of-the-kremlin/
LOCATION:Institut français in London\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Jude-Law-Paul-Dano-The-Wizard-of-the-Kremlin-Signature-Entertainment-1-scaled.jpeg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T220000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T142445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T142446Z
UID:10005511-1776974400-1776981600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Fanfares for Leoš Janáček\, with special guest Jakub Hrůša
DESCRIPTION:An evening devoted to the electrifying late music of Leoš Janáček\, marking 100 years since the premiere of his jubilant masterpiece\, the Sinfonietta.\n\nConductor Jakub Hrůša\, writer and broadcaster Nigel Simeone\, and leading Janáček scholar Jiří Zahrádka explore the composer’s extraordinary creative surge in the final decade of his life. From his transformative meeting with Kamila Stösslová in 1917 to the radiant\, defiant energy of works like the Sinfonietta\, the discussion traces how personal passion and an unmistakably original musical language combined to produce some of the most compelling music of the 20th century.\n\nInterwoven with musical examples and personal reflections\, this is above all a celebration of Janáček’s enduring voice – alongside the launch of two new publications: Janáček’s Sinfonietta by Nigel Simeone and Jiří Zahrádka (Boydell\, 2026) and Káťa Kabanová and The Cunning Little Vixen: Janáček’s New Lease of Life by Jiří Zahrádka (Host\, 2026).\n\nJakub Hrůša is Music Director of the Royal Opera\, Covent Garden\, Chief Conductor of the Bamberg Symphony and Music Director Designate of the Czech Philharmonic (from 2028). Born in Brno\, he has been an ardent champion of Czech music around the world. The production of Janáček’s Makropulos Case at Covent Garden in 2025 has been nominated for an Olivier Award\, and many of his recordings have won international recognition\, including the Gramophone Opera Award for Káťa Kabanová at the Salzburg Festival. His complete cycle of Bohuslav Martinů’s symphonies will be released later this year by Deutsche Grammophon.\n\nNigel Simeone is a writer and broadcaster with a lifelong interest in Janáček. He is the author of several books on the composer including The Janáček Compendium (2019) and he is co-author the standard catalogue of Janáček’s works (1997). He appears regularly on BBC Radio 3 (Record Review\, Opera on 3\, and the Proms)\, and has written programme notes for the Royal Opera House\, London Symphony Orchestra\, Salzburg Festival\, Glyndebourne Festival and others.\n\nJiří Zahrádka is Director of the Janáček Archive in Brno and a musicologist. He is the editor of critical editions of many works by Janáček including the Sinfonietta\, Taras Bulba\, Káťa Kabanová\, The Cunning Little Vixen and The Makropulos Affair\, and he is the author of several books on Janáček including acclaimed full-length studies of the operas\, most recently Káťa Kabanová and The Cunning Little Vixen.\n\nAdmission: £5 (+ Eventbrite fee)\nBook Here
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/fanfares-for-leos-janacek-with-special-guest-jakub-hrusa/
LOCATION:Czech Centre at the Czech Embassy Cinema\, 26 Kensington Palace Gardens\, London\, Select a State\, W8 4QY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/c6a4eeea082f67c2664bac558e69dace.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Centre":MAILTO:blues@czechcentre.org.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144125Z
UID:10005939-1776970800-1776974400@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Exclusive Screening Premiere: Lord Elgin and Some Stones of No Value (40-Year Anniversary)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an exclusive premiere screening of the newly restored film Lord Elgin and Some Stones of No Value (1986)\, celebrating 40 years since its release. Directed by Christopher Miles and featuring Hugh Grant’s first screen appearance\, the film is a nuanced and imaginative exploration of the Parthenon Sculptures’ removal from Athens\, drawing heavily on Lord Elgin’s own letters.  \nStarring Nigel Havers and Julian Fellowes\, the film has been meticulously researched and crafted with an unorthodox structure. Lord Elgin’s own words form the backbone of a narrative that shifts between past and present\, offering an experience that is at once informative\, thought-provoking\, and above all\, profoundly human.  \nThe screening will be followed by a Q&A session\, mediated by George T. Lemos\, with a panel that will include film cast and crew members Suzy Miles and Alberto Bona\, who will speak about the restoration of the film. More special guests might join the event\, depending on their availability. 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/exclusive-screening-premiere-lord-elgin-and-some-stones-of-no-value-40-year-anniversary/
LOCATION:The Hellenic Centre London\, 18\, 16 Paddington St\, ONLINE\, W1U 5AS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film,Talks
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ORGANIZER;CN="The Hellenic Centre":MAILTO:info@helleniccentre.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260421T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144354Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144356Z
UID:10005539-1776796200-1776803400@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:William Shakespeare: Hamlet - The Tragedy of Hamlet\, Prince of Denmark
DESCRIPTION:Join us this April for the adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Hamlet\, performed by the students of the University of Arts Târgu Mureș / Marosvásárhely. \nOne month. That’s how long it’s been since Hamlet’s father died. One month. That’s how long his mother waited before she remarried. One month. That’s how long Hamlet had to mourn before his father’s ghost appeared and asked him to avenge his death. The time is out of joint. And somehow\, for some reason\, it’s Hamlet who has to set it right. Someone who was supposed to be a poet now has to become a soldier. \nThe play is 130 minutes long\, including one intermission (15 minutes)\, and will be performed in Hungarian with English surtitles. \n\nDirector: Vladimir Anton \nDramaturg: Réka Dálnoky \nAssistant dramaturg: Bernadette Brok \nStage design: Măriuca Ignat and Vladimir Anton \nStage adaptation: Vladimir Anton\, Réka Dálnoky\, and Bernadette Brok \nHungarian translation: Ádám Nádasdy \nActors: Martin Berencsy\, Bence Dull\, Hunor Fazakas\, Zsolt Harsányi\, Botond Jánosi\, Péter Kiss\, Levent Kitay\, Máté Bátor Soós\, Orsolya Szilágyi\, Anna Torner \n\n\nDon’t miss out on this timeless tragedy of conscience and revenge\, translated by acclaimed Hungarian linguist and poet Ádám Nádasdy\, and brought to life by Vladimir Anton as a bold new adaptation. \nVladimir Anton is a theatre director\, university lecturer\, and the artistic director of the Csíki Játékszín Theatre. At the Bulandra Theatre in Bucharest\, he worked alongside renowned directors such as Liviu Ciulei\, Alexandru Darie\, and Yury Kordonsky\, and also served as assistant director to Francis Ford Coppola during the filming of Youth Without Youth. Early in his career\, he directed over 400 episodes of various television series. As a director\, he has worked at the Odeon Theatre in Bucharest and in numerous other theaters in Romania including Odorheiu Secuiesc\, Miercurea Ciuc and Sfântu Gheorghe\, where he staged The Dragon by Yevgeny Shvarts and Lajos Parti Nagy in 2022. His productions have received several international awards\, and his staging of Our Town in Odorheiu Secuiesc (2019) was nominated for a UNITER Award in the Best Performance category.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/william-shakespeare-hamlet-the-tragedy-of-hamlet-prince-of-denmark/
