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July 27, 2025

Potpourri of Bad News…for Jews

Summer doldrums have a way of deadening the senses. That might explain why a monumental week of bad news for Jews slipped by without a collective gasp. It should have shaken up even the most languid among the tribe—if anyone truly cared.

But alas, there was Donald Trump’s and Jeffrey Epstein’s friendship to interrogate, the untimely death of Malcolm-Jamal Warner to process, and a new round of tariffs to calculate—so one can be forgiven for slighting other, less newsworthy headlines.

Where to begin. Well, spearheaded by its president, Emmanuel Macron, France has decided to recognize a Palestinian state—by far the most influential country to have done so, joining Spain, Norway, Ireland and Sweden. France boasts the largest population of Jews (440,000) and Muslims (5.7 million, roughly 10 percent of the entire population) in all of Europe.

France already had a long history of antisemitism. But since the new millennium, physical attacks against Jews have swelled from a rapidly expanding demographic of unassimilated Muslims. The entire nation has faced well over 300 acts of terror committed by Islamists. Nearly 300 have been killed with 2,000 injured, mostly in Paris but also Nice, Toulouse, Marseille and Lyon.

Recognizing a Palestinian state as a reward for slaughtering, beheading, torching and gangraping 1,200 Israelis on October 7, 2023 is Macron’s cynical ploy to capture the votes of a mother lode of Muslims. It matters little to him that mother’s milk is the cause of this Jew-hating madness. And he has done nothing to mitigate the problem of 2,500 French mosques that eschew secular values and radicalize too many congregants already predisposed to terror. Placating them at the expense of France’s overachieving but dwindling Jewish population is smart politics. French Jewry is slowly leaving the country for Israel, anyway.

Good luck without your Jews, France. Throughout history, nations that killed or expelled Jews desperately felt their absence. Enjoy the “no-go zones” and daily calls to prayer. It will do wonders to clog traffic along the Champs-Elysées.

Good luck without your Jews, France. Throughout history, nations that killed or expelled Jews desperately felt their absence. Enjoy the “no-go zones” and daily calls to prayer. It will do wonders to clog traffic along the Champs-Elysées.

In response, Israel’s Knesset passed a resolution extending sovereignty over the entirety of the West Bank. Nice move, Macron. Hand that man a Nobel Prize for Peace, Norway.

More headlines of lowlights took place on the other side of the Pyrenees. Forty-four French Jewish children, summer campers on a trip, were removed from a Spanish airline, with their counselor forcibly restrained. The flight’s captain alleged, without any evidence, that the children were “disruptive” and “mishandled emergency equipment. ” Passengers, however, contradicted that report. Some kids quietly spoke or sang in Hebrew. That’s all it took to get tossed.

Although none were Israelis, Spain’s transportation minister called them “Israeli brats.” And get this: the pilot who gave the order to eject the kids from the aircraft was the same man who trained the two 9/11 terrorist hijackers who collapsed the World Trade Center.

American students who happen to be Jewish, or anyone who believes that schools should prioritize a faithful reciting of history rather than a propagandized one, were not spared this week. The largest teachers’ union in the United States published a handbook advising its members how to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day without … wait for it … mentioning Jews!

Apparently, the Holocaust will now be taught as the victimization of people of “different faiths . . . races . . . and genders”—12 million in total. “Six Million” now only refers to the “Man” of that many dollars on the hit 1970s TV show. The extermination of the Jewish people—the endgame of the Final Solution—is not so much being denied as being shared with all sorts of people who were never singled out for death.

The Holocaust also demands an understanding of the Nakba (“catastrophe”) committed against the Palestinians by the Jewish people of Israel. Oh, and you can now say anything you wish about Israel, or what you would like to do to Israelis, without it constituting antisemitism.

But not at Columbia University, which agreed to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Association’s definition of antisemitism. This means that calling Israel a racist enterprise, comparing Israelis to Nazis, holding Israel to a double standard and denying Jews the right to self-determination will be recognized by Columbia as antisemitic activity.

This was only part of Columbia’s larger settlement with the Trump administration that will restore its entitlement to federal funds. But without firing vast numbers of pro-Hamas faculty, and undoing the progressive protocols that has strangled intellectual life in the Ivy League, how will Columbia manage to comply with its new obligations?

Ceasefire talks in Gaza came to an end. Hamas has no interest in any surrender that requires them to actually surrender. That didn’t stop England and 28 other nations from demanding a ceasefire anyway—without any concessions from Hamas or return of hostages.

