Filed under: Arts, Podcasts @ 16th &Q | Tagged: Bernard-Henri Lévy, BHL, conservatism, French politics, Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture, Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival, Left in Dark Times, liberalism, Nouveaux Philosophes, philosophy, Politics, Sarkozy, video | Comments Off on In Case You Missed It: BHL Talks About the Failure of European Liberals at the LitFest
In Case You Missed It: BHL Talks About the Failure of European Liberals at the LitFest
From Saturday Night
A nice moment between Bernard-Henri Lévy and Tamara Handelsman, the Founding Chairperson of the Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival. BHL delivered the Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture on Saturday night at the Maison Française.
Filed under: Arts | Tagged: Bernard-Henri Lévy, Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture, Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival | Comments Off on From Saturday Night
Ask BHL a Question
The Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture featuring Bernard-Henri Lévy may be sold out, but that doesn’t mean you’re necessarily shut out. BHL has agreed to answer to answer some questions submitted electronically via our website. We’ll record his answers and post them here after the event. Click here to submit your question.
Filed under: Arts | Tagged: Bernard-Henri Lévy, BHL, Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture, Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival | Comments Off on Ask BHL a Question
Bernard-Henri Lévy coming to DC via Tblisi and Gori
UPDATED: This event has sold-out, but you can submit a question for BHL and have it answered online.
This year’s Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture will be delivered Saturday, September 20 by Bernard-Henri Lévy at La Maison Française at the Embassy of France. His new book, Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against the New Barbarism, “scrutinizes the totalitarianisms of the past as well as those on the horizon, and argues powerfully for a new political and moral vision for our times.”
Although BHL (as he is known in France) came to greater American attention only in 2003 for his investigative book, Who Killed Daniel Pearl?, he has for decades been a leading philosopher/journalist in France who cut his teeth covering the 1971 Bangladeshi War of Independence from Pakistan. So perhaps it is not surprising that he was recently in Georgia to observe the situation on the ground in Tblisi and Gori which he recounts in the Huffington Post:
As we approach Gori, the situation is different, the tension is suddenly palpable. Georgian jeeps are sprawled in the ditches on the sides of the road. Farther along is a burnt-out tank. Even farther along is a more important check point which completely blocks the group of journalists we have joined. And it is here that we are clearly told that we are no longer welcome, “You are in Russian territory now,” barks an officer puffed up with importance. “Only those with Russian accreditation may go farther.”
The post ranges from the war-torn streets of Gori and Kaspi to the inner-sanctum of besieged Georgian President Saakashvili to a suprising admission from a Russian General regarding Israel’s support for the Georgian army, “We summoned the Israeli Foreign Minister to Moscow. And he was told that if he continues to supply arms to the Georgians we would continue to supply Hezbollah and Hamas.” BHL concludes his essay with a moral charge sure to resonate with the themes of his talk on September 20, “Either we are capable of raising our voice and saying STOP to Putin in Georgia. Or the man who went, in his own words, “down into the toilets” to kill the civilians in Chechnya will feel he has the right to do the same thing to any one of his neighbors. Is this how we will build Europe, peace and the world of tomorrow?”
Filed under: Arts | Tagged: Bernard-Henri Lévy, Georgia, Gerald L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture, human rights, Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival, international affairs, Israel, literature, Politics, Russia | Comments Off on Bernard-Henri Lévy coming to DC via Tblisi and Gori