Bernard-Henri Lévy and AJC CEO Ted Deutch on How to Build a Resilient Jewish Future Post-October 7
Вставка
- Опубліковано 15 гру 2024
- 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 (www.ajc.org/fo...) : with Hen Mazzig (www.ajc.org/ne...) , Einat Admony (www.ajc.org/ne...) , and more (www.ajc.org/fo...) .
•
People of the Pod (www.ajc.org/pe...) :
•
What’s Next for the Abraham Accords Under President Trump? (www.ajc.org/ne...)
•
Honoring Israel’s Lone Soldiers This Thanksgiving: Celebrating Service and Sacrifice Away from Home (www.ajc.org/ne...)
•
The ICC Issues Arrest Warrants: What You Need to Know (www.ajc.org/ne...)
Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod (www.ajc.org/pe...)
You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org (mailto: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 condition...