For this reason, Israel must do what must be done. Keep fighting until Hamas is no more and the surviving hostages are rescued. The moral universe also requires that any “civilian” who took part in the massacre on October 7, or personally detained hostages, meet a similar fate to the terrorists they freely elected as their representatives.

Meanwhile, the Jewish state was once again blamed for nonexistent starvation in Gaza. Global media and its United Nations henchmen continue to believe anything Hamas tells them. No independent verification is ever necessary. But if Gazans are, indeed, suffering, it’s because no one is crazy enough to drive and distribute the thousand trucks filled with humanitarian aid stalled at the border. Hamas is prone to kill the aid workers along with the food’s intended beneficiaries.

The United States established the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (“GHF”) for the purpose of feeding Gazans. Hamas is not thrilled that it must now compete with an entity that serves a humanitarian purpose. The world’s hatred of Israel is so twisted, global media is doing Hamas’ bidding by undermining GHF’s efforts.

The world’s hatred of Israel is so twisted, global media is doing Hamas’ bidding by undermining GHF’s efforts.

Hamas is now murdering these aid workers, but news outlets are reporting the story as if the IDF is doing the firing—targeting both the GHF and random civilians. The Washington Post falsely reported that the IDF shot into a crowd that had lined up for food, killing over 30. Two days later it printed a retraction.

Finally, less significant but arguably most horrifying of all, featured guests on the MyronGainesX podcast concluded that Jews must have deserved what the Nazis did to them.

A busy week for the Jew-hating jet-set. I’m a fiction writer, too, so if you’re wondering whether I made this all up: I’m not that good. Fiction requires plausibility. What we have here is antisemitism as surrealism. Paint the crooked contours and you have a Salvador Dalí. He, apparently, had no fondness for Jews, either.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled, “Beyond Proportionality: Israel’s Just War in Gaza.

Potpourri of Bad News…for Jews Read More »

Exclusive: ‘Headlines Are Saying We Shot Starving Civilians’ but Israeli Reservist Tells TML ‘It Was a Violent Attempt to Overrun the Corridor’

To read more stories from The Media Line, click here.

A reservist in Gaza refutes international media headlines accusing Israel of intentionally starving civilians

In the quiet outskirts of Tel Aviv, an active-duty soldier in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), who, for security reasons, will be referred to only as “Y”, is between rounds of duty after completing more than 300 days of service since October 7. In an exclusive interview with The Media Line, he recounts what he saw during one of the most contested incidents of the war, challenging headlines that claimed Israeli soldiers opened fire on starving civilians. 

An IDF reservist who was present at the scene also spoke with The Media Line and confirmed “Y’s” account of the incident, including the sequence of events and the nature of the crowd that approached the distribution site. 

Access to Gaza has been limited, and the foreign press has been unable to enter the area to tell the story accurately. Since the soldier gave this account, Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) has challenged Hamas’ claim of widespread starvation in Gaza with a statement on Thursday that “there is no famine in the Gaza Strip,” while acknowledging “there are issues of access to food” in certain “pockets” in Gaza.

Photos were circulated on social media showing 1,000 humanitarian aid trucks stalled outside the Gaza Strip. While the UN claims that Israel’s bureaucracy prevents distribution, Col. Abdullah Halabi of COGAT told Yahoo News, “The State of Israel allows the entry of humanitarian aid beyond the standards of international law, without restriction. As long as the international community makes an effort to bring in the aid, we will allow them to bring it in.” 

The IDF announced Thursday that, in response to the humanitarian situation in Gaza, it will renew the airdrop of aid into the Gaza Strip. The effort will be coordinated by COGAT and the Israeli air force and will include seven aid pallets containing flour, sugar, and canned food provided by international organizations. Additionally, the IDF stated that it will facilitate the movement of aid trucks within Gaza. 

While the Israeli army has acknowledged that mistakes occur amid the fog of war and that serious incidents are subject to internal review, “Y” emphasizes that his account is based solely on what he witnessed during his deployment. “I’m not saying everything always goes right—we’re people, and people make mistakes,” he notes. “But where I was, I didn’t see what the news are claiming. I saw something very different.” 

The soldier’s latest deployment placed him not in combat with enemy terrorists, but guarding one of the war’s most controversial flashpoints: a humanitarian corridor intended to deliver aid to civilians in Gaza. 

You see people fight each other over food. Trampling, throwing sand, stealing. It’s chaos. We’re not trained for that. We’re infantry. We’re supposed to fight terrorists, not manage riots.