LOCATION:Hungarian Cultural Centre\, 10 Maiden Lane\, London\, London\, WC2E 7NA\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Theatre & Dance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/HAMLET_Eunic.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Liszt Institute Hungarian Cultural Centre London":MAILTO:info@hungary.org.uk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260417T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260419T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T143800Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T143803Z
UID:10005522-1776412800-1776618000@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Spanish Film Spring Weekend at Ciné Lumière
DESCRIPTION:The London Spanish Film Festival’s Spring Weekend brings to London an exciting snapshot of Spain’s dynamic film scene — all presented in the original language with English subtitles.  \nIn anticipation of the 22nd edition of the Festival later this year\, this is a unique opportunity to experience powerful stories\, rich cultural perspectives\, and unforgettable performances. On the programme : My Name is Juani\, Romeria\, The Dinner and The Delights of the Garden.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/spanish-film-spring-weekend-at-cine-lumiere/
LOCATION:Cinema Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Romeria_c-ElasticaFilms_15-scaled.jpg
GEO:51.4945863;-0.1773215
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144034Z
UID:10005527-1776366000-1776369600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Modern Poetry in Translation – The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the presentation of Modern Poetry in Translation’s latest issue\, The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus\, featuring 30 contemporary poets who expand the boundaries of Modern Greek\, Bulgarian and Arvanitika in English translation. The event will include poetry readings by issue contributors Kostya Tsolakis\, Calliope Michail\, Phoebe Giannisi and Brian Sneeden\, and will be introduced by guest editor Jessica Sequeira. \nThe Antidote to Agony features 30 selections of poems by contemporary poets\, translated into English\, expanding the linguistic boundaries of Modern Greek\, Bulgarian and Arvanitika\, reflecting on migrant crossings in the Mediterranean\, female friendship\, the transcription of orality\, imagined plagues\, the encounters of bodies\, the AIDS pandemic\, and artistic ruin\, among other themes. \nJoin us for an evening of poetry readings from issue contributors\, including readings by Kostya Tsolakis of his translations of Nikolas Koutsodontis and George Le Nonce\, Calliope Michail of her translations of Argyris Chionis and Iliassa Sequin\, and Brian Sneeden and poet Phoebe Giannisi will perform poems from Giannisi’s recent collection Goatsong\, as featured in this issue of MPT. \nModern Poetry in Translation was founded by Ted Hughes and Daniel Weissbort in 1965. They published poetry that dealt truthfully with the real contemporary world. For 60 years\, MPT has continued and widened that founding intent. To see more\, please visit: modernpoetryintranslation.com \nImage: Aegis – Design\, texts\, drawings by Phoebe Giannisi\, leather processing by Argyris Kappas \n 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/modern-poetry-in-translation-the-antidote-to-agony-focus-on-the-poetry-of-greece-and-cyprus/
LOCATION:The Hellenic Centre London\, 18\, 16 Paddington St\, ONLINE\, W1U 5AS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Art,Literature,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Hellenic Centre":MAILTO:info@helleniccentre.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260416T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T144242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T144243Z
UID:10005940-1776362400-1776369600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Special Screening – Miroirs No.3 + Q&A with director Christian Petzold
DESCRIPTION:Assist to a special screening of Miroirs No.3\, a German new release\, followed by a Q&A with director Christian Petzold. Laura\, a piano student from Berlin\, miraculously survives a car crash. Deeply shaken by the event\, Laura will eventually have to seek support from a local witness of the accident and come to terms with her own life with her loved ones.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/special-screening-miroirs-no-3-qa-with-director-christian-petzold/
LOCATION:Institut français in London\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/MIROIRS-NO.-3-1-Paula-Beer-Laura-Still-Hans-Fromm-c-Schramm-Film-1-scaled.jpg
GEO:51.4945863;-0.1773215
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Institut français in London 17 Queensberry Place London SW7 2DT United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=17 Queensberry Place:geo:-0.1773215,51.4945863
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260415T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260423T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T143902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T143923Z
UID:10005523-1776240000-1776963600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:New release - Diamenti
DESCRIPTION:A film director gathers his favourite actresses\, those he worked with and those he loves. He wants to make a film about women but he doesn’t reveal much: he observes them\, takes cue\, until his imaginations throws them into an era where the noise of sewing machines fills the space\, handled and populated by women\, where men have minor and marginal roles and cinema can be told from another point of view: the one of costume. Between loneliness\, passions\, anxieties\, heartbreaking absence and unbreakable bonds\, reality and fiction permeate\, as well as the lives of the actresses and those of the characters\, in a highly enjoyable film that celebrates the power of cinema and craft.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/new-release-diamenti/
LOCATION:Cinema Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/DIAMANTI_95A0473-scaled.jpg
GEO:51.4945863;-0.1773215
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Cinema Lumiere 17 Queensberry Place London London SW7 2DT United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=17 Queensberry Place:geo:-0.1773215,51.4945863
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260414T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260418T235959
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T142351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T142352Z
UID:10005510-1776124800-1776556799@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Tereza Stehlikova @ absolute now II
