Insights
Insights
Understanding our World: The continuing impact of the Holocaust
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Insights TV
PERSPECTIVES ON ANTISEMITISM
How to tackle antisemitism and anti-americanism in the Muslim world
HOW TO TACKLE ANTISEMITISM AND ANTI-AMERICANISM IN THE MUSLIM WORLD
A Conversation with Ambassador Akbar Ahmed, Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies, American University.

Akbar Ahmed, whom the BBC has described as the leading authority on contemporary Islam, reports on his recent trip through the Muslim world, where he spoke at universities, mosques, and madrassahs and interviewed President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, as well as a number of clerics, scholars, and others. Ambassador Ahmed undertook the trip on behalf of the Brookings Institution, the Pew Center, and American University.

At the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Dr. Ahmed discussed his findings publicly for the first time.

Antisemitism and Interfaith Cooperation: The Importance of Holocaust Memory
ANTISEMITISM AND INTERFAITH COOPERATION: THE IMPORTANCE OF HOLOCAUST MEMORY
One of France's foremost moral voices, Cardinal Lustiger is a leader in interfaith dialogue and the fight against antisemitism. He was born into a Jewish family and survived the Holocaust in hiding.

MEDICAL ETHICS
Legitimizing the Unthinkable: A Disability Rights Perspective on Nazi Medicine with Harriet McBryde Johnson
LEGITIMIZING THE UNTHINKABLE: A DISABILITY RIGHTS PERSPECTIVE ON NAZI MEDICINE WITH HARRIET MCBRYDE JOHNSON
Nazi science and medicine focused on eliminating both physical and mental impairments, real and perceived, as part of the path to "racial purity." Eugenics-based sterilization policies in Germany and throughout the world as well as the Nazis' so-called "euthanasia" program were often justified by physicians and scientists as relieving individual suffering while contributing to the "greater good." Renowned author, advocate, and attorney Harriet McBryde Johnson brought a disability rights perspective to bear on issues raised by the Museum's Deadly Medicine exhibition.

How Did Medicine Go So Wrong?
HOW DID MEDICINE GO SO WRONG?
Arthur Caplan, Director, Center for Bioethics, University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Caplan explores how moral inquiry into this history can inform the field of bioethics today as it confronts controversial issues and practices.

A More Perfect Human: The Promise and Peril of Modern Science.
A MORE PERFECT HUMAN: THE PROMISE AND PERIL OF MODERN SCIENCE.
Dr. Leon Kass, a physician and scientist engaged for more than 30 years with ethical and philosophical questions raised by biomedical advances, explored how modern science's pursuit of "human perfection" paved the way for Nazi programs to eliminate the "unfit." Dr. Kass addressed the persistence of biological "idealism" in contemporary scientific and medical thinking.

Progress and Evil.
PROGRESS AND EVIL.
Leon Wieseltier (Literary Editor, The New Republic) explores how the history presented in Deadly Medicine can help inform contemporary debate about the complex moral and social issues associated with scientific and technological advances.

In conversation with Terry Moran, ABC News.

Doing Good: The Promise and Perils of Science.
DOING GOOD: THE PROMISE AND PERILS OF SCIENCE.
The Nazis drew on the science of their day in their pursuit of "perfection" and the creation of the "master race." Dr. Ruth Faden, Director of the Phoebe R. Berman Bioethics Institute at Johns Hopkins University, and the daughter of Holocaust survivors, explored the implications of this history in light of current medical innovations to enhance appearance and intelligence or prevent disease.

The Death of Hippocrates: The
THE DEATH OF HIPPOCRATES: THE "LOGIC" OF NAZI MEDICINE
Sherwin B. Nuland, best-selling author of How We Die and Lost in America: A Journey with My Father and Clinical Professor of Surgery at Yale University.