Like Orpheus, Lanzmann was an untamed poet for whom the verses were steel rails, birch forests, silences, names.
Jeremy Corbyn threatens to lead Britain into a ‘Dark Internationale’ hastening the demise of democracy.
French presidential candidate and far-left leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, is transforming before our eyes into a mascot of totalitarianism.
Bernard-Henri Lévy implores France’s protesters: Even legitimate anger does not excuse everything.
From the Pilgrim founders to Donald Trump, ‘a belief in the exceptional role of an American nation’.
Caroline Fourest’s ‘Sisters in Arms’ arrives just in time for the Ottoman Anschluss against Syrian Kurdistan.
Why the filmmaker’s depiction of early-20th-century anti-Semitism in ‘J’accuse’ is, with reservations, ‘important and beautiful’.
Bernard-Henri Lévy remembers his friend and mentor, the activist and journalist of the ‘Nouvel Observateur’ and doyen of the French left.
We have entered a world in which a thinker who is not beholden to a party, a community, or an authority other than his own has become an alien concept.
Paris shows gratitude to the Afghan hero who tried to stop the Sept. 11 attacks—and whose warnings about Islamist fanaticism remain urgent today.
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