Podcasts about bernard henri l

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Best podcasts about bernard henri l

Latest podcast episodes about bernard henri l

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Delahousse, Bayrou, Lévy... La chronique du 26 mai 2025

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 7:27


Ce lundi 26 mai 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Laurent Delahousse, François Bayrou ou encore Bernard-Henri Lévy. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Praud, Lévy, Bruel... La chronique du 19 mai 2025

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2025 7:10


Ce lundi 19 mai 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Pascal Praud, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Patrick Bruel. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

BFM Politique
Bernard-Henri Lévy, écrivain et philosophe, auteur de "Nuit blanche" aux éditions Grasset - 20/04

BFM Politique

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 38:57


Guillaume Daret reçoit Bernard-Henri Lévy, écrivain et philosophe, auteur de "Nuit blanche" aux éditions Grasset, dans BFM Politique sur BFMTV, ce dimanche 20 avril 2025. « BFM POLITIQUE » est LE rendez-vous média incontournable rythmant la vie politique française. Chaque dimanche, en direct et en public, l'émission présentée par Guillaume Daret donne la parole aux personnalités de tous bords. Durant deux heures, un représentant politique au cœur de l'actualité répond aux questions de la journaliste de BFMTV, puis débat dans le « face à face » avec un contradicteur sur un sujet qui les oppose. BFMTV, 1ère chaine d'information en continu de France, vous propose toute l'info en temps réel avec 18h d'antenne live par jour et des directs partout à travers le monde où l'actualité le nécessite. BFMTV, c'est aussi les débats et les grands reportages d'actualité. Retrouvez BFMTV sur le canal 15 de la TNT et sur BFMTV.com.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Lévy, Marchais, Raffarin... La chronique du 15 avril 2025

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 7:32


Ce mardi 15 avril 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Bernard-Henri Lévy, Olivier Marchais ou encore Jean-Pierre Raffarin. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

RTL Humour
Laurent Gerra - L'INTÉGRALE - Lévy, Marchais, Raffarin... La chronique du 15 avril 2025

RTL Humour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 7:32


Ce mardi 15 avril 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Bernard-Henri Lévy, Olivier Marchais ou encore Jean-Pierre Raffarin. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Marchais, Lévy, Macias... La chronique du 28 mars 2025

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 5:16


Ce vendredi 28 mars 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Olivier Marchais, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Enrico Macias. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

RTL Humour
Laurent Gerra - L'INTÉGRALE - Marchais, Lévy, Macias... La chronique du 28 mars 2025

RTL Humour

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 5:16


Ce vendredi 28 mars 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Olivier Marchais, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Enrico Macias. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Pascal Praud et vous
Pascal Praud - Arielle Dombasle : «Bernard-Henri Lévy mon grand amour, l'insomnie fait partie de sa vie»

Pascal Praud et vous

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2025 15:13


Pascal Praud revient pendant deux heures, sans concession, sur tous les sujets qui font l'actualité. Vous voulez réagir ? Appelez-le 01.80.20.39.21 (numéro non surtaxé) ou rendez-vous sur les réseaux sociaux d'Europe 1 pour livrer votre opinion et débattre sur grandes thématiques développées dans l'émission du jour.Vous voulez réagir ? Appelez-le 01.80.20.39.21 (numéro non surtaxé) ou rendez-vous sur les réseaux sociaux d'Europe 1 pour livrer votre opinion et débattre sur grandes thématiques développées dans l'émission du jour.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Kan English
David Hirsh explains his withdrawal from the anti-Semitism conference

Kan English

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 12:30


The controversial anti-Semitism conference will take place next week in Jerusalem, organized by Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli . His decision to invite representatives of radical right-wing European parties sparked a backlash and sparked a wave of cancelations, including by European Jewish Congress President Ariel Muzicant and French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy and others. Chikli responded by saying: “I reject the assertion that the right-wing parties are the central threat to Jewish life in Europe. The threat is different: radical Islam. The politically correct have a hard time recognizing this and are stuck 50 years in the past.” KAN's Mark Weiss spoke with David Hirsh from Goldsmiths, University of London, the author of a number of books on anti-Semitism and one of those who withdrew from the conference.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

C dans l'air
Bernard-Henri Lévy - Poutine veut-il la paix?

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 10:59


C dans l'air l'invité du 17 mars 2025 : Bernard-Henri Lévy, philosophe et écrivain, auteur dernièrement de "Nuit blanche" publié aux éditions Grasset.Le président américain a indiqué dans la nuit qu'il échangerait mardi 18 mars avec son homologue russe des solutions visant à trouver une issue à la guerre en Ukraine. Un sujet à l'ordre du jour du Conseil des affaires étrangères qui se tient ce lundi à Bruxelles.La Russie a confirmé ce l'appel téléphonique entre Vladimir Poutine et Donald Trump, soit le deuxième entretien entre les deux hommes depuis le retour du républicain à la Maison Blanche en janvier. "Oui, c'est bien le cas. Une telle discussion est en préparation pour mardi", a répondu aux journalistes Dmitri Peskov, porte-parole du Kremlin, lundi 17 mars. Il n'a pas livré davantage de détails, notamment sur les thèmes qui seront évoqués.

Les Grosses Têtes
10 ANS DE RUQUIER - La rencontre entre Steevy et Bernard-Henri Lévy

Les Grosses Têtes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 5:50


À l'occasion des 10 ans de Laurent Ruquier aux commandes des "Grosses Têtes", RTL vous propose chaque jour de revivre en podcasts les meilleures séquences de l'émission ! Aujourd'hui, découvrez un extrait du 23 novembre 2016 ! Retrouvez tous les jours le meilleur des Grosses Têtes en podcast sur RTL.fr et l'application RTL.

Toute l'info du week-end - Bernard Poirette
Bernard Henri Lévy sur le terrain à Pokrovsk en Ukraine

Toute l'info du week-end - Bernard Poirette

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 4:54


Caroline Mangez, directrice de la rédaction de Paris Match, revient sur le sujet phare de la semaine.

Le grand journal du soir - Matthieu Belliard
Bernard-Henri Lévy : «Lorsque le président Zelensky dit que “nul au monde ne souhaite plus la paix que les Ukrainiens“ c'est vrai»

Le grand journal du soir - Matthieu Belliard

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 26:27


Tous les soirs à 20h30, Pierre de Vilno reçoit un invité qui fait l'actualité politique. Ce soir, il reçoit l'écrivain et philosophe, Bernard-Henri Lévy revenu du Donbass sur le front ukrainien, il donne son ressenti sur ce qu'il a vu et constaté sur place ainsi que sur les perspectives de fin de conflit. Dans un second temps, il est question de l'allocution d'Emmanuel Macron concernant la guerre en Ukraine, de la menace russe, mais aussi sur l'échange musclé entre Donald Trump et Volodymyr Zelensky à la maison Blanche.

