Q&A with Bernard-Henri Lévy
The French thinker’s latest book offers a global vision in which national pride and universal ideals can powerfully coexist
Paris shows gratitude to the Afghan hero who tried to stop the Sept. 11 attacks—and whose warnings about Islamist fanaticism remain urgent today
Omar Sheikh, Pakistan, and the geopolitics of values
Daniel Pearl’s killer talked to ‘Newsline’ in 2005
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
Caroline Fourest’s ‘Sisters in Arms’ arrives just in time for the Ottoman Anschluss against Syrian Kurdistan
Bernard-Henri Lévy implores France’s protesters: Even legitimate anger does not excuse everything
Bernard-Henri Lévy’s one-man show ‘Looking for Europe’ makes the case for America better than most Americans ever do
Full text of a speech delivered before the Academic College of Netanya, June 18, 2018, upon receiving an Honoris Causa doctorate
‘Please, please remain. The long march begins tonight.’
A love letter in 70 lines
It’s good to be the czar
Bernard-Henri Lévy draws from the well of late-18th-century French philosopher Chateaubriand for a broad defense of the aesthetics and morals of liberalism
Bernard-Henri Lévy attacked during a speech in the Serbian capital
Bernard-Henri Lévy, Leon Wieseltier, Paul Berman, and Tablet editor-in-chief Alana Newhouse in conversation at the 92 Street Y on March 29
In Erbil, Kurdish officials and high-ranking Peshmerga took in BHL’s latest doc about the fight for a city that rages on