DESCRIPTION:‘Eternity does not exist anywhere but in changing time. Eternity is the absolute now.’ — D.T. Suzuki\, Time and Eternity (1956) \n\n\n\n\nRieko Akatsuka – George Barber – Kaz – Guy Sherwin – Tereza Stehlikova\n\n\n\n\nFor the 10th anniversary of absolute now—a group exhibition originally held in Tokyo—five artists return to explore the enduring paradox of time: the coexistence of the fixed and the fluid\, the eternal and the ever-changing.\n\n\n\n\nAmong the new works presented\, Czech artist Tereza Stehlikova contributes a video installation that expands on her long-term project 4 Generations of Women (2012–). Her piece immerses viewers in a layered reality where personal\, familial\, and more-than-human identities converge. Through the poetic use of moving image\, Stehlíková explores how selfhood is entangled with ancestry\, descendants\, and the natural world — revealing a timeless quality within the rhythms of change. Boundaries dissolve: between mother and daughter\, self and other\, human and non-human\, past and future — yet something essential endures in the very act of being present.\n\n\n\n\nAs with the other participating artists\, Stehlikova uses the language of the moving image — a medium built from stillness in motion — to question what ‘absolute now’ means in a socio-political context transformed over the past decade. The exhibition reflects on how we inhabit the present in a time when truth feels increasingly unstable and digital technologies offer continual escape from the here and now.\n\n\n\n\nThe exhibition is curated by Kaz and will include a curated programme of events.\n\n\n\n\nFor further information\, please contact danielle@daniellearnaud.com.\n\n\n\n\nThe gallery is open by appointment only.  \n\n\nMore info about the exhibition on\n \nDANIELLE ARNAUD website
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/tereza-stehlikova-absolute-now-ii/
LOCATION:Danielle Arnaud Gallery\, 123 Kennington Road\, London\, SE11 6SF\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Tereza-Stehlikova_Four-Generations-of-Women.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Danielle Arnaud":MAILTO:danielle@daniellearnaud.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260413T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260413T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T162225Z
UID:10005505-1776105000-1776112200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Erev Yom HaShoah: ‘People Without History Are Dust’: An In Conversation with Dr Anna Hájková and Rabbi Kamila Kopřivová
DESCRIPTION:MON 13 APR 2026 18:30 Westminster Synagogue\, London \nWhere are the stories of great queer love in the Shoah? There are almost none. Dr Anna Hájková examines why the history of same-sex desire during the Shoah – queerness among Jews persecuted by the Nazis for their race – is largely absent from history books\, and how restoring these narratives can contribute to a more inclusive understanding of the Holocaust. \nBased on extensive archival research and oral histories\, her book\, recently awarded the 75th National Jewish Book Award in the Holocaust category\, offers a concise and accessible insight into the queer history of the Holocaust for both general readers and specialists. On Monday 13th April\, Anna will discuss her research in conversation with Rabbi Kamila Kopřivová on the occasion of Yom HaShoah\, the annual day of Holocaust remembrance in the Jewish calendar. \n\n\n 	6.30pm – Erev Yom HaShoah Service\n 	7pm – In Conversation\, followed by Q&A and refreshments\n 	Early Bird Tickets: £15 members / £20 non-members\nEarly bird ends Monday 6 April\nBOOK NOW\n\nDr Anna Hájková is Reader of modern European continental history at the University of Warwick. She is the author of\, among others\, The Last Ghetto: An Everyday History of Theresienstadt (2020) and People Without History Are Dust: Queer Desire in the Holocaust (2025) which won the 75th National Jewish Book Award in the Holocaust category\, in February. Hájková is the pioneer of queer Holocaust history.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/erev-yom-hashoah-people-without-history-are-dust-an-in-conversation-with-dr-anna-hajkova-and-rabbi-kamila-koprivova/
LOCATION:Westminster Synagogue\, Rutland Gardens Mews\, Rutland Gardens\, London\, SW7 1BX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/7e1f0dfd81d408c4bd17d7b7fe577341.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Cenrre London":MAILTO:http://london.czechcentres.cz
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260409T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260409T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T142751Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T142753Z
UID:10005514-1775761200-1775766600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Concert - Près de votre oreille – Blessed Echoes
DESCRIPTION:Revisit Elizabethan and Jacobean gems with French ensemble Près de votre oreille who will perform their album Blessed Echoes in London\, celebrating the richness of the English Lute Song through an ambitious and rarely heard musical panorama.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/concert-pres-de-votre-oreille-blessed-echoes/
LOCATION:Institut français in London\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Blessed-Echoes-@Helene-Hanon-copie-scaled.jpg
GEO:51.4945863;-0.1773215
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Institut français in London 17 Queensberry Place London SW7 2DT United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=17 Queensberry Place:geo:-0.1773215,51.4945863
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260409T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260409T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T163003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T132116Z
UID:10005504-1775761200-1775766600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Wandering the World\, Wondering How to Return – Monodrama in One Act – When Diary Notes Grow into Literature
DESCRIPTION:For five years\, acting student Anna Torner travelled across the world\, documenting her experiences and inner journey in blog posts. From London to South America\, from India to New Zealand\, her travel journals eventually grew into her 2024 novel\, Itt sem fogunk élni (~We Won’t Live Here Either)\, which traces a young woman’s coming-of-age through her diary entries. \n\nIn 2025\, Boglárka Berecz and Mátyás Dögei adapted the book for the stage\, with Péter Vargyas composing its music and writing the lyrics. Thus was born the monodrama Wandering the World\, Wondering How to Return–a sensitive and humorous theatrical piece that takes the audience through this intimate journey of self-discovery. \nThroughout Anna Torner’s creative path – moving between writing and acting – her blog posts evolved into works of literary merit\, while acting became a defining part of her life. \nJoin us for this special performance\, which aims to offer us all relatable touchstones and answers. \n\n\n\nSynopsis \nIt takes one hour to fly from Budapest to Târgu Mureș. Travelling through England\, Asia\, and South America – sometimes by bicycle\, car\, train\, on foot\, by bus\, ship\, truck\, ferry\, tractor\, boat\, or motorbike – alone\, but never completely alone\, the same journey can take five years. \nThe journey matters more than the destination. I move like a ghost through a Parisian apartment. Pink ponies in London. In the junky quarter\, I swim across the canal with you. We cycle around Southeast  Asia and New  Zealand. Without you\, I hitchhike on Mexican trucks\, my Christmas dinner is green banana boiled with callaloo leaves\, and I rewrite the rules of wild camping. Don’t look for happiness outside. I try what’s worth trying in Colombia\, dance at a Kichwa celebration in Ecuador\, travel through Peru with Tata\, and get close to the Big Dipper itself. Without you. Home is within you. By the time I return\, maybe my phone will finally ring. \nThe performance