RTL Sans filtre
"Si il y a la guerre en France, le seul qui sera un peu content c'est Bernard-Henri Lévy : ça lui fera moins loin pour y aller"

RTL Sans filtre

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 4:41


Le journal de la nuit
Bernard-Henri Lévy : «Lorsque le président Zelensky dit que “nul au monde ne souhaite plus la paix que les Ukrainiens“ c'est vrai»

Le journal de la nuit

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 26:27


Tous les soirs à 20h30, Pierre de Vilno reçoit un invité qui fait l'actualité politique. Ce soir, il reçoit l'écrivain et philosophe, Bernard-Henri Lévy revenu du Donbass sur le front ukrainien, il donne son ressenti sur ce qu'il a vu et constaté sur place ainsi que sur les perspectives de fin de conflit. Dans un second temps, il est question de l'allocution d'Emmanuel Macron concernant la guerre en Ukraine, de la menace russe, mais aussi sur l'échange musclé entre Donald Trump et Volodymyr Zelensky à la maison Blanche.

RTL Humour
La Vizo Conférence - "Si il y a la guerre en France, le seul qui sera un peu content c'est Bernard-Henri Lévy : ça lui fera moins loin pour y aller"

RTL Humour

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 4:41


Les Grandes Gueules
"On s'en fout, on s'en fout pas" : Saint-Valentin, 154 euros de dépenses en moyenne - 14/02

Les Grandes Gueules

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 9:21


Plusieurs débats au cœur de l'actualité, les Grandes gueules ont le choix, en débattre ou non : Ukraine : vers une paix négociée sans l'Europe ? Bernard-Henri Lévy : enquête pour prise illégale d'intérêts Saint-Valentin : 154 euros de dépenses en moyenne

Le grand rendez-vous
Le Grand Rendez-vous avec Bernard Henri Lévy

Le grand rendez-vous

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2025 44:38


Une heure d'entretien incontournable en partenariat avec CNEWS et Les Echos. Une personnalité politique, un dirigeant économique ou un intellectuel revient sur les grands thèmes de l'actualité et répond aux questions sans détours de Pierre de Vilno pour apporter des réponses concrètes aux Français.

Pascal Praud et vous
Pascal Praud et vous : l'intégrale du 13/01/2025

Pascal Praud et vous

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 79:05


Au sommaire de l'émission :Le sommeil et l'insomnie sont au cœur des débats, avec le témoignage poignant de l'écrivain Bernard-Henri Lévy qui souffre d'insomnies depuis 50 ans et les conseils du médecin du sommeil Rémi Lombard sur les solutions pour mieux dormir.La ville de Bordeaux est désignée comme la plus embouteillée de France, avec les automobilistes qui ont passé en moyenne 113 heures dans les bouchons en 2022.Le sort de Riette, le sanglier de 100 kilos élevé comme un animal de compagnie, est débattu devant la justice, alors que sa propriétaire espère pouvoir le garder.Le patron de Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, souhaite insuffler plus d'énergie masculine dans le monde professionnel, suscitant de nombreuses réactions.Un ancien agent hospitalier témoigne de ses difficultés à trouver le sommeil après 40 ans de travail de nuit au SAMU.Notre équipe a utilisé un outil d'Intelligence artificielle via les technologies d'Audiomeans© pour accompagner la création de ce contenu écrit.Vous voulez réagir ? Appelez-le 01.80.20.39.21 (numéro non surtaxé) ou rendez-vous sur les réseaux sociaux d'Europe 1 pour livrer votre opinion et débattre sur grandes thématiques développées dans l'émission du jour.

Les interviews d'Inter
Bernard-Henri Lévy : "Être insomniaque, c'est vivre deux vies à la fois"

Les interviews d'Inter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 12:06


durée : 00:12:06 - L'invité de 7h50 du week-end - L'écrivain et philosophe Bernard-Henri Lévy est notre invité de 7h50, pour son roman “Nuit blanche” (Grasset), un livre sur l'insomnie dont il souffre depuis des décennies.

Les matins
Bernard-Henri Lévy : le crépuscule d'un monde en paix

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 39:05


durée : 00:39:05 - France Culture va plus loin (l'Invité(e) des Matins) - par : Guillaume Erner, Isabelle de Gaulmyn - Le philosophe et écrivain Bernard-Henri Lévy publie "Nuit blanche" aux éditions Grasset, un ouvrage qui nous plonge dans les insomnies de l'auteur, entre les souvenirs et les combats de sa vie. - réalisation : Félicie Faugère - invités : Bernard-Henri Lévy Écrivain, philosophe; Iryna Slavinska Journaliste, directrice de la chaîne de radio publique Radio Culture Ukraine

Laurent Gerra
PÉPITE - B-H. Lévy raconte son réveillon de "guerre"

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2025 2:03


Bernard-Henri Lévy transforme un dîner gastronomique en véritable champ de bataille... Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Lévy, Houellebecq, Delerm... La chronique du 2 janvier 2025

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2025 6:20


Ce jeudi 2 janvier 2025, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Bernard-Henri Lévy, Michel Houellebecq ou encore Vincent Delerm. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes.

AJC Passport
Bernard-Henri Lévy and AJC CEO Ted Deutch on How to Build a Resilient Jewish Future Post-October 7

