Rosa Luxemburg is, after Marie Skłodowska-Curie, the most famous Polish woman in the world. An icon of pacifism, internationalism and democratic socialism. In our country, almost everyone associates her name, but few know who she really was. Her biography has been treated instrumentally and has been falsified. She therefore needs to be retold. What emerges from Rosa Luxemburg's turbulent life is a portrait of a "cross-thinking" person who did not fit into either the traditional Jewish family, the social roles assigned to women at the time or the rigid framework of ideology. All her activity stemmed from a deep-rooted sense of justice, a sensitivity to all forms of oppression, discrimination, exploitation, to other people's suffering - not only human, but also animal suffering. Her biography has everything you would expect from a gripping story: noble motives and black characters, conflict and common cause, a great story, love and death and mystery.
Moderated by Marta Perchuć-Burzyńska.