runs 1 hour and 15 minutes and will be performed in English. \n\n\n\nDirector: Boglárka Berecz\nDramaturg and musical director: Mátyás Dögei\nPerformed by: Anna Torner\nLive music and vocals: Péter Vargyas\n\n\n\nWhen a young woman gathers her savings and buys a one-way ticket to Mexico – and keeps going\, farther and farther still – she can be sure to stumble upon a thousand little stories along the way. She sleeps in roadside motels\, trucks\, tents\, and pay toilets. Cooks banana soup in a Rasta hut in Belize\, finds surrogate parents in Peru\, argues with soldiers in the Indian mountains\, and ends up in a quarantine hostel in New Zealand. She babysits\, fries doughnuts\, tends bar\, and shears sheep. She makes friendships for life. Sometimes she curses the very idea of living in the moment – and herself. Because what are a thousand adventures compared to a fulfilled love? Then she’s off again\, speeding into the sunset on a truck bed. Or moves into a flat on Dob Street\, Budapest. And then moves on once more\, always farther – until… What does it really mean to arrive? \nAnna Torner travelled the world for five years. Her novel – born from blog entries and perhaps letters never sent – is both a travelogue and a diary\, written for those who keep searching\, with endless curiosity\, for their own path. \nLeonidasz Purosz\, editor of Itt sem fogunk élni (~We Won’t Live Here Either)
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/wandering-the-world-wondering-how-to-return-monodrama-in-one-act-when-diary-notes-grow-into-literature/
LOCATION:Hungarian Cultural Centre\, 10 Maiden Lane\, London\, London\, WC2E 7NA\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Theatre & Dance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/VM_Eunic.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Liszt Institute Hungarian Cultural Centre London":MAILTO:info@hungary.org.uk
GEO:51.5102115;-0.1232743
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Hungarian Cultural Centre 10 Maiden Lane London London WC2E 7NA United Kingdom;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=10 Maiden Lane:geo:-0.1232743,51.5102115
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260409T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260408T142703Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T142704Z
UID:10005512-1775728800-1781283600@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Desire to Create: Baťa's Architecture of Belonging
DESCRIPTION:The Czech Centre London\, in collaboration with the Tomáš Baťa Foundation and the Bata Heritage Centre\, marks the 150th anniversary of Czech entrepreneur Tomáš Baťa\, founder of the global Baťa Shoe Company\, with an exhibition exploring his achievements and guiding principles and their realisation in East Tilbury. It reveals how ideas about work\, culture\, sport\, health and community were embedded in the design of the built environment.\n\nThe exhibition unfolds in two complementary strands. Desire to Create presents Baťa’s legacy as a comprehensive philosophy\, uniting work with service\, enterprise with education\, and personal development with responsibility towards others – not as a relic of the past\, but as a continuing source of inspiration. Baťa’s Architecture of Belonging brings East Tilbury to life through architectural drawings\, historic photographs and original artefacts\, evoking its distinctive modernist atmosphere. Together\, they trace how ideas were translated into built form – from vision to planning\, from planning to everyday life – creating a cohesive narrative of belonging\, work and community.\n\nOrganised by Czech Centre London in partnership with Bata Heritage Centre.\n\n 	EXHIBITION OPENING\nThursday 9 April 2026\, 6.30 – 8.30 pm\nFree entry\, Register Here\n 	EXHIBITION DATES: 10 April – 12 June 2026\n 	VENUE & OPENING TIMES\nVitrínka Gallery\, Czech Centre London\n30 Kensington Palace Gardens\, London\, W8 4QY\nOpening hours: Tue – Fri 10am – 5pm
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/desire-to-create-batas-architecture-of-belonging/
LOCATION:Vitrínka Gallery\, Czech Centre London\, 30 Kensington Palace Gardens\, London\, W8 4QY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Art
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/4f44b16930c96e3b868397657f54cccc.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Centre":MAILTO:blues@czechcentre.org.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260408T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260408T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T131753Z
UID:10005503-1775673000-1775682000@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Roma Routes – Art\, Identity\, and Expression from Hungary
DESCRIPTION:Join us on 8 April to mark International Roma Day for Roma Routes\, an evening of photography\, film\, and contemporary art exploring the journeys that shape Roma identity. Bringing together documentary work from a collaborative project in Tiszavasvári\, Hungary\, and artistic reflections by London-based Roma artist Robert Czibi\, the exhibition traces connections between place\, memory\, and belonging. Through images\, stories\, and personal perspectives\, Roma Routes invites audiences to reflect on how identity is shaped between the places we come from and the places we continue to become.\n\nThis exhibition brings together two intertwined narratives: the story of a segregated Roma community in Tiszavasvári\, and that of an artist born in another Roma neighbourhood in the same region who has carried its memory across borders.\n\nThe first story is that of collaboration: stepping across internal borders between the countryside and the Hungarian capital\, Budapest\, to involve participants from the Roma neighbourhood of a small town in the North-East of Hungary in a collaborative writing project with local non-Roma residents through the publication of the periodical Duj Dzséne – Ketten – Two Together.\n\nThe second story is of the artist\, Robert Czibi who crossed internal borders of identity and the physical borders of countries on many occasions before finding his expressive voice in the multiplicity of London’s lingua-culture. The simultaneity of identity as rootedness in Roma origins and identity as motion and interaction with our surroundings is what unites the two narratives that unfold in the images exhibited together.\n\n\nThe Road Ahead\nDocumentary and Photography Projects from Hungary – Film and photography\n\nThis photo exhibition was created in collaboration between photojournalist Márton Kállai\, multiple-winner of the Hungarian Press Photo Competition\, and the Tiszavasvári Roma Girls’ Youth Club\, on the initiative of the KRE Linguistic Diversity and Social Participation research group at Károli Gáspár University in Budapest. Together\, Roma and non-Roma participants from Tiszavasvári and Budapest write and publish the journal Duj Dzséne – Ketten – Two Together\, creating a narrative of trust and belonging about Roma futures and the coexistence of Roma and non-Roma in Hungary. The documentary film Duj Dzséne – Ketten – Two Together: Stories of a collaborative journal in support of Roma social participation showcases stages from their journey together: how they forged a collaborative writing and research collective across the borders of identity that separate people living alongside each other.