AJC Passport

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 34:52


What lessons can be drawn from the post-October 7 era? Amid growing isolation and antisemitism, where do opportunities for hope and resilience lie for the Jewish people? In a compelling discussion, AJC CEO Ted Deutch and Bernard-Henri Lévy—renowned French philosopher, public intellectual, and author of Israel Alone—explore these critical questions. Guest-hosted by AJC Paris Director Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache, this conversation offers insight into the challenges Jewish communities face and the possibilities for a brighter future. Listen – AJC Podcasts: The Forgotten Exodus: with Hen Mazzig, Einat Admony, and more. People of the Pod:  What's Next for the Abraham Accords Under President Trump? Honoring Israel's Lone Soldiers This Thanksgiving: Celebrating Service and Sacrifice Away from Home The ICC Issues Arrest Warrants: What You Need to Know Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've appreciated this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. __ Transcript of Conversation with Bernard-Henri Lévy and Ted Deutch: Manya Brachear Pashman: What lessons can be drawn from the post-October 7 era? Amid growing isolation and antisemitism, where do opportunities for hope and resilience lie for the Jewish people? I'm throwing it off to AJC Paris Director Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache to explore these critical questions. Anne-Sophie? Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you, Manya. Welcome everyone to today's special episode of People of the Pod. I'm sitting here in our office near the Eiffel Tower for a special and unique conversation between Ted Deutch AJC CEO and Bernard-Henri Lévy, one of the most, if not the most prominent French philosopher and public intellectuals. Bonjour. Bernard-Henri Lévy:  Bonjour. Hello. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Today, we will speak about loneliness, the loneliness of the Jewish people in Israel, the explosion of antisemitism in Europe and the United States, the attacks on Israel from multiple fronts since October 7. We will also speak about the loneliness of Western democracies, more broadly, the consequences of the US elections and the future for Ukraine and the European continent.  Bernard-Henri Lévy:, you've recently come back from a tour in the United States where you presented your latest book titled Israel Alone. Ted, you've just arrived in Europe to sound again the alarm on the situation of Jewish communities on this continent after the shocking assault on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam. Israel alone, the diaspora alone, actually the Jewish people, or Am Yisrael alone. As if Israel and Jews all over the world have merged this year over a common sense of loneliness.  So I ask the question to both of you, are we alone? Bernard, let's start with you. Bernard-Henri Lévy:  I am back from a campus tour in the United States of America. I went in USC, in UCLA, in Columbia, in Ohio, University in Michigan. I was in many places, and in these places, in the campuses, it's not even a question. The loneliness is terrible. You have Jewish students, brave, resilient, who have to face every day humiliation, provocations, attacks, sometimes physical attacks. And who feel that, for the first time, the country in the world, America, which was supposed to be immune to antisemitism. You know, we knew about antisemitism in Europe. We knew about antisemitism in the rest of the world.  But in America, they discovered that when they are attacked, of course there is support. But not always from their teachers, not always from the boards of the universities, and not always from the public opinion. And what they are discovering today in America is that, they are protected, of course, but not as it was before unconditionally. Jews in America and in Europe are supposed to be protected unconditionally.  This is minimum. Minimum in France, since French Revolution, in America, since the Mayflower. For the first time, there are conditions. If you are a right wing guy, you say, I protect you if you vote for me. If you don't vote, you will be guilty of my loss, and you will be, and the state will disappear in a few years. So you will be no longer protected. You are protected under the condition that you endorse me. On the left. You have people on the left wing side, people who say you are protected under condition that you don't support Israel, under condition that you take your distance with Zionism, under condition that you pay tribute to the new dark side who say that Netanyahu is a genocide criminal and so on. So what I feel, and not only my feeling, is the feeling of most of the students and sometimes teachers whom I met in this new situation of conditional security and support, and this is what loneliness means in America.  Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you, Bernard. How about you, Ted? Ted Deutch:  Well, it's interesting. First of all, thank you Anne-Sophie, and Bernard, it's an honor to be in conversation with you. It's interesting to hear you talk about America. Your observations track very closely. The comments that I've heard since being in Europe from students in the UK, and from students here who, speaking about America, tell me that their conclusion is that whatever the challenges they face here and the challenges are real, that they feel fortunate to be in university in Europe rather than in the United States.  But the point that you make that's so important everywhere, is this sense that it's not only the Jewish community that expects to have unconditional security. For the Jewish community now, it feels as if expecting that security, the freedom to be able on college campuses, the freedom to be able to pursue their studies and grow intellectually and have different experiences.  That when that security is compromised, by those who wish to exclude Jews because they support Israel, for those who wish to tag every Jewish student as a genocidal baby killer, that when those positions are taken, it's the loneliness stems from the fact that they're not hearing from the broader community, how unacceptable that behavior is. That it's become too easy for others to, even if they're not joining in, to simply shrug their shoulders and look the other way, when what's happening to Jewish students is not just about Jewish students, but is fundamentally about democracy and values and the way of life in the U.S. and in Europe. Bernard-Henri Lévy:  Of course, except that the new thing in America, which is not bad, is that every minority has the right to be protected. Every community, every minority has the right to have a safe space and so on. There is one minority who does not have the same rights. The only minority who is not safe in America, whose safety is not granted, is the Jewish one. And this is a scandal. You know, we could live in a sort of general jungle. Okay, Jews would be like the others, but it is not the case. Since the political correctness and so on, every minority is safe except the Jewish one. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  So if we are alone, if American Jewish students feel alone, as European Jewish students, we are probably not the only one to feel that way, right? I turn over to you, Mr. Levy, and go to another subject.  Since day one of the Russian invasion, and even before that, you have been a forceful advocate for a steadfast European and American support for Ukraine.  Is Ukraine alone today? And will it be even more during America's second Trump administration? Bernard-Henri Lévy:  I've been an advocate of Ukraine, absolutely and I really believe that the freedom for liberty, the battle for liberty, the battle for freedom today, is waged on two front lines. For the moment, it might be more, but Israel and Ukraine. I wish to make that very clear, it is the same battle. They are the same stakes, the same values, and the same enemy.  I'm not sure that every Ukrainian, every Jew, knows that they have the same enemy. The axis between Iran, Putin, China, more and more, Turkey, and the same axis of authorisation countries. So it is the same battle.  The Ukrainians have not been exactly alone. They have been supported in the last two years and half, but in a strange way, not enough. The chancellery, the West, spoke about an incremental support. Incremental support meant exactly what is not enough, what is necessary for them not to lose, but not to win. This is what I saw on the ground.  I made three documentaries in Ukraine on the field, and I could elaborate on that a lot, precisely, concretely in every spot, every trench they have exactly what is needed for the line not to be broken, but not to win. Now we enter in a new in a new moment, a new moment of uncertainty in America and in Europe, with the rise of populism. Which means the rise of parties who say: Who cares about Ukraine, who don't understand that the support of Ukraine, as the support of Israel, is a question of national interest, a question of national security for us, too. The Ukrainian ladies and gentlemen, who fight in Ukraine, they fight for the liberty. They fight for ours, French, yours, American. And we might enter in a new moment. It's not sure, because history has more imagination than the man, than mankind. So we can have surprises. But for the moment, I am really anxious on this front line too, yes. Ted Deutch:  There are additional connections too, between what's happening in Ukraine and what's happening in Israel, and clearly the fact that Iranian killer drones are being used by Russia to kill Europeans should be an alarming enough fact that jars all of us into action. But the point that you make, that I think is so important Bernard, is that Israel has in many ways, faced the same response, except with a much tighter window than Ukraine did.  