 “This was the worst thing I’ve ever done,” says “Y.” “It was disgusting. You see people fight each other over food. Trampling, throwing sand, stealing. It’s chaos. We’re not trained for that. We’re infantry. We’re supposed to fight terrorists, not manage riots.”  

Assigned to a corridor, one of the three Safe Distribution Sites in southern Gaza, “Y” was part of the Israeli effort to allow aid trucks into the Strip without empowering Hamas. The system was coordinated with US aid officials and monitored by drones to weaken Hamas’s control over food distribution and, in turn, pressure the group to agree to a ceasefire and release hostages.  

“It made sense strategically,” he explains. “Take away their grip on aid, make life easier for civilians, and isolate Hamas. But on the ground, it turned into chaos.”  

There are no lines. No supervision. It’s a stampede. They push, they stab, they throw sand at each other. Sometimes they trample the weak. We tried to bring some order, but the system collapsed from the start.

According to “Y,” thousands of civilians pour into the compound daily. “It’s the size of a football field, surrounded by sand berms and barbed wire. People arrive on foot, in cars, on motorcycles, or on horses. They carry sacks. There are no lines. No supervision. It’s a stampede. They push, they stab, they throw sand at each other. Sometimes they trample the weak. We tried to bring some order, but the system collapsed from the start.”  

People beat each other, shoved kids aside, filled bags with sugar and rice, then sprinted out while gangs waited to rob them

What shocked “Y” most was how fast the humanitarian operation turned into disorder. “The site was supposed to have minimal friction. Instead, it became a magnet for chaos. People beat each other, shoved kids aside, filled bags with sugar and rice, then sprinted out while gangs waited to rob them.”  

He says that on several occasions, those trying to loot aid would hide among the crowd, then attempt to breach the sand barriers in groups. “They timed it. Always just before or just after the drones passed over. It wasn’t spontaneous.”  

They take it from civilians and resell it. We’ve arrested people doing it. Some are Hamas. Some are just opportunists. But it’s organized. It’s how Hamas keeps people dependent.

The danger didn’t end inside the compound. Outside, “Y” says, Hamas terrorists and criminal gangs waited to rob those who managed to secure food. “They take it from civilians and resell it. We’ve arrested people doing it. Some are Hamas. Some are just opportunists. But it’s organized. It’s how Hamas keeps people dependent.”  

He directly rejects reports of starvation in Gaza. “There is no one collapsing from hunger. That’s a blood libel. If there’s malnutrition in Gaza, it’s because Hamas wants it. They have the food, and they block it. They want the photos of skinny children. That’s their weapon.”  

He draws comparisons rarely heard in the international press. “Saudi Arabia bombed the Houthis for 10 years and sent 5,000 trucks of aid, but there was no global outrage. Israel has been bombing Hamas, a terrorist organization, for 21 months and has sent more than 23,000 aid trucks into Gaza but is somehow accused of starving Gaza.”  

 

Israel’s security establishment, meanwhile, maintains that it has not restricted the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza. Since May 19, the government reports that nearly 4,500 aid trucks have entered the Strip via two channels: through US-operated distribution centers that supply weekly food packages, and through UN-coordinated deliveries of flour, baby food, and ingredients for bakeries and communal kitchens.

 

Officials report that 50% of the aid goes through each channel, and that more than 1.5 million food packages and 2,500 tons of baby food have reached civilians. As of this week, however, the contents of some 950 trucks remain uncollected on the Gazan side of crossings, with Israel blaming UN agencies for delays in distribution.  

That frustration peaked on July 20, when international headlines reported that Israeli troops had opened fire on civilians waiting for food. “Y” says he was there and that nothing about that morning resembled the story broadcast to the world.  

According to his account, the incident began the night before. On July 19, around 10 p.m., eight to ten aid trucks arrived at the site. The delivery was standard procedure, meant to prepare for morning distribution. But soon after, a crowd began to approach.  

“They weren’t supposed to be there. It was closed. They saw the trucks and came to loot,” he says. “We fired warning shots. No one was hurt. They left, for the time being.”  

The army had posted the opening times on Palestinian Facebook groups. Drones circled overhead, broadcasting in Arabic: “The site will open at 9 a.m. Do not approach.” “Y” says the instructions were clear, constant, and public.  

Around 2 a.m., a small team was sent to a forward position one kilometer from the corridor, at a junction of several dirt paths. Their role was to intercept any suspicious movement before it reached the aid zone.  

At approximately 4:30 a.m., four Gazan men came into view. Voices echoed in the dark. Then came chants of “Allahu Akbar.”  