\n\n\n\n\nThere I Was Born\, Here I Become\nContemporary Art\n\nRobert Czibi’s artistic response unfolds as a parallel journey alongside the documentary and the photos. Although Robert’s works reflect his individual journey as a London-based Roma artist from Hungary\, his journey explores the potentialities that open up when collectives or individuals persistently criss-cross and interrogate physical and narrative borders of identity. Through his works\, he returns to the landscapes of his childhood not only to remember\, but to understand how identity is formed between the place of birth and the place of becoming. Through images\, he explores what it means to grow up in a Roma family\, to leave it behind\, and to continue carrying its imprint in his works. Together\, his artworks create a dialogue between here and there\, between collective memory and personal transformation.\n\n\n\n\nProgramme\n\n 	18:30 – Film screening (25 minutes)\n 	19:00 – Panel discussion – The Road Ahead – Documentary and Photography Projects from Hungary\n 	19:30 – There I Was Born\, Here I Become – Private view\n 	21:00 – End of Event\n\n\n\n\nWe warmly invite audiences to join us for an evening of photography\, film and contemporary art marking International Roma Day. Through documentary images\, collaborative storytelling and personal artistic reflection\, Roma Routes opens a space to engage with questions of identity\, belonging\, and the journeys that shape Roma lives across places and generations.\n\nThe exhibition offers an opportunity to encounter the voices and perspectives behind these projects and to reflect on how communities and individuals navigate the paths between heritage\, memory and new beginnings.\n\nRegistration is open via Eventbrite.\n\nThe event is supported by the National Research\, Development and Innovation Office – Hungary and organised by the Liszt Institute London
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/roma-routes-art-identity-and-expression-from-hungary/
LOCATION:Liszt Institute Hungarian Cultural Centre London\, 17-19 Cockspur St.\, London \, SW1Y 5BL\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Art,Film,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Roma-Routes_Eunic.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Liszt Institute Hungarian Cultural Centre London":MAILTO:info@hungary.org.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260329T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260329T190000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T155223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T155325Z
UID:10005506-1774792800-1774810800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:GLOBAL CULTURES: EUROPE FEST 2026
DESCRIPTION:On the 29th March\, to celebrate the rich tradition of European film\, Jesus College\, Panorama\, EUNIC and member states\, the EU Delegation and the Cambridge Festival will partner to screen short films from Estonia\, the Faroe Islands\, Lithuania\, Ireland\, Poland\, Cyprus\, the Netherlands\, Turkey\, Romania\, Germany\, Hungary\, and Scotland. Previously shown in the ‘In Short’ film festival held by EUNIC in London\, this is their first outing to Cambridge. The programme includes films\, Q&As and discussions with filmmakers and artists Vytautas Katkus\, Sam Yazdanpanna\, and more. \n\n\n\nA celebration of diversity\, inclusion\, and access from across Europe\, themes will respond to kinship\, the politics of geography\, and surviving against hardships. \n\n\n\nThis event is part of Panorama’s partnership with Jesus College\, Cambridge. Global Cultures at Jesus College is produced by Panorama and led by Director Matthew Webb. Its goal is to contribute to Cambridge city beyond our walls\, offering unique cultural moments with world-class figures through its regular events\, which are open to all. In the last year alone\, we have featured master craftspeople\, Noh theatre mask makers\, National Geographic photographers\, and film directors\, producers and talent. Monthly events throughout the year will provide many opportunities for you to participate. \n\n\n\nThe day is supported by the following EUNIC members: the Cyprus High Commission; the Embassy of Estonia; the Embassy of Ireland in the UK; the Embassy of the Netherlands in the UK; the Goethe-Institut London; the Liszt Institute – Hungarian Cultural Centre London; the Lithuanian Embassy in the UK; the Polish Cultural Institute London; the Romanian Cultural Institute; the Representation of the Faroe Islands in the UK; Scotland House London; and the Yunus Emre Turkish Institute London.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/global-cultures-europe-fest-2026/
LOCATION:West Court\, Jesus College\, Jesus Lane\, Cambridge CB5 8BL\, Jesus Lane\, Cambridge\, CB5 8BL\, United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Estonia-Keyhole-Promo.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260326T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260326T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T162717Z
UID:10005439-1774551600-1774555200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Athens Tales: Athens in Literature and Song
DESCRIPTION:Join the book launch and discussion of Athens Tales\, an anthology of one hundred and fifty years of Greek short fiction about Athens\, compiled and translated into English by Joshua Barley. The evening will include an illustrated presentation of the book by the translator\, and an accompanying performance of Athenian songs by mezzo-soprano Alexandra Achillea.  \nThis is the main UK launch of Athens Tales\, recently published by Oxford University Press. The book is an anthology of the last one hundred and fifty years of Greek short fiction about Athens\, comprising eighteen authors from representative periods of the city’s modern history. There are stories of war and migration\, love stories and other vignettes of Athenian life\, through which the reader traces the multiple transformations of the Greek capital. With each author bringing their own perspective as well as style\, the anthology is both an introduction to modern Greek literature as well as a portrait of Athens through its writers. At this event\, the book’s creator and translator\, Joshua Barley\, will give an illustrated talk weaving together some of the anthology’s lesser-known authors with the modern history of the city. He will be joined by special guests including the singer Alexandra Achillea\, who will perform a selection of twentieth-century Athenian songs with piano accompaniment. 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/athens-tales-athens-in-literature-and-song/
LOCATION:The Hellenic Centre London\, 18\, 16 Paddington St\, ONLINE\, W1U 5AS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://euniclondon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Screenshot-2026-01-07-at-16.06.27.png
ORGANIZER;CN="The Hellenic Centre":MAILTO:info@helleniccentre.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260326T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260326T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T162451Z
UID:10005507-1774549800-1774555200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:An evening of British Latinx Poetry