Israel was allowed to respond to the attacks of October 7, that for those few days after the World understood the horrific nature of the slaughter, the rape, and the babies burning, the terrible, terrible mayhem, and recognize that Israel had a right to respond, but as with Ukraine, only to a point Bernard-Henri Lévy:  Even to a point, I'm not sure. Ted Deutch:  But then that point ended. It was limited. They could take that response. But now we've moved to the point where, just like those students on campus and in so many places around the world, where only the Jews are excluded, that's a natural line from the geopolitical issues, where only Israel is the country that can't respond in self defense. Only Israel is the country that doesn't have the right to exist. Only a Jewish state is the one state that should be dismantled. That's another reason, how these are, another way they are all tied together. Bernard-Henri Lévy:  Don't forget that just a few days after Israel started to retaliate. We heard from everywhere in the West, and United Nations, calls for cease fire, call for negotiation, call for de-escalation. Hezbollah shell Israel for one year. We never heard one responsible of the UN called Hezbollah for not escalating. The day Israel started to reply and retaliate after one year of being bombed, immediately take care to escalation. Please keep down. Please keep cool, etc, etc.  So situation of Israel is a unique case, and again, if you have a little memory, I remember the battle for Mosul. I made a film about that. I remember the battle against the Taliban in 2001 nobody asked the West to make compromise with ISIS and with al-Qaeda, which are the cousins of Hamas. Nobody asked the West not to enter here or there. No one outside the ground said, Okay, you can enter in Mazar-I-Sharif in Afghanistan, but you cannot enter in Kandahar.  Or you can enter in the western part of Mosul. But be careful. Nobody had even this idea this happened only for Israel. And remember Joe by then asking the Prime Minister of Israel about Rafa? Don't, don't, don't. At the end of the day, he's not always right and he's often wrong, but the Prime Minister was right to enter into Rafa for obvious reasons, which we all know now. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Ted, let me come back to you more specifically on the US. At AJC, we support democracy. This is in our DNA. Since the organization was founded 1906 we've been strong supporters of the Transatlantic Partnership since day one. We believe in the alliance of democracies in the defense of our common values. And you know here, there's a lot of anxiety about Donald Trump's re-election. So what is your take on the U.S. elections' consequences for Europe, for transatlantic relations? Ted Deutch: I've been coming to Europe for years, as I did as an elected official. Now in this capacity there is that our friends in Europe are always rightly focused on US policy and engaging the level of commitment the US makes to Europe. The election of Donald Trump, this isn't a new moment. There is history. And for four years in the last administration, the focus that the President had on questioning the ties to Europe and questioning NATO and questioning the commitment that has been so central to the transatlantic relationship rightfully put much of Europe on edge. Now, as the President will come back into power, there is this question of Ukraine and the different opinions that the President is hearing. In one side, in one ear, he's hearing from traditional conservative voices in the United States who are telling him that the US has a crucial role to play, that support for Ukraine is not just as we've been discussing, not just in the best interest of Ukraine, but that it relates directly back to the United States, to Europe. It actually will, they tell him, rightly so, I submit, that US involvement and continued support for Ukraine will help to prevent further war across the continent. In the other ear, however, he's hearing from the America first crowd that thinks that America should recognize that the ocean protects us, and we should withdraw from the world. And the best place to start is Ukraine, and that means turning our back on the brave Ukrainians who have fought so nobly against Russia. That's what he's hearing. It's imperative that, starting this weekend, when he is here at Notre Dame, that he hears and sees and is reminded of not just the importance of the transatlantic relationship, but why it's important, and why that relationship is impacted so directly by what's happening in Ukraine, and the need to continue to focus on Ukraine and to support NATO. And to recognize that with all of the challenges, when there is an opportunity for American leadership to bring together traditional allies, that should be the easiest form of leadership for the President to take. It's still an open question, however, as to whether that's the approach that you will take.  Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you, Ted.  Let me sum it up, our conversation for a minute. We said that the Jewish people feels alone, but we said that we are not the only ones. Didn't you feel that on that lonely road of this year, we've also never felt as strong as who we are, both our Jewishness. A French intellectual I know, Bernard Levy would say our Jewish being, être juif, and Jewish unity. Are they the best answers to overcome our loneliness? Let's start with our philosopher. Bernard-Henri Lévy:  I don't believe only in Jewish unity. I believe in Jewish strength. And in one of my previous books, the genius of religion, I spoke about about that Jewish strength, not military strength in Israel, but spiritual strength, and I think that this strength is not behaving so bad. I told you about the campuses. I told you the dark side.  But there is also the bright side, the fact that the students stand firm. They stand by themselves, by their position. They are proud Jews in the campuses. In Israel, come on. Israel is facing the most difficult war and the most terrible war of its history. We know all the previous wars, and alas, I have the age to have known personally and directly, a lot of them since 1960s about this war with terrorists embedded in the civilians, with the most powerful terrorist army in the world on the north, with seven fronts open with Houthis sending missiles and so on. Israel never saw that.  So the people of Israel, the young girls and young boys, the fathers, even the old men of Israel, who enlist, who are on the front, who fight bravely. They do a job that their grandfathers never had to do. So, resilience. Also in Israel. The most sophisticated, the most difficult, the most difficult to win war, they are winning it. And in Europe, I see, as I never saw, a movement of resistance and refusal to bow in front of the antisemite, which I never saw to this extent in my long life. You have groups today in France, for example, who really react every day, who post videos every day.  Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Some are in this room.  Bernard-Henri Lévy:  Some are in this room. Pirrout is in this room, for example, every day about the so called unbound France. Mélenchon, who is a real antisemite as you know, they publish the truth. They don't let any infamy pass without reacting, and this again, is new, not completely new, but I never saw that to this extent.  Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you, Rene. How about you Ted, what do you think?  Ted Deutch:  more important than ever that as Jews, as Jewish community, As Zionists, that we don't allow our opponents to define what's happening, that the response is never to to feel defensive, that the response. Is to be bold, boldly Jewish, boldly Zionist, unapologetically Zionist. To to do exactly what those students are doing across the United States, that I've seen, the students here who have that I that I've met with that in Europe, a student in in London a few days ago, said to me, she said, when someone yells at me, when they when they scream at me and accuse me of genocide, she said it only makes me want to get a bigger Magen David. The person that that stood up at a meeting in New York a few months ago who told me that, before announced in front of a big crowd that that for years, she's been involved in all of these different organizations in her community to to help feed the hungry and to help kids to read, and all these worthy causes. She said, since October 7, she said, I am all Jewish all the time, and I want everyone to know it the and Israel is perhaps the best example of this. It's impossible to imagine the kind of resilience that we see from Israelis. The taxi driver that I had in Israel. He said, This is so difficult for all of us. We've all known people. We've lost people. It's affected all of us, but we're just never going to give up, because our history doesn't allow it. We have prevailed as a people for 1000s of years and have gotten stronger every single time. