For those who remember the April 2002 Jenin “massacre” hoax, the whirlwind of accusations of genocide, starvation and mass killings in Gaza are familiar. Then, as now, there is very little verifiable information, but, relying on Palestinian “sources,”with their UN and NGO industry allies, Israel is again pronounced guilty.
The events of April 2002 should serve as an object lesson for how a concerted campaign can turn propaganda and lies, parroted in a closed echo chamber, into unquestioned fact. In that incident, Israeli forces were accused of a large-scale massacre in the Jenin refugee camp on the West Bank. Operation Defensive Shield targeted the center of the Palestinian terror network located in a dense urban area that had carried out mass bombings, including a Passover night attack in Netanya that killed 30 Israeli civilians (a real massacre). Israeli casualties numbered hundreds of dead, and thousands with major injuries.
Immediately after IDF forces entered Jenin, Palestinian officials and NGO “experts” rushed to appear on the BBC and CNN, where they authoritatively declared that Israeli forces killed 500 or even 1,300 civilians. Citing Palestinian hospitals and anonymous “eyewitnesses”, they described IDF tanks allegedly bulldozing homes and executing civilians. Derek Pounder, from Amnesty International, told the BBC that he had direct first-hand knowledge to verify these atrocities. But Pounder was nowhere near Jenin, as was the case for all the other “independent sources.”
Similarly, Ken Roth, the long-time leader of Human Rights Watch with a well-known hostility towards Israel, condemned the “disproportionate use of force” – an easily manipulated term which lacks a consistent definition in urban counterterror conflicts. In press releases, statements and reports, Roth repeated the mantra, and echoing “trusted NGO experts,” media headlines featured words like massacre and war crimes.
In parallel, the UN Human Rights Commission (as it was known then) held an emergency session to demand that Israel open the area to “international observers.” The NGOs lobbied intensively for the creation of an “independent investigation commission” to examine the evidence of Israeli war crimes. (The hundreds of Israeli victims of the Palestinian mass bombing campaign, known as the “second intifada,” were of no interest to these human rights stalwarts.)
But it was all a lie, and the massacre myth began to disintegrate. Only around 50 confirmed names of dead Palestinians were published (most affiliated with the terror groups ), and videos showed staged funerals in which “victims” accidentally fell to the ground, and the bodies miraculously sprang to life and run away. Accounts by Israeli troops were publicized, including the activities of the IDF medical team headed by Dr. David Zangen, and the non-combat related care they provided to Palestinians, including children, while in Jenin. In the fighting, 23 Israeli soldiers were killed by explosives in the booby-trapped buildings of the refugee camp.
But the false accusations and demonization were not erased, and remained ready to be amplified in the next round. There were no consequences for the journalists, UN or NGO officials who spread the lies and added to anti-Israel hate propaganda. In the absence of penalties or even mild censure for violating basic professional standards, this behavior became the norm.
All of this is entirely relevant to the storm regarding the food distribution process in Gaza. This one features the same combination of unverified claims and the central role of NGOs like Amnesty International and HRW in spreading the myths.
Now, as in 2002, the stakes in the propaganda battle are very high. Hamas and its allies give highest priority to preventing the alternative Gaza Humanitarian Foundation from replacing the UN agencies and NGOs that are closely allied with the terror organization. The Hamas support network is using all available political and media assets to promote the accusations of wanton deaths and starvation, media platforms and feel-good politicians in Europe and elsewhere are eager to lend their assistance.
As in Jenin, it could take months to discern and separate the facts in Gaza from the lies. Until that stage is reached, it is important to acknowledge the uncertainty, while maintaining a healthy skepticism regarding unverified rumors.
Gerald M Steinberg is professor of politics at Bar Ilan University and President of the NGO Monitor research institute in Jerusalem
Gaza Starvation and the Jenin Massacre Hoax
Gerald M. Steinberg
For those who remember the April 2002 Jenin “massacre” hoax, the whirlwind of accusations of genocide, starvation and mass killings in Gaza are familiar. Then, as now, there is very little verifiable information, but, relying on Palestinian “sources,”with their UN and NGO industry allies, Israel is again pronounced guilty.
The events of April 2002 should serve as an object lesson for how a concerted campaign can turn propaganda and lies, parroted in a closed echo chamber, into unquestioned fact. In that incident, Israeli forces were accused of a large-scale massacre in the Jenin refugee camp on the West Bank. Operation Defensive Shield targeted the center of the Palestinian terror network located in a dense urban area that had carried out mass bombings, including a Passover night attack in Netanya that killed 30 Israeli civilians (a real massacre). Israeli casualties numbered hundreds of dead, and thousands with major injuries.
Immediately after IDF forces entered Jenin, Palestinian officials and NGO “experts” rushed to appear on the BBC and CNN, where they authoritatively declared that Israeli forces killed 500 or even 1,300 civilians. Citing Palestinian hospitals and anonymous “eyewitnesses”, they described IDF tanks allegedly bulldozing homes and executing civilians. Derek Pounder, from Amnesty International, told the BBC that he had direct first-hand knowledge to verify these atrocities. But Pounder was nowhere near Jenin, as was the case for all the other “independent sources.”
Similarly, Ken Roth, the long-time leader of Human Rights Watch with a well-known hostility towards Israel, condemned the “disproportionate use of force” – an easily manipulated term which lacks a consistent definition in urban counterterror conflicts. In press releases, statements and reports, Roth repeated the mantra, and echoing “trusted NGO experts,” media headlines featured words like massacre and war crimes.