DESCRIPTION:Presencia y Resistencia: British Latinx Poetry\, Language and Belonging\n\nLaunch of Wasafiri’s Presencia y Resistencia Issue\n\nJoin us at the Instituto Cervantes London for an unforgettable evening celebrating the launch of Wasafiri’s Presencia y Resistencia issue—a powerful showcase of contemporary British Latinx writing and visual art.\n\nHosted by poet and Wasafiri editor Leo Boix\, this vibrant event brings together three outstanding Latinx voices—Patrizia Longhitano\, José Buera and Luisa de la Concha Montes—for an evening of readings that move between languages\, geographies and lived experiences. Their work speaks of migration\, memory\, queerness\, resistance\, food\, love and survival\, capturing what it means to create art from the crossings of cultures and tongues.\n\nFollowing the readings\, the poets will come together for a lively Q&A conversation exploring what it means to write—and live—between languages\, how Latinx identities are shaping contemporary UK literature\, and why presence itself can be an act of resistance.\n\nAudience members will have the opportunity to purchase the magazine\, meet the poets\, and continue the conversation after the event.\n\nAn evening of poetry\, dialogue and cultural fire—don’t miss it.\n\n——-\n\nBios\n\nLeo Boix is a bilingual Latinx poet\, born in Argentina and based in London. His second collection\, Southernmost: Sonnets (Chatto & Windus\, 2025)\, was shortlisted for the Forward Prizes and named book of the year by The Guardian and The Week. His debut English collection\, Ballad of a Happy Immigrant (2021)\, was a Poetry Book Society Wild Card Choice. Boix is editor and lead translator of Hemisferio Cuir\, introducing English readers to major Latin American voices.\n\nLuisa De la Concha Montes is a writer and photographer from Mexico City who now resides in London. Her work attempts to bring shapeless states such as grief\, diaspora\, identity\, and memory into physical form through visual poetry\, documentary photography and digital curation. Her writing has been showcased at the National Poetry Library\, and published in the collective zine Lenguas Enredadas\, Shado Magazine\, The Big Ship\, amongst many other publications.\n\nJosé Buera is a Caribbean/Latinx writer from the Dominican Republic. An alumni of the London Library’s Emerging Writers Programme (24/25)\, his poetry appears in Magma\, Propel\, Southword\, Wasafiri and elsewhere. José is the founder and curator of Empanada Poetry Salon\, a bimonthly gathering of diaspora poets amidst their foods.\n\nPatrizia Longhitano Patrizia Longhitano is a pansexual immigrant poet who spent her childhood between Brazil and Italy.\n\nShe is currently the manager of Poetry Pharmacy bookshop\, a board member of Magma and the host of Venn Diagrams. Some of her work is found in Wet Grain\, Rialto and Un Nuevo Sol anthology.\n\nEvent in English and Spanglish
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/an-evening-of-british-latinx-poetry/
LOCATION:Instituto Cervantes London\, 15-19 Devereux Court\, ONLINE\, WC2R 3JJ
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ORGANIZER;CN="Instituto Cervantes":MAILTO:cenlon@cervantes.es 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260325T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260325T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T162812Z
UID:10005509-1774463400-1774468800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Why women’s stories of war matter. Ukraine in a global context.
DESCRIPTION:Location:\n\n\n\n\nInstitut français\n17 Queensberry Place\nLondon\nSW7 2DT \n\n\nJoin us for a conversation on women’s experiences of war\, inspired by stories from Ukraine collected by the Ukrainian writer Yuliia Iliukha in her book My Women. These are diverse\, often unseen and silenced experiences:painful\, intimate\, sometimes even funny. They rarely make newspaper headlines\, yet they are no less important than frontline reports or updates from sites of destruction. \nTogether with Christina Lamb OBE\,Chief Foreign Correspondent at The Sunday Times\, one of Britain’s leading foreign journalists and bestselling author of Our Bodies Their Battlefields and What War Does to Women\, we will discuss why women’s stories matter and how they resonate within a broader global context. \nStories of women’s wartime experiences allow us to better understand the trauma of contemporary war and the ways it shapes daily life. They stay with us. They are remembered\, retold\, and carried forward. They bear witness\, cultivate solidarity\, and help us endure. \n\nSpeaker \n\n\nYuliia Iliukha \n\nYuliia Iliukha is a poet\, prose writer and journalist\, born in 1982 in Kharkiv oblast\, Ukraine. She is the author of several books for adults and children. Her poems and prose stories have been translated into over fifteen languages. Iliukha has received awards\, including the Oles Honchar International Ukrainian-German Literary Prize\, the Smoloskyp Prize\, and the Rotahorn Literaturpreis. My Women won the BBC Book of the Year 2024 in Ukraine and was shortlisted for the EBRD Literature Prize 2025. The book has been published in the US\, France\, Sweden\, Slovakia\, Austria\, Poland\, Greece\, Lithuania and Italy\, with translations forthcoming in Bulgaria\, Latvia\, Spain and Finland. Illukha is currently working on a novel. \n\nModerator \n\n\nChristina Lamb \n\nCovering conflicts across the globe for the past 38 years\, Christina Lamb is recognised as one of the world’s leading foreign correspondents and is Chief Foreign Correspondent for The Sunday Times as well as a bestselling author. \nHer dispatches with the Afghan mujaheddin fighting the Soviet Union saw her named Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 22. She has since reported everywhere from Israel to Ukraine\, Syria to Zimbabwe and been awarded Foreign Correspondent of the Year seven times as well as Europe’s top war reporting prize\, the Prix Bayeux\, the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award from both the Society of Editors and Women in Journalism as well as the Chesney Gold Medal for promoting the understanding of war\, previously awarded to Henry Kissinger and Winston Churchill. Christina’s work has earned her international renown not only as a ground-breaking journalist but as a campaigner for women impacted by war.  She has authored ten books\, including Our Bodies Their Battlefields\, What War Does to Women and co-writing I Am Malala with Malala Yousafzai. \nShe is a Global envoy for UN Education Cannot Wait\, on the board of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting\, and an Associate of the Imperial War Museum and was awarded an OBE in 2013 as well as an honorary doctorate from Oxford in 2026. \n  \n 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/why-womens-stories-of-war-matter-ukraine-in-a-global-context/
LOCATION:Cinema Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature,Talks
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260322T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260322T170000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260324T162622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260324T162623Z
UID:10005508-1774195200-1774198800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Concert "A Musical Tale: El Niño y la Bestia (The Boy and the Beast)"
DESCRIPTION:Instituto Cervantes in collaboration with the Oxford Literary Festival\, presents El niño y la bestia (The Boy and the Beast)\, a performance based on the short story of the same name by author Elvira Lindo. \n\nIn this performance\, Lindo narrates a story inspired by her father’s childhood\, when he was sent to live with an aunt in a Madrid devastated in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War. She is accompanied by musicians Olatz Ruiz de Gordejuea on violin\, Salvador Bolón on cello\, Ander Perrino on double bass\, and María Lindo—artistic director of the project—on English horn.\n\nElvira Lindo is a journalist and writer. Her children’s books featuring the character Manolito are considered classics of Spanish children’s literature and include Manolito on the Road and Manolito Four-Eyes: The 1st Volume of the Great Encyclopedia of My Life. She is a recipient of Spain’s National Prize for Children’s Literature. Her works for adults include Open Heart.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/concert-a-musical-tale-el-nino-y-la-bestia-the-boy-and-the-beast/