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you, Ted. I can keep thinking about this overwhelming challenge that we face as the Jewish people today, which seems to confine us to solitude. Anyway, Jews and Israel are attacked with alternative truths, false narratives. We've witnessed how international justice, our common, universal values, have been turned upside down in the Jewish tradition, we say that we have a mission to repair the world, Tikkun Olam. But how can we make sure to recreate the common world in the first place? Bernard-Henri Lévy:  It's on process number one, continue to try to repair the world, I remind you, and you know that, and Simone Rodan knows it also, in many occurrences, in many situations of the last 30 years when real genocides happened. Real genocide, not imaginary. Real one. In Rwanda, in Srebrenica, in Darfur, when I met with in Chad, with Simone, and so on. The first whistleblowers, the first to tell the world that something terrible was happening, were not exactly Jews, but were ladies and men who had in their hearts the memory of the Shoah. And the flame of Yad Vashem. That's a fact, and therefore they reacted and what could be repaired. They contributed to repair it. Number one.  Second observation, about what Ted said, there is in Europe now, since many years, a tendency to step out, to give up to and to go to Israel. Not only by love of Zionism, but thinking that this is not a safe place any longer for them. I tell you, this tendency starts to be reversed now you have more and more Jews in Europe who say, no, no, no, no. We built this country. We are among the authors of the French social contract.  For example, we will not leave it to those illiterate morons who try to push us away. And this is a new thing. This reaction, this no of the Jews in Europe is something relatively new. And third little remark. 10 years ago in the States, I met a lot of young people who were embarrassed with Israel, who said we are liberal and there is Israel, and the two don't match really well. 10-15, years ago, I met a lot. Less and less today. You have more and more students in America who understand that Israel should be supported, not in spite of their liberal values. But because of their liberal values. And come on, this for a liberal, is a treasure, and it is unprecedented, and there is no example. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  How about you, Ted? How do you think we can overcome the challenge of those parallel realities we feel we live in? Ted Deutch:  Those students, and I think broadly the Jewish community, after October 7, came to realize that as Hamas terrorists rolled into southern Israel, they made no distinctions about the politics of the Israelis. That great irony, of course, is that the peaceniks, or the brunt of these attacks, living along the southern edge of Israel by Gaza, they didn't make determinations on who to kill based on how they practiced, what their politics were, how they felt about Bibi.  And I think what the Jewish world, certainly it's true for young people that I talk to, came to realize is that connection between Israel and the Jewish people is not theoretical, that that ultimately, what's gone on for the past year is is an attack against Israel, Israel as the stand in for the Jewish people, and that defending Israel is really defending all of us. And I think they've come to understand that.  But going forward, I think what you described, Bernard, is new, this is what it means now to be an Or Lagoyim. This is what it means to be a light unto the nations. That in the face of all of these attacks, that Israeli democracy continues to thrive. That the conversation by those, ironically, the conversation that has attempted to demonize Israel by demonizing Bibi, has highlighted the fact that these protests have continued during the time of war. As you point out that this is this is unlike anything you would see, that what's permitted, the way democracy is thrives and is and is vibrant in Israel, is different than every place else, that this is a message that the world will see, that that the that in the face of these ongoing challenges, that the Jewish community stands not just against against these attacks against the Jews, but stands against what's happening In the streets of so many places in America. Where people march with Hezbollah flags, where they're openly supporting Hamas. It's going to take some time, but ultimately, because of the strong, because of the resilience, because of the strong, proud way that Jews are responding to this moment and to those protests, eventually, the world will realize that standing in support of Hamas terrorism is not just something that is dangerous to the Jews, but puts at risk the entire world. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you. I'm a Sephardic Jew, so I cannot just end this conversation speaking about loneliness. How about hope? Can we find some? Bernard-Henri Lévy:  I compare the situation of the Jews today to the situation in the time of my dad, for example, there are some change, for example, the Christians and the Catholic Church. 50 years ago, a huge cultural revolution in the world. It is the change of position of the Catholic Church on anti semitism. It was the Vatican Two Council and the Nostra aetate. It seems tiny, but it is huge revolution, and it consisted in a single word, one word, the Catholic Council of Vatican Two said Jews are no longer the fathers of the Christians, as it was said before, in the best of the case, they are the brothers of the Christians.  This is a huge revelation. Of course, Catholics are not always faithful to this commitment. And popes, and especially the pope of today do not remember well the message of his ancestor, but on the whole, we have among the Christians, among the Catholics in Europe and in. Real friends in America among the new evangelical I don't know if they are friends, but they are strong allies. Abraham agreements was again another big revolution which has been underestimated, and the fact that the Abraham agreements, alliance with Morocco, Emirates, Bahrain stands, in spite of the war on seven fronts. Is a proof. It is solid. It is an ironclad alliance, and it holds.  And this is a new event, and we have in the not only in the top of the state, but in the public opinions of the Muslim world. We have a lot of people who who start to be who are more and more numerous, to believe that enough is enough. Too much war, too much misunderstandings, too much hatred, and who are really eager to make the real peace, which is the peace of hearts and the peace of souls with their other brothers, who are the Jews. So yes, there are some reasons to be optimistic.  Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you very much, Bernard. Ted? Ted Deutch:  I don't think that we can ever give up hope. And optimism is necessary, and I think justified. The things Bernard talks about, I mean, at AJC, our focus on on building democracy, our focus on interreligious work, the work we've done with the Catholic Church around Nostra aetate, now 60 years old and and continuing to build the relationship our Muslim Jewish Advisory Council always looking for opportunities to to find those voices that are tired of all of the war. And in our office, in Abu Dhabi, we've, we've continued to go to the Gulf, to the Abraham Accord states, and beyond, even through this entire war, because there is the hope of of getting to a place where, where Israel is in a more normalized position in the region, which will then change the perception and push back against the lies that those who wish to to see a world without Israel continue to espouse.  All of that is hopeful, and we work toward it. But for me, the most hopeful thing to come from this moment is, AJC works around the world and because the Jewish community now understands how connected we all are as a result of the threats that we face, the opportunity to strengthen diaspora Jewry, to help people realize that the connections between the Jewish community in Paris and the Jewish community in Mexico City and the Jewish community in Buenos Aires in Chicago, in Miami and New York, that they're interrelated and that we don't have the luxury of viewing our challenges as unique in our countries.  By standing together, we're in a much, much stronger position, and we have to continue to build that. That's why AJC's Global Forum is always the most important part of the year for us, bringing together the Jewish community from around the world. That's why the antisemitism summit that we'll be doing here with the CRIF is going to be so critical to building those relationships. We have an opportunity coming out of this incredibly dark time to take the strength and the resolve that we feel and to and to channel it in ways that that will lead the Jewish community to places that a year ago seemed absolutely impossible to imagine. Those 101 hostages need to return home. We stand together calling for them to return home. We stand together in our support of Israel as it wages the seven-front war, and ultimately, we stand together as Jewish people. That's what gives me hope every day. Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache:  Thank you so much. Manya Brachear Pashman: If you missed last week's episode, be sure to tune in for the conversation between my colleague Benji Rogers, AJC's director for Middle East and North Africa initiatives, and Rob Greenway, director of the Allison center for national security at the Heritage Foundation, and former senior director for Middle Eastern and North African Affairs on the National Security Council, they discuss the opportunities and challenges President-elect Trump will face in the Middle East.