In parallel, the UN Human Rights Commission (as it was known then) held an emergency session to demand that Israel open the area to “international observers.” The NGOs lobbied intensively for the creation of an “independent investigation commission” to examine the evidence of Israeli war crimes. (The hundreds of Israeli victims of the Palestinian mass bombing campaign, known as the “second intifada,” were of no interest to these human rights stalwarts.)
But it was all a lie, and the massacre myth began to disintegrate. Only around 50 confirmed names of dead Palestinians were published (most affiliated with the terror groups ), and videos showed staged funerals in which “victims” accidentally fell to the ground, and the bodies miraculously sprang to life and run away. Accounts by Israeli troops were publicized, including the activities of the IDF medical team headed by Dr. David Zangen, and the non-combat related care they provided to Palestinians, including children, while in Jenin. In the fighting, 23 Israeli soldiers were killed by explosives in the booby-trapped buildings of the refugee camp.
But the false accusations and demonization were not erased, and remained ready to be amplified in the next round. There were no consequences for the journalists, UN or NGO officials who spread the lies and added to anti-Israel hate propaganda. In the absence of penalties or even mild censure for violating basic professional standards, this behavior became the norm.
All of this is entirely relevant to the storm regarding the food distribution process in Gaza. This one features the same combination of unverified claims and the central role of NGOs like Amnesty International and HRW in spreading the myths.
Now, as in 2002, the stakes in the propaganda battle are very high. Hamas and its allies give highest priority to preventing the alternative Gaza Humanitarian Foundation from replacing the UN agencies and NGOs that are closely allied with the terror organization. The Hamas support network is using all available political and media assets to promote the accusations of wanton deaths and starvation, media platforms and feel-good politicians in Europe and elsewhere are eager to lend their assistance.
As in Jenin, it could take months to discern and separate the facts in Gaza from the lies. Until that stage is reached, it is important to acknowledge the uncertainty, while maintaining a healthy skepticism regarding unverified rumors.
Gerald M Steinberg is professor of politics at Bar Ilan University and President of the NGO Monitor research institute in Jerusalem
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
Hadar’s New “Book of Shemot” Makes Torah Accessible to Young Children
Antizionism is Anti-America, Anti-World, Anti-Peace and Anti-Truth
Your Essential Guide to New Zealand: Know Before You Go.
Final Approach – A poem for Parsha Vayigash
The Unsung Heroes Who Make No Noise
A Moment in Time: “The First Time I Understood ‘Merry Christmas’”
Trump’s Dream
What the Media Won’t Tell Us: Bari Weiss Made Valuable Suggestions on ‘Sixty Minutes’ Segment
Had the media delved more deeply into Weiss’s editorial input, readers today would be feasting on journalism rather than sketchy optics.
A Bisl Torah — Extinguished Light
The extinguished flame teaches us to recognize when we need to wind down… initiated by ourselves.
The Mystery Guest Who Delivered Faith and Light to My Home
The ‘Brain Virus’ on Full Display: Why Tucker Carlson Is Wrong About Qatar and Israel
Given Carlson’s recent adulation of Putin and Hamas, it’s not surprising that he shows admiration for an Islamist dictatorship that consistently stirs unrest in the Middle East.
The Multicultural Failure of Islam
The West badly miscalculated. Multiculturalism was destined to fail if it depended on a Muslim consensus on religious pluralism.
Without Hanukkah, There Would Be No Christmas
The world’s most influential moral and religious traditions rest, in part, on a people who refused to disappear.
Meeting Our Moment: As Hanukkah Ends, a Tough New Era Begins
For inspiration, we can look at the scrappiness of Podhoretz and the depth of his intellect; at his love for America and his love for truth; at his ability to fight for his tribe while bringing light into the world.
How One Word in ‘Singing in the Rain’ Changed Everything
Because Lockwood (played by Gene Kelly) saw little “dignity” in the lowbrow vaudeville world his parents immersed him in, he couldn’t bear to reveal that past and felt he had to make up a new one.
Why I Threw a Public Hanukkah Party Right After Bondi
The initial reaction to tragedy is to hide and retreat from the world. But we must do the exact opposite.
A Moment in Time: “Chanukah: One Light Connecting the Entire World”
A Bisl Torah — Choice within Fear
We always have a choice. To practice our faith. To experience joy. To learn. To grow. To live. Or not.
The Intense Psychology of Israeli Protection Dogs and Their Trainers
With the rise in violence against Jewish communities around the world, an Israel-based company is seeing an increased demand for their security products — protection dogs.
At the End – A poem for Parsha Miketz
At the end is a dubious place to begin.
Antisemitism Is Thriving Because Schadenfreude Makes People Happy
For better or for worse, Jews are seen as a successful bunch, and if there’s one thing we know about successful people, many people are happy when they fall.
‘Laemmle’s List’: A Hollywood Giant’s Unheralded Act of Heroism
After Bondi Beach
The fight against antisemitism begins with lighting a candle in the presence of our enemies.
StandWithUs Festival of Lights Gala Celebrates Heroes, Students, and Israel Advocates
StandWithUs marked its 24th anniversary with its annual Festival of Lights (FOL) gala on December 7, 2025, bringing together more than 850 guests at the Fairmont Century City.
Monty Pickle and Halle Stanford: Jewish Joy, Entertainment and Pickle Latkes
Taste Buds with Deb – Episode 137
Former Hostage Eli Sharabi Speaks to Packed Sinai Temple
Over 2,000 people showed up to see the author of “Hostage” share haunting stories from the tunnels of Gaza.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.