FestivALT is a 10-day festival of Jewish art, activism, and education, drawing on the deeply rooted traditions and complex Polish-Jewish history. In the spirit of remembrance and heritage, we engage in dialogue with the past to better understand the present and build a future based on mutual respect.
We specifically confront stereotypes and long-standing narratives that have often distorted the image of the Jewish community and majority-minority relations.
Join us for the 9th edition of FestivALT!
This year at FestivALT, we are pursuing hope.
We do so because we are living through a time that feels increasingly hopeless — marked by war, polarization, rising antisemitism, and the erosion of shared values. In this atmosphere, hope is not a given; it is something we must search for, wrestle with, and perhaps reimagine.
For Jewish communities around the world, the events in Israel and Gaza have deepened these reflections, challenging personal identities and communal relationships. At the same time, the urgency of building bridges, questioning narratives, and holding space for complexity has never been greater.
It is impossible to ignore that our theme echoes the title of the Israeli national anthem, HaTikvah — “The Hope.” Written in the 19th century, before the founding of the State, it imagined a future of freedom and return for Jews. Today, its meanings are more fraught than ever. The country that had been the beacon of hope for the Jewish people is presently triggering a global backlash against Zionism, a rise in antisemitism, and an existential reckoning for many Jewish people.
In response, we are seeing many Jews turn to tradition for answers. Studying Jewish scripture may serve as a respite from violence. Similarly, for this year’s FestivALT, many artists — Jewish and non-Jewish, observant and secular — are turning to texts, rituals, and memories as tools for navigating a fractured present. They are not searching for simple answers, but for continuity and complexity — for echoes of voices across centuries trying to make sense of danger, exile, and renewal. Through art, they ask: Is hope possible? Can it be shared? At what cost? And can we still use this language to dream of a shared future?
At FestivALT, we don’t offer slogans or solutions. What we offer is space — to listen, reflect, and struggle with difficult questions. In art, dialogue, and memory, we find ways to move, even if unsteadily, toward something more just and more human.
Michael Rubenfeld, FestivALT Co-Director
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20 June ’2519:00
Opening of the 9th edition of FestivALT | Shabbat by the Vistula River | FestivALT 2025
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21 June ’2517:00
Life Is With People | vernissage | FestivALT 2025
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21 June ’2519:00
If I Had a Gun, I’d Take Them All Down | preview performance | FestivALT 2025
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22 June ’2514:00
Epitaph | artistic installation & performance | FestivALT 2025
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22 June ’2518:00
Hymns to the Goddess | Exhibition Opening | Q&A | FestivALT2025
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25 June ’2519:00
The Longlasting Project | sound installation & performance | FestivALT 2025
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24 June ’2519:00
Voice from the Heart of Hell | monodrama | FestivALT 2025
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26 June ’2519:00
Ta’am | dance performance | FestivALT 2025
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27 June ’2519:00
Ulterior motives | musical and prayer performance | FestivALT 2025
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28 June ’2519:00
KulturDocs | screening | Q&A | FestivALT 2025
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29 June ’2514:00
In This Place | Soundwalk | FestivALT 2025
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The 9th edition of FestivALT is made possible thanks to the support of the Matanel Foundation and Dutch Jewish Humanitarian Fund and takes place as part of the project “ReActMem: Rescue Memory – Activism, Art, and Public Memory,” which is co-financed by the European Union under the Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values (CERV 2024–2026) program.