“It's a whole work to build a memory,” says Bernard-Henri Lévy

“It's a whole work to build a memory,” says Bernard-Henri Lévy
“It's a whole work to build a memory,” says Bernard-Henri Lévy

Guest of the Grand Rendez-vous Europe 1/CNews/Les Echos on the eve of the commemorations of the 80th anniversary of the release of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp, Bernard-Henri Lévy returned to the theme of the Shoah. And especially on whether the memory of Nazi barbarism was fading. A “fairly complex” question in the eyes of the philosopher.

Is the Holocaust memory of the Holocaust? On the eve of the commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the release of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp, and while anti-Semitic acts have increased very strongly in Europe and since October 7, the question is “quite complicated”, advances Bernard-Henri Lévy.

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Guest From the big meeting Europe 1/CNews/Les Echos, the philosopher explains that memory “is not a stock that crumbles, which is fraying”, it is also “a monument”. For the one whose family has paid for blood the Nazi barbarism, “it is a whole work to build a memory, and it is a work that must be solidified”.

France

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