No Wound Denied, No Wound Enthroned

No Wound Denied, No Wound Enthroned

Holocaust Memory, Genocide Prevention, and the Life-Coherent Ethics of Non-DisposabilityBy Dr. Bichara Sahely
Michael Caine
Listen with Sir Michael Caine™ and 1,000+ voices
Length1h 7m

About this audiobook

No Wound Denied, No Wound Enthroned is a life-coherent reflection on Holocaust memory, genocide prevention, and the moral duty to protect all peoples from disposability. Dr. Bichara Sahely examines how sacred memory can either become a universal warning for the protection of life or be captured into exceptional innocence, state immunity, and selective grief. Grounded in the maxim “No wound denied. No wound enthroned,” this audiobook asks what the Holocaust requires of humanity today, especially in the face of Gaza, antisemitism, anti-Palestinian racism, and the erosion of international law. It offers a framework for remembrance as repair: truthful, anti-scapegoating, legally accountable, spiritually serious, and committed to ensuring that no people are made ungrievable, killable, or disposable.

Audiobook details

GenreHistory, Education and Learning
Length1 hr 7 mins
Narrated byListen with 1,000+ voices
FormateBook with Audio
Publish dateJun 14, 2026
LanguageEnglish

Table of contents

1Title Page
20Chapter 8. What Was Being Conserved?
2Author's Note: Proof-of-Principle on AI-Mediated Unspeakability and Procedural Capture This white paper was developed with the assistance of frontier artificial intelligence tools. During the preparation of conceptual figures for this paper, a revealing limitation appeared. Attempts to generate visual material explaining how peoples are progressively removed from the circle of protection either triggered safety restrictions or produced sterile schematic substitutes. The intended purpose was preventive, educational, anti-genocidal, and life-protective. Yet the system appeared unable to reliably distinguish between reproducing dehumanization and critically exposing the mechanisms by which dehumanization becomes possible. This experience is included here as a proof-of-principle. It demonstrates a structural danger in contemporary frontier technologies: the undiscussable can be made undiscussable not only through explicit censorship, but through automated risk-avoidance, keyword sensitivit
21Chapter 9. Holocaust Memory as Life-Coherent Warning
3Opening Summary
22Chapter 10. The Capture of Memory
4Guiding Questions
23Chapter 11. Antisemitism, Criticism of Israel, and the Necessary Distinctions
5Central Thesis
24Chapter 12. Gaza as the Moral Stress Test of Holocaust Memory
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6Legal and Terminological Note for Listeners
25Chapter 13. Cui Bono and Cui Malo in Contemporary Commemoration
7Chapter 1. Introduction: The Crisis of Memory in an Age of Disposability
26Chapter 14. What World Is Appearing?
8Chapter 2. Scope, Safeguards, and Academic Responsibility
27Chapter 15. What Better World Can Be Brought Forth?
9Chapter 3. Methodology: A Life-Coherent Hermeneutic of Memory
28Chapter 16. Principles for Life-Coherent Holocaust Remembrance
10Chapter 4. Conceptual Framework
29Chapter 17. The Life-Coherent Remembrance Test
114.1. Life-Coherence
30Chapter 18. Theological and Spiritual Implications
124.2. Non-Disposability
31Chapter 19. Policy and Institutional Implications
134.3. Sacred Memory
32Chapter 20. Limitations
144.4. Cultural Violence
33Chapter 21. Contribution to the Life-Coherent Framework
154.5. Institutional Autopoiesis
34Chapter 22. Discussion: The Razor-Thin Line
164.6. Procedural Capture
35Chapter 23. Conclusion: Memory Fulfilled
17Chapter 5. Literature and Intellectual Lineages
36Glossary for Listeners
18Chapter 6. The Holocaust as Historical Rupture
37Source Note
19Chapter 7. Cui Bono and Cui Malo at Inception

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