Frontlines and Backrooms
In this episode of Frontlines & Backrooms, historian Omer Bartov joins us for a deeply personal and historically charged conversation about Israel, Zionism, Gaza, historical trauma, collective denial, and the dangerous collapse of moral certainty after October 7th. Born in Israel and raised on a left-wing socialist kibbutz, Bartov reflects not only as one of the world’s leading historians of genocide and mass violence, but also as someone whose own life is deeply tied to the history he studies. Together, we explore the transformation of Israeli society over decades, the legacy of the Nakba, the political evolution of Zionism, the radicalization of the IDF, Holocaust memory, occupation, and the psychological consequences of building national identity around fear, trauma, and denial. The conversation also moves beyond Israel itself and confronts a broader question facing many societies today: what happens when nations refuse to confront the darkest parts of their own history? This is not a debate built around slogans, headlines, or ideological performance. It is a long-form historical conversation about memory, power, violence, identity, and the stories nations tell themselves in order to survive. Frontlines & Backrooms - Subscribe to our Substack Frontlines & Backrooms | Substack [https://frontlinesbackrooms.substack.com/]Independent geopolitical analysis, political history, and long-form conversations beyond the noise.
51 episodios
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