Azri Amram on the Jewish-Palestinian conflict, and food tourism as a bridge
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Food
Interview
Society & Culture
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Food
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Mar 22, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:47:26

This episode of Meant to be Eaten was produced in collaboration with Gastronomica Journal. Melissa Fuster, from Gastronomica: The Journal for Food Studies, is in for Coral Lee.A conversation with Azri Amram. Can food serve as a tool to build bridges in times of conflict? Azri Amram takes us to the Palestinian town on Kafr Qasim, the site of a massacre in 1956, which today serves as the site for food tours,motivating dialogue between Palestinians and Israeli-Jewish “food tourists”. Azri Amram is completing his doctorate degree in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at The Ben-Gurion of the Negev in Israel, examining Jewish-Palestinian relationships in food spaces.

Photo Courtesy of Azri Amram. 

Meant To Be Eaten is powered by Simplecast.

 

"This episode of Meant to be Eaten was produced in collaboration with Gastronomica Journal. Melissa Fuster, from Gastronomica: The Journal for Food Studies, is in for Coral Lee. A conversation with Azri Amram. Can food serve as a tool to build bridges in times of conflict? Azri Amram takes us to the Palestinian town on Kafr Qasim, the site of a massacre in 1956, which today serves as the site for food tours, motivating dialogue between Palestinians and Israeli-Jewish “food tourists”. Azri Amram is completing his doctorate degree in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at The Ben-Gurion of the Negev in Israel, examining Jewish-Palestinian relationships in food spaces. "

This episode of Meant to be Eaten was produced in collaboration with Gastronomica Journal. Melissa Fuster, from Gastronomica: The Journal for Food Studies, is in for Coral Lee.A conversation with Azri Amram. Can food serve as a tool to build bridges in times of conflict? Azri Amram takes us to the Palestinian town on Kafr Qasim, the site of a massacre in 1956, which today serves as the site for food tours,motivating dialogue between Palestinians and Israeli-Jewish “food tourists”. Azri Amram is completing his doctorate degree in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at The Ben-Gurion of the Negev in Israel, examining Jewish-Palestinian relationships in food spaces.

Photo Courtesy of Azri Amram. 

Meant To Be Eaten is powered by Simplecast.

 

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