Trainings & Workshops

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Khaled Ghrairi

Khaled Ghrairi (they/them or no pronouns) is a queer BIPOC activist and advocate from Tunisia, currently living in exile in Germany. Navigating the complexities of the immigration system while confronting systemic discrimination, Khaled brings lived experience and deep insight into queer and migration rights. Their work is grounded in direct support of displaced and imprisoned queer and political activists in Tunisia, with a sharp understanding of the region's political structures and colonial legacies.

Khaled offers talks, workshops, and trainings that center marginalized voices, challenge systems of oppression, and open up new ways of understanding identity, resistance, and belonging.

Speaking Engagements & Contact

Khaled is available for panel discussions, guest lectures, community events, and collaborative learning spaces.

To get in touch or invite them to speak or lead a session, please email: [....]

Workshops & Trainings Offered

All offerings can be tailored to grassroots groups, educators, NGOs, and institutions committed to anti-oppressive work.

🌈 What Does Queerness Really Mean — and Could I Be Queer?
A Decolonial Exploration of Identity, Belonging, and Queer Possibility
This reflective session challenges fixed, Western ideas of queerness by centering lived experiences from the Global South and diasporic communities. Together, we explore queerness as practice, survival, and political refusal  beyond visibility politics or rigid identity labels.

🌍 What Does It Mean to Be Queer Across Cultures?
Interrogating Queer Identity Through an Intersectional and Anti-Colonial Lens
This workshop unpacks how queerness is shaped by colonial histories, racial capitalism, displacement, and cultural erasure. We explore how systemic power produces — and polices — queer identities, and how communities resist through creativity, care, and collective knowledge.

🌱 What Can Nature Teach Us About Queerness, Resistance, and Rupture?
Queer Ecology as Decolonial Practice
This workshop explores how queer and Indigenous ecological thinking challenge colonial ideas of nature, purity, and control. We reclaim interdependence, transformation, and “unnaturalness” as radical tools for healing, survival, and resistance.

🏛️ Why Is Homosexuality Criminalized in North Africa — and Who Benefits?
Uncovering Colonial Legacies, State Violence, and Resistance
Participants trace the roots of anti-queer legislation in the region, revealing how colonial law, authoritarian rule, and nationalist morality intersect to police queer existence. The session highlights resistance from within and beyond these borders.

🛂 How Do Queer Migrants Resist Borders and Bureaucracy?
Queer Migration as a Struggle for Dignity, Not Just Asylum
This workshop centers queer migration as a site of resistance against state violence, legal exclusion, and racial capitalism. Through lived experience and collective strategies, we explore survival, visibility, and the contradictions of “asylum” in Europe.

🏠 How Do We Build Truly Liberatory Spaces for Queer Migrants?
Beyond Inclusion: Toward Collective Care, Autonomy, and Anti-Colonial Practice
More than symbolic diversity, this session offers a radical vision for building spaces rooted in care, solidarity, and power-sharing. Ideal for groups seeking to move from inclusion toward structural change and accountability.