Madeleine K. Albright
While she was serving as US Secretary of State, Madeleine K. Albright, who had been raised as a Catholic, learned of Jewish ancestry in her family. Listen as Albright discusses how this knowledge influenced her.
Voices on Antisemitism features a broad range of perspectives about antisemitism and hatred. This podcast featured dozens of guests over its ten-year run.
While she was serving as US Secretary of State, Madeleine K. Albright, who had been raised as a Catholic, learned of Jewish ancestry in her family. Listen as Albright discusses how this knowledge influenced her.
Bassam Tibi is a Muslim who advocates for secular democracy. And he is an immigrant who advocates for integration of fellow Muslims in Western society. But today, Tibi says, critics of Islam are being silenced all across Europe.
When Holocaust denier David Irving sued Deborah Lipstadt for libel in a British court, she experienced what she called "the world of difference between reading about antisemitism and hearing it up close and personal."
Long before she joined the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Sara Bloomfield taught students about the Holocaust. Here, Bloomfield explains why remembering this history matters.
In 2002, as president of Harvard University, Lawrence Summers publicly expressed concern about resurgent antisemitism. Listen to Summers explain why he spoke out.
Listen as Christopher Caldwell explains that the recent wave of Muslim immigration has brought a new strain of antisemitism to Europe.
For more than forty years, Father John Pawlikowski has urged Catholics and others to confront the long history of Christian antisemitism.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali describes herself as a "dissident of Islam." Despite threats to her life, Ali remains outspoken about freedom of expression, hatred of Jews, and reform of Islam.
Historian Christopher Browning has written extensively about how ordinary Germans became murderers during the Holocaust. Listen to Browning explain why examining the perpetrators' history matters.
Gerda Klein survived the Holocaust and was liberated by an American soldier who she eventually married. Here, Klein discusses her understanding of hatred and antisemitism today.