
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us Fan Mail
There are some books that resist hope—not because they lack meaning, but because they refuse comfort. Night by Elie Wiesel is one of those works. It confronts us with the Holocaust not as distant history, but as lived reality: a world where cruelty was systematized, faith was tested to its breaking point, and survival itself became an act of resistance.
In this deeply serious episode of Hope is Kindled, we wrestle honestly with the question: How do you look for hope in a story shaped by such overwhelming darkness? We do not rush the answer. We do not soften the horror. Instead, we sit with it.
Through historical, biographical, psychological, and comparative analysis, we explore how Wiesel’s determination to survive, to remember, and to bear witness became one of the most enduring forms of hope imaginable. Hope here is not optimism. It is not rescue. It is the refusal to let suffering be erased or forgotten.
This episode also includes a clear condemnation of antisemitism and genocidal hatred in all forms, and an affirmation of solidarity with Jewish friends, families, and communities. Remembering Night is not passive, it is a moral responsibility.
Night teaches us that hope does not always look like light. Sometimes it looks like endurance. Sometimes it looks like memory. And sometimes, it looks like the courage to tell the truth so that the world cannot look away again.
In a world where survival depends on blending in, Aliens Anonymous, a new musical with seventeen songs on the album, follows a hidden community of extraterrestrials living quietly among humans, each carrying the weight of isolation, identity, and the fear of being truly seen.
Support the show
By JasonSend us Fan Mail
There are some books that resist hope—not because they lack meaning, but because they refuse comfort. Night by Elie Wiesel is one of those works. It confronts us with the Holocaust not as distant history, but as lived reality: a world where cruelty was systematized, faith was tested to its breaking point, and survival itself became an act of resistance.
In this deeply serious episode of Hope is Kindled, we wrestle honestly with the question: How do you look for hope in a story shaped by such overwhelming darkness? We do not rush the answer. We do not soften the horror. Instead, we sit with it.
Through historical, biographical, psychological, and comparative analysis, we explore how Wiesel’s determination to survive, to remember, and to bear witness became one of the most enduring forms of hope imaginable. Hope here is not optimism. It is not rescue. It is the refusal to let suffering be erased or forgotten.
This episode also includes a clear condemnation of antisemitism and genocidal hatred in all forms, and an affirmation of solidarity with Jewish friends, families, and communities. Remembering Night is not passive, it is a moral responsibility.
Night teaches us that hope does not always look like light. Sometimes it looks like endurance. Sometimes it looks like memory. And sometimes, it looks like the courage to tell the truth so that the world cannot look away again.
In a world where survival depends on blending in, Aliens Anonymous, a new musical with seventeen songs on the album, follows a hidden community of extraterrestrials living quietly among humans, each carrying the weight of isolation, identity, and the fear of being truly seen.
Support the show