Results for “Chine

A Beacon of Hope

Liel Leibovitz, City Journal, October 02, 2024

Bernard-Henri Lévy deems Israel a “hearth that radiates a light and a language without which a part of humanity would be lost.”

Oppressed lovers of freedom everywhere are secretly rooting for Israel to win

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Jewish Chronicle, September 25, 2024

The war with Hamas is existential for all of Western civilization: an excerpt from Bernard-Henri Lévy's new book, "Israel Alone".

Bernard-Henri Lévy: ‘Today’s woke thinking is straight-forward racism’

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), The Telegraph, September 15, 2024

From an undisclosed location, the philosopher talks Israel, racism and the French election.

Israel Must Respond Forcefully to Iran’s Attack

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Tablet, April 19, 2024

Iran’s drones and missiles are not a joke. They are a declaration of war, and must be treated as such.

‘New Philosopher’; Bernard-Henri Levy

Stewart McBride, The CS Monitor, January 20, 1983

Levy is perhaps the best known and most iconoclastic of France's ''Nouveaux Philosophes,'' During the last six years, Levy has personally waged war against socialism in three controversial best sellers.

War and peace, what can we do ?

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), Thirty Seven East, November 30, 2023

BHL captures, in his film, the horrors of war, the hopefulness of the Ukrainian citizens and their optimism in the face of senseless destruction.

Why I Defend Israel

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Time, November 27, 2023

The philosopher, journalist and human rights activist explains why we must support Israel in its war against the terrorist Hamas.

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?

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.