
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
A commitment to a liberal ethos necessitates a commitment to speaking with “the other”, especially about matters we hold most dear. In this edited recording of the Edward Bronfman Memorial Lecture, delivered in front of a live audience during our annual Community Leadership Program at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, Yehuda Kurtzer and Yossi Klein Halevi discuss the “lost art” of persuasion: How do we stand by our unique values while also practicing pluralism? What would happen if we valued humble, peaceful society over passionate, loud ideas? How can we examine ourselves, within and without, to become better people?
For further viewing:
Should Diaspora Jews Have a Say in Israeli Affairs? [YouTube]
The Last Time Democracy Almost Died [The New Yorker]
4.7
170170 ratings
A commitment to a liberal ethos necessitates a commitment to speaking with “the other”, especially about matters we hold most dear. In this edited recording of the Edward Bronfman Memorial Lecture, delivered in front of a live audience during our annual Community Leadership Program at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, Yehuda Kurtzer and Yossi Klein Halevi discuss the “lost art” of persuasion: How do we stand by our unique values while also practicing pluralism? What would happen if we valued humble, peaceful society over passionate, loud ideas? How can we examine ourselves, within and without, to become better people?
For further viewing:
Should Diaspora Jews Have a Say in Israeli Affairs? [YouTube]
The Last Time Democracy Almost Died [The New Yorker]
420 Listeners
605 Listeners
1,488 Listeners
1,205 Listeners
43 Listeners
173 Listeners
269 Listeners
366 Listeners
1,070 Listeners
2,829 Listeners
983 Listeners
551 Listeners
205 Listeners
97 Listeners
464 Listeners