LOCATION:Oxford University Mathematical Institute: Lecture Theatre 1\, Oxford University Mathematical Institute: Lecture Theatre 1\, Oxford\, OX26GG\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature,Music
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ORGANIZER;CN="Instituto Cervantes":MAILTO:cenlon@cervantes.es 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260317T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260317T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260223T184909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260223T184911Z
UID:10005497-1773774000-1773779400@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:The Matchbox Girl: Alice Jolly in Conversation with Rosie Goldsmith
DESCRIPTION:We are thrilled to welcome prize-winning novelist Alice Jolly\, author of The Matchbox Girl\, in conversation with award-winning journalist Rosie Goldsmith. \nSet in 1930’s Vienna\, The Matchbox Girl brilliantly brings neurodiversity to light. \nJoin us for a conversation offering insight into the story of a young non-verbal girl’s battle for survival and search for the truth. \n\nAbout The Matchbox Girl \nAdelheid Brunner does not speak. She writes and draws instead and her ambition is to own one thousand matchboxes. Her grandmother cannot make sense of this\, but Adelheid will stop at nothing to achieve her dream. She makes herself invisible\, hiding in cupboards with her pet rat\, Franz Joseph\, listening in on conversations she can’t fully comprehend. Then she meets Dr Asperger\, a man who lets children play all day and who recognises the importance of matchboxes. He invites Adelheid to come and live at the Vienna paediatric clinic\, where she and other children like herself will live under observation. But the year is 1938 and the place is Vienna – a city of political instability\, a place of increasing fear and violence. When the Nazis march into the city\, a new world is created and difficult choices must be made. Why are the clinic’s children disappearing\, and where do they go? Adelheid starts to suspect that some of Dr Asperger’s games are played for the highest stakes. In order to survive\, she must play a game whose rules she cannot yet understand. \n\nAlice Jolly is a novelist and playwright. Her writing has been awarded the PEN/Ackerley Prize\, an O Henry Prize and the V. S. Pritchett Memorial Prize\, and been longlisted for Ondaatje Prize and the Rathbones Folio Prize. She teaches on the Creative Writing Masters at Oxford University. \n\nRosie Goldsmith is an award-winning journalist and presenter\, specializing in arts and foreign affairs. As a BBC broadcaster for twenty years\, she travelled the world. Today she combines journalism with presenting and curating cultural and literary events. As well as being Director of the European Literature Network and Editor-in-Chief of The Riveter magazine\, Rosie is also the Artistic Director of the European Writers’ Festival in the UK\, a books podcaster and book prize judge.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/the-matchbox-girl-alice-jolly-in-conversation-with-rosie-goldsmith/
LOCATION:Austrian Cultural Forum London\, 28 Rutland Gate\, London\, SW7 1PQ\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260312T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260312T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260209T132004Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260209T132006Z
UID:10005453-1773342000-1773347400@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:World Between Us
DESCRIPTION:Will Marie from a small town in the Czech Republic succeed by fulfilling her lifetime dream to conquer New York as a still photographer? \nMarie Tomanová travelled from Mikulov to the USA as an au pair\, and today she shoots campaigns for fashion brands such as Nike\, Instagram\, or for the fashion magazines such as Vogue CS. However\, her name is better known abroad than in her native country\, which provided few opportunities for the young painter. Paradoxically\, it was only in New York\, far from home\, that she was able to grow up and find herself – a transition greatly supported by Marie’s partner in professional and personal life\, art historian Thomas Beachdel. Tomanová touches the world in a different way\, with a rush of positive emotions\, an immediate connection\, acting as a medium through which the energy of the portrait-sitter passes. Directed by fellow Czech expatriate Marie Dvořáková\, a Student Academy Award winner\, the film is both a tender portrait of friendship and a reflection on ambition\, identity\, and the search for home. Through the story of the two Maries\, World Between Us explores the fragile space between worlds\, showing that home is not always a place but a feeling of connection\, belonging\, and self-discovery. \nMarie Dvořáková\, Czech Republic\, Slovakia 2024\, 90 min\, English subtitles   \nBest Cinematography Award at the 24th Jihlava International Documentary Film Festival\nMarie Dvořáková was born in Jablonec nad Nisou\, and after studying directing at FAMU\, she went on to study for a master’s degree at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. She now lives and works in the USA. Her short film Who’s Who in Mycology (2016)\, for which she won a student Oscar in Hollywood\, opened the door to a big world for her. \n\nAdmission: £5\nBOOK NOW\n\nThe screening is an accompanying event to the exhibition Pixels and Poetics: Sudek\, Funke\, and the Influence of New Technologies on the Development of Photography\, presented at the Vitrínka and Bouda Galleries and in the public space outside the Czech Embassy\, running from 20 January to 13 March 2026.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/world-between-us/
LOCATION:Czech Centre at the Czech Embassy Cinema\, 26 Kensington Palace Gardens\, London\, Select a State\, W8 4QY\, United Kingdom
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ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Centre":MAILTO:blues@czechcentre.org.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260310T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260310T200000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260223T185037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260223T185038Z
UID:10005496-1773167400-1773172800@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:An evening with José Ángel Mañas
