7th May 2026
How did a state founded in the shadow of catastrophe arrive at this moment of profound crisis?
In this urgent and deeply reflective conversation, historian and genocide scholar Professor Omer Bartov joins the Britain Palestine Project to examine the political, moral, and historical trajectory of Israel from its founding to the present day.
Drawing on decades of research into nationalism, war, memory, and mass violence, Bartov explores the ideological foundations of the Israeli state, the long-term consequences of occupation, and the growing international debate around human rights, apartheid, and genocide. He also reflects on the changing role of Holocaust memory in Israeli political culture, the collapse of the peace process, and the dangers posed by rising extremism and dehumanisation.
This episode asks difficult but essential questions: What went wrong? Could it have been different? And what might accountability, justice, and coexistence look like now?
About the Speaker
Professor Omer Bartov is an Israeli-American scholar and Dean’s Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Brown University. He has written extensively on war crimes, interethnic relations, nationalism, and genocide.
His books include:
- Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town Called Buczacz (National Jewish Book Award winner)
- Genocide, the Holocaust and Israel-Palestine: First-Person History in Times of Crisis
- Israel: What Went Wrong? (2026)
His essays and commentary have appeared widely in international media and academic publications.
Topics Discussed
- The founding ideals of Israel and how they evolved
- Occupation, militarisation, and political radicalisation
- Holocaust memory and national identity
- Gaza and the international legal debate
- The collapse of the Oslo peace process
- Zionism, democracy, and ethnonationalism
- The role of the international community
- Prospects for justice, equality, and peace
Listen / Watch
You can watch this conversation on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts — just search Britain Palestine Project.