Moms Don’t Have Time to Read Books
Bernard-Henri Lévy, ISRAEL ALONE

Moms Don’t Have Time to Read Books

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 23:44


Purchase on Bookshop: https://bit.ly/4g0w3ufShare, rate, & review the podcast, and follow Zibby on Instagram @zibbyowens! Now there's more! Subscribe to Moms Don't Have Time to Read Books on Acast+ and get ad-free episodes. https://plus.acast.com/s/moms-dont-have-time-to-read-books. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

JBS: Jewish Broadcasting Service
Defending Israel with David Harris: Bernard-Henri Lévy

JBS: Jewish Broadcasting Service

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 30:45


David Harris is joined by renowned French philosopher, writer, and public intellectual Bernard-Henri Lévy, who brings his unique perspectives to a discussion of his book "Israel Alone."

Les Grosses Têtes
MOMENT CULTE - Arielle Dombasle va-t-elle être virée des "Grosses Têtes" ?

Les Grosses Têtes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2024 0:46


Le mari d'Arielle Dombasle, Bernard-Henri Lévy, surprend tout le monde en appelant sa compagne en plein direct. Un appel qui ne plaît pas à Laurent Ruquier... Retrouvez tous les jours le meilleur des Grosses Têtes en podcast sur RTL.fr et l'application RTL.

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed
Q & A: BHL on Israel, Ukraine, and the World Crisis

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2024


Bernard-Henri Lévy, the French philosopher, writer, and activist, has been going to Israel his whole life, virtually. He went on October 8, 2023, the day after the attack. His new book is “Israel Alone.” With Jay, he discusses various aspects of this war. Also Russia's war on Ukraine. And the connectedness of things. A meaty […]

Q & A, Hosted by Jay Nordlinger
BHL on Israel, Ukraine, and the World Crisis

Q & A, Hosted by Jay Nordlinger

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 36:32


Bernard-Henri Lévy, the French philosopher, writer, and activist, has been going to Israel his whole life, virtually. He went on October 8, 2023, the day after the attack. His new book is “Israel Alone.” With Jay, he discusses various aspects of this war. Also Russia's war on Ukraine. And the connectedness of things. A meaty and clarifying discussion. 

Le Média
Macron joue au roi au Maroc, Braun-Pivet le trahit à Paris | Nils Wilcke

Le Média

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2024 28:17


Nouvelle édition des “Indiscrets” du journaliste politique indépendant Nils Wilcke, une plongée dans les coulisses de la politique française telle qu'on la raconte peu, c'est-à-dire sans fards ni éléments de langage. Au sommaire : Quand Emmanuel Macron tente de se re-présidentialiser en allant au Maroc à la tête d'une délégation immense, les polémiques franco-françaises le poursuivent, notamment sur ses invités gênants, Nils a enquêté sur les coulisses de ce voyage hautement sensible en période de disette budgétaire… Car Emmanuel Macron n'est pas venu seul en visite d'Etat au Maroc (le plus haut niveau des visites diplomatiques). Le président a embarqué Teddy Riner, Gérard Darmon, Jack Lang, Arielle Dombasle, Leïla Slimani, Bernard-Henri Lévy, Jamel Debbouze, etc. En tout, 122 invités sont venus avec Macron aux frais de la princesse, évidemment… La photo officielle des 577 députés a finalement été réalisée sous la houlette de Yaël-Braun Pivet… Mais comme souvent, on rigole pour cacher un malaise ? Lequel ? Nils nous parle des ambitions contrariées de la présidente de l'Assemblée. Une Yaël Braun-Pivet qui continue de se démarquer de Macron au fur et à mesure que le président s'enfonce dans son impopularité. On rappelle que Macron est mal considéré par les trois quarts des Français selon les derniers sondages. Il est aussi très affaibli par ses échecs électoraux et sa dissolution ratée, comme on l'a déjà évoqué dans cette émission. Cela n'a pas échappé à la présidente de l'Assemblée, qui prend désormais toute sa liberté.

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast
No Courage, No Convictions: Trade Publication Cancels Promo for Book with "Israel" in Title

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2024 16:52


This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit smokeempodcast.substack.comLet's say you want to promote a book and you have a little ad money to burn. If you are author and communications consultant Melanie Notkin, you might contact Shelf Awareness, which sends free newsletters to, per its Instagram bio, “booksellers, librarians, publishers, book collectors, literary antiquarians, and everyone else who loves to read.” Shelf Awareness publisher Matt Balducci was happy to run the promo, for the U.S. release of Bernard-Henri Lévy's latest book… until two days later, when he emailed Melanie to say they were cancelling the ad.“I've never been denied the ability to pay for an ad in any outlet,” says Notkin, who knew, before she spoke with Balducci — a conversation Notkin recorded — that he was backing out because of one of the words in the book's two-word title, and it wasn't “Alone.”Francesca Block at The Free Press reported on the story earlier today. Here, Notkin picks up the conversation, including:* Is the anti-Israeli movement contracting or going underground?* Pro tip: When you basically tell someone you're caving to the mob, maybe try not to sound patronizing* The shadow-banning of books and authors leads nowhere good* Quick: A group of masked people on the subway chant, “Raise your hand if you're a Zionist!” What do you do?* “I don't want to live in a world where my friend denounces me.”* #nevershuttingupPlus, big love for Douglas Murray, when intolerance becomes a show of valor, and did casual Fridays ruin everything?

Park Avenue Podcasts
Conversations with Cosgrove: Israel's Existential War with Bernard-Henri Lévy

Park Avenue Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2024 27:39


Listen to Rabbi Cosgrove's interview with renowned philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy as they discuss his new book, Israel Alone, and Israel's existential war against barbarism. For more Rabbi Elliot Cosgrove, follow @Elliot_Cosgrove on Instagram and Facebook. Want to stay connected with PAS? Follow us @ParkAvenueSyn on all platforms, and check out www.pasyn.org for all our virtual and in-person offerings.

Fareed Zakaria GPS
Israel says it will retaliate against Iran - what to expect

Fareed Zakaria GPS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 43:14


Today on the show, Fareed is joined by Danny Citrinowicz, former head of the Iranian Strategic Branch in the Israeli military intelligence, to discuss Iran's attack this week and how Israel might strike back.   Then, long-time foreign correspondent Kim Ghattas speaks with Fareed from Beirut. They discuss the impacts of Israel's military campaign against Hezbollah and the hope for a political alternative.   Next, French philosopher and writer Bernard-Henri Lévy comes on the show to discuss his new book “Israel Alone,” and makes the case for why the West should support Israel in its war.    Then, author of the new book “The Message” Ta-Nehisi Coates tells Fareed about what he saw during his trip to Israel and the West Bank, and why he believes that Israel is an apartheid state.   GUESTS: Danny Citrinowicz (@citrinowicz), Kim Ghattas (@KimGhattas), Bernard-Henri Lévy (@BHL), Ta-Nehisi Coates  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Foreign Podicy
Two Fronts in The War Against the West

Foreign Podicy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 41:21


America and other free nations are threatened by enemies – an axis of tyrants, of aggressors, of authoritarians, of revanchists – all those terms are apt. But the response of Western leaders continues to be woefully inadequate.The most imminently endangered democratic societies: Ukraine and Israel.Host Cliff May discusses with Bernard Henri-Lévy and Oleksandra Matviichuk.