DESCRIPTION:Instituto Cervantes London is organising a presentation of the English translations of the books U Feeling and Doctor X by José Ángel Mañas\, published in English by Aniara Publishing.\n\nThe author will be accompanied in a conversation with Rickard Lundberg\, director of the publishing house that released the English editions.\nSynopsis of U-FEELING\nThe U-FEELING experience\nDo you need to refresh your existence for a few days?\nU-FEELING is the ultimate experience. Forget your old self and enjoy the unforgettable sensations of having a brand‑new body. You choose who you want to be!\nSynopsis of Doctor X\nOn October 1st\, 2013\, the United States Government shut down Silk Road\, also known as “the Amazon of drugs\,” a notorious Dark Web site where drugs and pharmaceuticals could be purchased from anywhere in the world. Its creator\, the twenty‑something Ross Ulbricht\, as well as everyone involved in the platform—whether as administrators or forum moderators—ended up in prison.\nEveryone except one: a Spanish doctor known as DoctorX.\n\nWho is this mysterious figure connected to Silk Road?\nWhy didn’t he end up behind bars?\nHow did he become a geek idol of the Dark Web?\n\nA gripping true story that José Ángel Mañas and Jordi Ledesma have turned into a fast‑paced thriller.\n\nJosé Ángel Mañas is a writer from Madrid\, often associated with the generation of neo‑realist novelists of the 1990s. He rose to fame with Historias del Kronen\, which forms part of the “Kronen Tetralogy\,” together with his subsequent novels: Mensaka (1995)\, Ciudad rayada (1998)\, and Sonko95.\n\nEvent in English.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/an-evening-with-jose-angel-manas/
LOCATION:Instituto Cervantes London\, 15-19 Devereux Court\, ONLINE\, WC2R 3JJ
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ORGANIZER;CN="Instituto Cervantes":MAILTO:cenlon@cervantes.es 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260308T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260319T235959
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260226T102351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260226T102504Z
UID:10005501-1772928000-1773964799@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Film Screening: The Tasters
DESCRIPTION:Autumn 1943. Having fled bombed Berlin\, Rosa arrives in a small\, isolated village near the eastern border. Rosa soon discovers that the seemingly peaceful village hides a secret: Hitler’s headquarters\, the Wolf’s Lair\, is in the neighbouring forest. As the Führer sees enemies everywhere and is obsessed with the idea of being poisoned\, Rosa and other young women from the village are taken one morning at dawn to taste the food cooked for him. Torn between the fear of dying and hunger\, the tasters form alliances\, friendships and secret pacts… \n\n\n\nFor screening times and tickets please see link below.  \n\n\n\nThe screening on 8 March\, at 13:15 pm  will be followed by a Q&A with director Silvio Soldini.
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/film-screening-the-tasters/
LOCATION:Cinema Lumiere\, 17 Queensberry Place\, London\, London\, SW7 2DT\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Film
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260307T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260307T160000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260212T122817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260212T122819Z
UID:10005438-1772895600-1772899200@euniclondon.org
SUMMARY:Kalamoti: A Medieval Village on Chios Island
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the book launch and discussion on the book Kalamoti: A Medieval Village of Chios. Kalamoti combines architecture with history\, highlighting current issues surrounding the preservation of cultural heritage. The Panayotis & Effie Michelis Foundation has entrusted Kalamoti’s representation to the architect and photographer Yiorgis Yerolymbos\, whose images reveal the harmony between landscape\, architecture\, and the people who inhabit them. The discussion will be between Yiorgis Yerolymbos\, political scientist Stathis Kalyvas and Pprofessor Roman Gerodimos.  \nThe historical context and development of the region over the centuries are comprehensibly described by the island’s former mayor\, architect Manolis Vournous\, who presents the reader with the necessary background and raises topical issues.  \nThe book serves as an occasion to reignite a substantive discussion within the scientific community and in society at large regarding the aesthetics of historic villages and their impact on the past and the foreseeable future.   \nThe book will be available to purchase on the day.  \nImage credit: Yiorgis Yerolymbos 
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/kalamoti-a-medieval-village-on-chios-island/
LOCATION:The Hellenic Centre London\, 18\, 16 Paddington St\, ONLINE\, W1U 5AS\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Talks
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ORGANIZER;CN="The Hellenic Centre":MAILTO:info@helleniccentre.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260305T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260305T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T231201
CREATED:20260223T185203Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260223T185206Z
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SUMMARY:Wolves\, Folklore\, and Family: Reading and Discussion with Zuzana Rihova
DESCRIPTION:Acclaimed Czech writer and scholar Zuzana Říhová joins Dr Kathryn Murphy (University of Oxford) for an informal evening of readings and discussion of her novel Playing Wolf\, a contemporary tale set in the Czech countryside. \nA couple move from Prague with their young son to a remote village in the hope of repairing their failing marriage. As they attempt to settle in\, they encounter a closed community shaped by unspoken rules\, strange coincidences\, and fragments of local folklore. Using the familiar tale of Little Red Riding Hood\, subtly woven into the narrative\, the story illuminates themes of vulnerability\, trust\, and hidden menace. \nBlending psychological insight with folkloric resonance\, Playing Wolf explores how myths and inherited stories continue to influence behaviour and relationships in the present day. The conversation will reflect on the role of folklore and fairy-tale motifs in the novel\, and on how quiet tensions within families and communities can slowly transform lives. \nZuzana Říhová studied Czech language and literature and comparative literature at Charles University in Prague. She has published a collection of poetry\, Pustím si tě do domu (I’ll Let You in My House)\, and a novella\, Evička (Little Eve). \nAlex Zucker’s translations include novels by Magdaléna Platzová\, Jáchym Topol\, Bianca Bellová\, Petra Hůlová\, and Tomáš Zmeškal. He has also translated plays\, subtitles\, young adult and children’s books\, poems\, philosophy\, art history\, and an opera. \nKathryn Murphy is Fellow and Tutor in English Literature at Oriel College\, Oxford\, where she writes about and teaches seventeenth-century literature. Her book\, Robert Burton: A Vital Melancholy is forthcoming from Reaktion. She studied Czech literature at the University of Glasgow\, and reviews Czech fiction for the Times Literary Supplement. \nAdmission: £5 (+ Eventbrite fee)\nBook Here \nZuzana Říhová will also appear in Oxford the day before\, on Wednesday 4 March 2026\, for a special event at The Queen’s College exploring poetry in translation alongside a reading from Playing Wolf. The Oxford evening will include discussion\, a book signing and refreshments. Free entry. More info
URL:https://euniclondon.org/event/wolves-folklore-and-family-reading-and-discussion-with-zuzana-rihova/
LOCATION:Czech Centre\, 30 Kensington Palace Gardens  \, London\, W8 4QY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Literature
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ORGANIZER;CN="Czech Centre":MAILTO:blues@czechcentre.org.uk
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR