Results for “Ben Ali

The Metaphysics of the Sarah Halimi Affair

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Tablet, April 30, 2021

French law must protect people like the murdered Jewish schoolteacher.

How an Anti-totalitarian militant discovered ultranationalism

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Atlantic, May 13, 2019

After 30 years, I spoke with Viktor Orbán again.

Ukraine and Israel are in the same fight

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Hill, December 15, 2023

Ukraine and Israel are both victims of aggression. Their aggressors share a strategy — that of intentionally striking civilian targets.

A Masterpiece of Thought and Feeling

Liel Leibovitz, Tablet, December 07, 2023

French intellectual superstar Bernard-Henri Lévy’s affecting new war documentary shows us how ordinary people become heroes.

Israel Mourns and Prepares for War

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Wall Street Journal, October 20, 2023

Two weeks ago, the Jewish state was bitterly divided. After Hamas’s atrocities, it is united in a just and necessary defense.

Portrait of Bernard-Henri Lévy

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), Purple, May 10, 2011

The rules of the game: names, a collection of names, all of which had one thing in common: they had in one way or another played a part in BHL's intellectual or personal life.

Radical Evokes This

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Purple, October 17, 2017

The radical party in the memory of the twentieth century is synonymous with everything that is most mediocre, most corrupt, most hostile to greatness in French politics.

City of revolution

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), Purple, May 22, 2020

Does Paris have a distinctive spirit of protest and revolution? Is BHL's vision of Paris as literary as it is political?

On war and its dehumanization

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), Purple, January 09, 2023

As a philosopher, what is BHL's idea of war? Is war fundamentally human? Is man, in the end, a wolf who hunts man? Or is there still hope of eradicating war?

In the Footsteps of Tocqueville (Part V)

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Atlantic, November 01, 2005

A twenty-first-century pilgrim ends a year-long journey where the seventeenth-century Pilgrims ended theirs—on the coast of New England, not far from where his travels began.