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THE GENIUS OF JUDAISM by Bernard-Henri Lévy

THE GENIUS OF JUDAISM

by Bernard-Henri Lévy translated by Steven B. Kennedy

Pub Date: Jan. 10th, 2017
ISBN: 978-0-8129-9272-4
Publisher: Random House

A memoir and philosophical reflection on the renewed urgency to study the Jewish tomes.

With a nod to Chateaubriand’s Genius of Christianity, which passionately defended the faith against the critics of the French Enlightenment, Lévy (American Vertigo: Traveling America in the Footsteps of Tocqueville, 2006, etc.), the French public intellectual, filmmaker, and controversial author, embarks on an ardent, meandering defense of Judaism as a bulwark against what he sees as the growing forces of barbarism and bigotry. This latest book is a companion of sorts to the author’s The Testament of God (1980) as well as a continuing dialogue with like-minded philosophers and influences such as Benny Lévy, Alain Finkielkraut, and, especially, Emmanuel Levinas. First, Lévy responds to the “oldest form of hate,” anti-Semitism, and to the “new guise” of anti-Zionist forces that include Holocaust deniers and revisionists who propound a “competition over victimhood”—e.g., Palestinians and African-Americans vs. Holocaust victims. Within this new guise of anti-Semitism, Lévy labels the BDS campaign (“boycott, disinvestment, sanctions”) against Israel as “a new form of warfare.” Then he looks at the global hot spots where he and other secular Jews have sprung into action against forces of genocide—specifically in Libya and Ukraine, which Levy compares, in an elaborate biblical analogy, to the great city of Nineveh, which fell into decadence and decay and prompted God to command the prophet Jonah to prophesy its destruction. The divine message is that God “chose to view that evil as redeemable,” and thus Lévy’s message is essentially uplifting: that the brilliant scholars of Judaism, the authors of the Talmud, provide elucidation into “the great questions that have stirred humanity since the dawn of time.” By turns eloquent and overworked, the author’s prose will turn some readers off, but his material is provocative as always.

A philosophical celebration of Judaism that wanders but ultimately returns to hope and light.