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Events

We are delighted to present the forthcoming programme of events at the Leo Baeck Institute London. Our upcoming schedule features a series of lectures that explore central themes in Jewish history, culture, and contemporary thought.

We warmly invite colleagues and guests to join these gatherings, which will are held in-person in Central London, and live on Zoom. Detailed timings, registration links, and speaker biographies may be found on the individual event pages.

Please follow our social media channels for updates - the links in are in our page footer - and sign up to receive the LBI Newsletter.

17 Apr 2026 00:00 - 24 Apr 2026 23:59

The Leo Baeck Institute London would like to invite you to another free online screening from the LBI Film Club, starting on Thursday 17 April 2026. We hope all the film lovers among you will continue to enjoy our selection of thought-provoking films exploring the rich, diverse and multi-faceted Jewish experience. This latest offering is compelling historical account of Herzl’s life and vision which invites viewers to reflect on the complexities and legacies shaping Jewish life today.

 

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Sandra Lipner
21 May 2026 17:30 - 07:00 PM
POSTPONED

 

During the Third Reich, German political, social, economic, and private life was transformed to such an extent that the Holocaust became thinkable and, ultimately, possible. Yet many Germans maintained a ‘not Nazi’ subjectivity, drawing a line between themselves and overly zealous ‘150%’ Nazis. This talk uses the extensive private collection of letters and documents of Annemarie and Heinrich Brenzinger, Sandra Lipner’s great-grandparents from south-west Germany, to discuss why bourgeois Germans who were not enthusiastic about Hitler still willingly embraced the…

Alexander Walther
22 Oct 2026 17:30 - 07:00 PM

What role did Jewish survivors in the German Democratic Republic play in the cultural debate on the Holocaust and National Socialism? How could Jewish experiences of persecution and antifascist convictions be negotiated and articulated in the face of history, politics, and state- imposed acts of remembrance? Drawing on personal documents and works by authors like Arnold Zweig and neglected historian Helmut Eschwege, the talk explores these questions and shows Jewish and, in some cases, non-Jewish actors’ motivations and options for action. In doing so, the talk examines the tension between…

Günther Jikeli
19 Nov 2026 17:30 - 07:00 PM

Once the driving force of antisemitism worldwide, Nazi Germany waged war against Jews everywhere, radicalising antisemitism in word and deed. After 1945, Germany was pacified by the Allies, and open antisemitism became the antithesis of the new democratic Staatsräson. Yet today, antisemitism has returned – from the far right, parts of the radical left, Islamist movements, and the centre of society. This lecture examines the German case in a global context and asks whether the postwar Staatsräson – the commitment to Jewish life and Israel’s security – can hold, and what this means for…

Pragya Kaul
03 Dec 2026 19:00 - 08:30 PM

How did German Jews experience life as refugees from Nazism in the British Empire? Scholars of the Holocaust have often turned to frameworks of racial triangulation to answer this question, emphasizing Jews’ ‘Other-ing’ in Nazi Germany to place refugees ‘in-between’ the binaries of coloniser and colonised, European and non-European. This talk, however, takes a deep dive into the history of Indian constitutional development and legislative reform to understand the place of Holocaust refugees in the racialised socio-political hierarchy of the British Raj. Focusing on the Government of India…

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