Foreign Podicy
Two Fronts in The War Against the West

Foreign Podicy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 41:21


America and other free nations are threatened by enemies – an axis of tyrants, of aggressors, of authoritarians, of revanchists – all those terms are apt. But the response of Western leaders continues to be woefully inadequate.The most imminently endangered democratic societies: Ukraine and Israel.Host Cliff May discusses with Bernard Henri-Lévy and Oleksandra Matviichuk.

il posto delle parole
Valentina Gasparet "pordenonelegge"

il posto delle parole

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 14:28


Valentina Gasparet"pordenonelegge"Festa del libro e della libertàwww.pordenonelegge.itCon una riflessione di S.E. il Cardinale Gianfranco Ravasi sul tema “In principio: creazione ed ecologia”, un intervento concepito per il festival e focalizzato sul nostro tempo, si inaugura – domani, mercoledì 18 settembre, alle 18.30 al Teatro Verdi di Pordenone - la 25^ edizione di pordenonelegge, che festeggia quest'anno il suo primo quarto di secolo. L'urgenza di un vasto impegno per lo sviluppo sostenibile e l'analisi della condizione attuale del pianeta sono in rapporto con la ricerca sull'evoluzione umana e sulle vicende dell'universo, quindi con il tema della creazione e il concetto di generazione e rigenerazione. Lo sguardo sul nostro tempo e quello futuro sono filo rosso portante della Festa del libro, da quest'anno anche Festa della libertà: dal 18 al 22 settembre sono in arrivo oltre 600 autrici e autori italiani e internazionali, protagonisti di334 eventi in 43 sedi fra Pordenone e il Friuli Venezia Giulia, con 60 anteprime editoriali riservate al festival.La 25^ edizione di pordenonelegge, Festa del libro e della libertà, è promossa dalla Fondazione Pordenoneegge.it, presieduta da Michelangelo Agrusti, a cura di Gian Mario Villalta (direttore artistico), Alberto Garlini e Valentina Gasparet. Fra attualità e letteratura a pordenonelegge sono attese voci iconiche del nostro tempo, da Bernard-Henri Lévy ad Azar Nafisi e Richard Ford.«Pordenonelegge rinnova la sua vocazione a raccontare il mondo, restando sull'uscio della storia: nella consapevolezza – spiega il presidente di Fondazione Pordenonelegge.it Michelangelo Agrusti – che i libri sono sempre presidio di libertà». La guida completa del festival è scaricabile in formato stampabile sul sito www.pordenonelegge.it Pordenonelegge è una Festa della cultura accessibile, comunitaria e inclusiva. A cominciare dall'inaugurazione didomani, mercoledì 18 settembre (ore 18.30, Teatro Verdi di Pordenone) alla quale parteciperanno centinaia di studenti della città, rinnovando il “patto” della letteratura con le generazioni che rappresentano il nostro futuro, accanto a molti cittadini delle locali residenze per la terza età, e a una rappresentanza della comunità locale ghanese, nel contesto di un progetto finalizzato a fornire gli strumenti per l'ottimale integrazione.E ci saranno 25 studentesse e studenti del Liceo Bilingue Ustvani e dell'Università Karlova di Praga, accolti da una rappresentanza di studenti dell'ITS Alto Adriatico Academy di Pordenone. Inoltre il festival potrà contare sull'apporto del gruppo di ragazzi inseriti nel progetto Pordenone Pulita e Inclusiva, che saranno operativi negli spazi di piazza XX settembre e limitrofe, per garantire il decoro dell'area e per dare supporto agli espositori per la gestione della RD, per l'intera durata del Festival.La 25^ edizione del festival riserverà inoltre un'attenzione speciale alla popolazione carceraria attraverso gli eventi organizzati per i detenuti della Casa Circondariale di Pordenone: venerdì 20 settembre alle 15 Alessandro Bergonzoni racconterà la sua esperienza artistica, tra teatro e libri, e sabato 21 settembre alle 17 Massimo Cirri sarà protagonista di un ulteriore incontro con tanti aneddoti legati alla sua esperienza radiofonica. Attesissimo domani, subito dopo l'inaugurazione, l'avvio del progetto di Video Mapping, che dal tramonto alle ore notturne, per tutto il festival, animerà il centro storico di Pordenone con le suggestioni immersive delle grandi biblioteche del mondo, da New York a Washington, da Praga a Dublino e Roma. Sui palazzi del centro storico sfileranno le proiezioni di queste splendide biblioteche, un arredo urbano fortemente evocativo per passeggiare in una mirabolante selva di scaffali e pubblicazioni di ogni latitudine del mondo. IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.

The John Batchelor Show
GOOD EVENING: The shiow begins in Erie County, Pennsylvania, where the winner of the state mmay well be decided.....

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2024 6:29


GOOD EVENING: The shiow begins in Erie County, Pennsylvania, where the winner of the state mmay well be decided.....  1890 Erie County CBS EYE ON THE WORLD WITH JOHN BATCHELOR FIRST HOUR 9-915 #KeystoneReport: The critical diner vote of Erie County spells it "dinor." Salena Zito, Middle of Somewhere, @DCExaminer Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, New York Post, SalenaZito.com 915-930 #PacificWatch: #VegasReport: Soon the Vegas train from LA to the Strip. @JCBliss 930-945 #TAIWAN: The debate over defending Taiwan. Bradley Bowman, FDD 945-1000 #"Israel Alone:" New volume by Bernard-Henri Lévy, re October 7. Peter Berkowitz, Hoover Institution SECOND HOUR 10-1015 CALIFORNIA: GOP down 47 to 1 since 2002 and no winning prospect in sight. Bill Whalen, Hoover Institution 1015-1030 #SPACEFORCE: Triple the budget to start. Henry Sokolski, NPEC 1030-1045 SPACEX: Spacewalk success. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.com 1045-1100 NASA: JPL: Voyager 1 nominal. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.com THIRD HOUR 1100-1115 5/8: The Light of Battle: Eisenhower, D-Day, and the Birth of the American Superpower by Michel Paradis (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Light-Battle-Eisenhower-American-Superpower/dp/0358682371/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= On June 6, 1944, General Dwight Eisenhower addressed the thousands of American troops preparing to invade Normandy, exhorting them to embrace the "Great Crusade" they faced. Then, in a fleeting moment alone, he drafted a resignation letter in case the invasion failed. In The Light of Battle, Michel Paradis, acclaimed author of Last Mission to Tokyo, paints a vivid portrait of Dwight Eisenhower as he learns to navigate the crosscurrents of diplomacy, politics, strategy, family, and fame with the fate of the free world hanging in the balance. In a world of giants—Churchill, Roosevelt, De Gaulle, Marshall, MacArthur—it was a barefoot boy from Abilene, Kansas, who would master the art of power and become a modern-day George Washington. Drawing upon meticulous research and a voluminous body of newly discovered records, letters, diaries, and firsthand accounts from three continents, Paradis brings Eisenhower to life, as a complicated man who craved simplicity, a genial cipher whose smile was a lethal political weapon. With a page-turning pace and an eye for the overlooked, Paradis interweaves the grand arc of history with more human concerns, bringing readers into the private moments that led to Eisenhower's most pivotal decisions. By deftly integrating the personal and the political, he reveals how Eisenhower's rise both reflected and was integral to America's rise as a global superpower. An unflinching look at how character is forged, and leadership is learned, The Light of Battle breathes new life into the man who made "the leader of the free world" the mantle of the American presidency. 1115-1130 6/8: The Light of Battle: Eisenhower, D-Day, and the Birth of the American Superpower by Michel Paradis (Author) 1130-1145 7/8: The Light of Battle: Eisenhower, D-Day, and the Birth of the American Superpower by Michel Paradis (Author) 1145-1200 8/8: The Light of Battle: Eisenhower, D-Day, and the Birth of the American Superpower by Michel Paradis (Author) FOURTH HOUR 12-1215 #RUSSIA: Putin is a KGB thinker who practices empty threats. Ivana Stradner, FDD 1215-1230 #LANCASTER COUNTY REPORT: SEVERE MARKDOWNS AND LIGHT TRAFFIC. Jim McTague, former Washington Editor, Barrons. @MCTagueJ. Author of the "Martin and Twyla Boundary Series." #FriendsofHistoryDebatingSociety 1230-1245 #CANADA: Untroubled by the mass migration that burdens the US and Europe, Conrad Black National Post 1245-100 AM #ITALY: Debating immigrant citizenship in a nation that needs young families. Lorenzo Fiori, Ansaldo Foundation

