A long fabric flutters on his wrist.
The colors clash with the dazzling whiteness of his eternal shirt.
The inscription runs in English on the bracelet.
“To be removed when the hostages are freed,” translates Bernard-Henri Lévy.
Protected by several agents, the 75-year-old philosopher receives Le Parisien-Aujourd'hui en France at Grasset, his publisher, on the occasion of the release, Wednesday March 20, of “Solitude of Israel” (17 euros), which he will discuss during a major conference Tuesday evening, Salle Pleyel.
His essay, 176 pages written on the spot of the war, sees the horrors of October 7 as a turning point, an “Event”, of which he insists we must be aware.
From Tel Aviv to Ukraine, the writer paints the portrait of a world on the edge, ready to break.
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