“That’s when it became obvious; this wasn’t just a spontaneous crowd,” he says. “It was coordinated.”  

Then four became a hundred. Then a thousand. All adult men. No women. No children. Just men running straight at us.

The four Gazan men emerged from behind a building. A warning shot was fired ten meters in front of them. They kept running. “Then four became a hundred. Then a thousand. All adult men. No women. No children. Just men running straight at us.”  

The soldiers were surrounded on three sides, with the food trucks behind them. “We heard Kalashnikov fire from behind the crowd. We didn’t see who fired it, but we heard it clearly,” he says.  

Nothing stopped them, not the drones, not the megaphones, not flash grenades or warning shots. In the end, we fired. There was no other choice.

With the mass approaching within 100 meters, a standing order was given: defend the position. “Nothing stopped them, not the drones, not the megaphones, not flash grenades or warning shots. In the end, we fired. There was no other choice.”  

“Hamas had two goals,” he says. “Steal the food and provoke a tragedy they could film.” According to “Y,” the same group had tried to storm the site at 10 p.m. and again at 2 a.m. “They came back stronger. More people. More vehicles. Gunfire behind them. They knew what they were doing.”  

“Y” describes intense restrictions placed on Israeli soldiers guarding the corridor. “We weren’t allowed to engage unless it was life-threatening. That’s how Hamas exploited it. They knew we had limits. They sent the crowd ahead like a shield. And when things exploded, the cameras were already rolling.”  

We had to choose between protecting the mission and being slaughtered on a rooftop. And then we get called war criminals.

The moral complexity, he says, is unbearable. “We had to choose between protecting the mission and being slaughtered on a rooftop. And then we get called war criminals.”  

By midday, headlines were saying we shot starving civilians. That’s not what happened. It wasn’t a line for food. It was a violent attempt to overrun the corridor.

By midday, headlines were saying we shot starving civilians. That’s not what happened. It wasn’t a line for food. It was a violent attempt to overrun the corridor. What angers him most is how quickly the story was rewritten. “By midday, headlines were saying we shot starving civilians. That’s not what happened. It wasn’t a line for food. It was a violent attempt to overrun the corridor.”  

Telegram channels later published the names of the dead. “All adult males. No women. No children.”  

The soldiers held their positions for over thirty minutes. At one point, a small force was actively defending the rooftop. “If they had broken through, we would’ve been overrun. There was no alternative.”  

Asked how he felt watching the international coverage, “Y” didn’t hesitate. “People want to believe lies. It helps justify their hate. But it only hurts the Palestinians. Because every time this propaganda is believed, Hamas gets stronger.”  

They wanted a bloodbath. Something to sell to the media. And they got it.

“Y” is convinced the entire event was staged. “They wanted a bloodbath. Something to sell to the media. And they got it.”  

On the proposal to restore distribution control to United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), his response is just as blunt: “UNRWA is Hamas. There’s no difference between them. Giving them back control is handing it straight to the terrorists.”  

In his view, there is only one path to end the current cycle. “Ceasefire and hostage return,” he says. But that, he insists, “can’t mean full withdrawal. There has to be a buffer zone. We can’t allow another October 7.”  

The lies will continue. The world will keep blaming us. But we’ll keep doing the job, because someone has to.

“Y” doesn’t expect the headlines to change. “The lies will continue. The world will keep blaming us. But we’ll keep doing the job, because someone has to.”  

Then, without raising his voice, he adds:  

“They weren’t hungry. They were coming for the trucks.” 

Meanwhile, the Foreign Press Association released a statement expressing concern over the humanitarian crisis, including reports of starvation in the Gaza and calling on Israel to allow the flow of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip.  

FPA

Foreign Press Association’s statement regarding the humanitarian situation in Gaza (FPA)

The IDF released a statement that starting Sunday July 27, it would work with COGAT to increase humanitarian aid coming into the Gaza Strip coinciding with a 10-hour pause in military operations the densely populated areas of Al-Mawasi, Deir al-Balah, and Gaza City daily until further notice. The Media Line has reported that aid distribution has not sufficiently reached these areas until now. 

IDF map showing areas of tactical pause in the Gaza Strip (IDF, X)

In addition, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates are reportedly planning to restart humanitarian airdrops into Gaza in coordination with the IDF. 

Exclusive: ‘Headlines Are Saying We Shot Starving Civilians’ but Israeli Reservist Tells TML ‘It Was a Violent Attempt to Overrun the Corridor’ Read More »