Unorthodox
Bernard-Henri Lévy on Israel Alone

Unorthodox

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 38:44


Liel Leibovitz sits down with the French philosopher, journalist, and filmmaker Bernard-Henri Lévy to discuss his new book, Israel Alone

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - De Moulins, Lévy, Sébastien... La chronique du 28 août 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 6:46


Une nouvelle saison démarre pour Laurent Gerra et son équipe. Ce mercredi 28 août, retrouvez notamment les imitations de Xavier de Moulins, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Patrick Sébastien... Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Laurent Gerra
PÉPITE - BHL tourne un nouveau film de guerre dans le Marais

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 1:47


REDIFF - Suite aux déclarations de Muriel Robin sur l'homophobie au cinéma, Bernard-Henri Lévy a décidé de tourner un nouveau film de guerre. Cette-fois il se rend dans le quartier parisien du Marais pour montrer le quotidien des homosexuels. Tout l'été, réécoutez le meilleur de la saison de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application RTL et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

The Dispatch Podcast
What Happened in France | Interview: Bernard-Henri Lévy

The Dispatch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 44:21


NOTE: This episode was recorded last week July 10, before the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump. French public intellectual Bernard-Henri Lévy joins Jamie on today's episode to discuss the surprise rise of the far-left in the French elections and its implications for Western foreign policy. Plus: why BHL's glad he's not American. Agenda: —French antisemitism —How extremism is devouring the center —Why Jews must stay in France —The “made-up” question of migrants —Broken economic schemes —Why America actually won in Afghanistan —“Ukraine and Israel are two front lines of the same war” Show Notes: —Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld's remarks on voting —Jeffrey Goldberg's “Is it time for Jews to leave Europe?” —BHL's “In The Footsteps of Tocqueville” —BHL's “The Afghan Who Won't Surrender to the Taliban” —Ernest Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls —Douglas Murray —Adam Gopnik The Dispatch Podcast is a production of The Dispatch, a digital media company covering politics, policy, and culture from a non-partisan, conservative perspective. To access all of The Dispatch's offerings—including members-only newsletters, bonus podcast episodes, and weekly livestreams—click here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Lenglet, BHL, Les Deschiens... La chronique du 26 juin 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 8:17


Ce 26 juin 2024, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité François Lenglet, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Les Deschiens... Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Visão Global
Bernard-Henri Lévy

Visão Global

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 49:18


Entrevista de José Manuel Rosendo com Bernard-Henri Lévy. Eleições em França. Os candidatos no Irão. Edição de Mário Rui Cardoso.

Israel: State of a Nation
Freedom is a Burden | Bernard-Henri Lévy on what Ails The West, and the Courage We Need To Save Liberty

Israel: State of a Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 52:12


Bernard Henri Levy, or BHL, is a French philosopher, journalist, filmmaker, and public intellectual. He's a leading member of the Nouveaux Philosophes movement, but not up in an ivory tower, traveling to warzones to bear witness and write history. His latest book, Solitude of Israel, is set for release in English later this year, reflecting on thoughts that have troubled him since October 7. When Hamas shocked the world with the October 7 Massacre, Israel felt embraced as never before. World leaders flew in to bear witness and express solidarity. Parliament buildings lit up in the colors of the Israeli flag. Israelis thought - that's it, this time the world gets it and will back us as we fight for humanity against Hamas, as we fight to bring the hostages home. That optimism has given way to a sense of betrayal. The knowledge that the world wants to end this war with Hamas on its feet - and undermining Israel's leverage to get the hostages back. SOLITUDE is Israel's condition, but must it be its fate?Stay up to date at:https://www.stateofanationpodcast.com/X: https://twitter.com/stateofapodInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/stateofapod/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?... LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/state-of-a-nation

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Bayrou, Lévy, Castex... La chronique du 21 mai 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 8:57


Ce 21 mai 2024, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité François Bayrou, Bernard-Henri Lévy ou encore Jean Castex... Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Praud, Arditi, Lévy... La chronique du 13 mai 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 9:54


Ce lundi 13 mai, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Pascal Praud, Pierre Arditi ou encore Bernard-Henri Lévy. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Bouvard, Bruel, Lévy... La chronique du 9 mai 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 8:05


Ce jeudi 9 mai 2024, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité Patrick Bruel, Philippe Bouvard ou encore Bernard-Henri Lévy. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Laurent Gerra
L'INTÉGRALE - Bayrou, Henri-Lévy, Sébastien... La chronique du 22 avril 2024

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 11:10


Ce lundi 22 avril 2024, Laurent Gerra a notamment imité François Bayrou, Bernard Henri-Lévy ou encore Patrick Sébastien. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Laurent Gerra
PÉPITE - B. Henri-Lévy lance une pétition contre le caviar trop cher

Laurent Gerra

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 1:56


Après les conflits Russie-Ukraine et Israël-Hamas, un nouveau front s'est ouvert entre Israël et l'Iran. On en parle avec l'infatigable baroudeur, cinéaste et philosophe Bernard-Henri Lévy. Tous les jours, retrouvez le meilleur de Laurent Gerra en podcast sur RTL.fr, l'application et toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Fareed Zakaria GPS
Morale on the Frontlines of Ukraine; Risk of Israel War Expanding; Waning Bipartisan support for Ukraine; Antisemitism on Campus

Fareed Zakaria GPS

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 42:50


This week, Fareed sits down with French philosopher and documentarian Bernard-Henri Lévy to discuss the morale and momentum on the frontlines of Ukraine. Next, Fareed speaks to Haaretz diplomatic correspondent Amir Tibon about Israel's war strategy. Then, Fareed talks with The American Enterprise Institute's Kori Schake and The Atlantic's Anne Applebaum on waning bipartisan support for Ukraine. Finally, Fareed asks former Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust about antisemitism on University campuses. She discusses her new book “Necessary Trouble: Growing Up at Mid-century” and the lessons she learned from growing up in the segregated south. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices