
Tunisia Culture Weekend in London
From 2–5 October 2025, London will host a unique cultural encounter that foregrounds the richness of Tunisian cinema and heritage. Organized by ATUGE in collaboration with Nowart, the event combines two initiatives of growing international significance: the 5th Edition of the Alyssa Film Festival and the 2nd Edition of Tunisia Culture Weekend.
This four-day program represents more than a celebration of artistic expression. It functions as a platform for transnational cultural dialogue, positioning Tunisian creative voices within the global cultural landscape while cultivating connections between diasporic communities and broader London audiences.
ATUGE London and Nowart London: Building Cultural Bridges
The collaboration between ATUGE London and Nowart London is central to the festival’s vision. ATUGE London, as the UK branch of the Association des Tunisiens des Grandes Écoles, is committed to fostering professional, academic, and cultural exchange between Tunisia and the diaspora. Its work situates culture not only as heritage but also as a driver of contemporary identity and civic engagement. Nowart London, an interdisciplinary cultural platform, brings expertise in curating innovative artistic events that amplify underrepresented voices. Together, the two organizations create a framework that merges institutional capacity with creative experimentation, ensuring that the festival is both locally grounded in London’s cultural scene and globally oriented toward Tunisia’s artistic future.
Tunisian Cinema on the Global Stage
The cinematic strand of the festival presents two highly anticipated works of contemporary Tunisian filmmaking:
For Ilef (dir. Saber Baccouch), screening on 2 October, explores the intimate intersections of personal narrative and collective memory.
AICHA (dir. Mehdi M. Barsaoui), screening on 3 October, continues the director’s tradition of socially engaged storytelling, examining pressing issues within Tunisian society.
Both screenings will take place at The Court House, London, followed by exclusive Q&A sessions with the filmmakers, either in person or via remote participation. These post-screening conversations highlight the festival’s commitment to fostering dialogue not only between artist and audience but also across borders, linguistic boundaries, and cultural contexts.
Cultural Immersion Beyond the Screen
On 5 October, the festival expands into a holistic cultural immersion at St Luke’s Hall of Remembrance. The program brings together culinary traditions curated by Tawla Tounsia and live music by DJ Helmy, evoking the sensory and social dimensions of Tunisian identity. This segment situates culture as lived experience, offering participants an entry point into Tunisia’s vibrant contemporary creativity as well as its culinary and musical heritage.
Significance and Community Engagement
The combination of film festival and cultural weekend underscores ATUGE’s vision of cultural diplomacy rooted in community engagement and intercultural exchange. The initiative is significant not only for members of the Tunisian and North African diasporas in the UK but also for a wider public eager to encounter cultural practices and cinematic works that remain underrepresented in mainstream European circuits.
By convening audiences, filmmakers, musicians, and culinary artists, the festival embodies what scholars of migration and culture often term “diasporic cultural brokerage”: the creation of spaces where heritage and contemporary creativity intersect, generating new modes of belonging and recognition.
With ticketing details now available, audiences are invited to secure their tickets and participate in an event that promises to be both intellectually enriching and sensorially immersive. The Alyssa Film Festival & Tunisia Culture Weekend in London affirms the role of cultural events as powerful vehicles for dialogue, connection, and the circulation of artistic expression beyond national borders.