Antisemitism Watchdog Rips ‘Blood Libel’ Smear Against NYT for Reporting Israeli Rape of Gazans

“To weaponize the term ‘blood libel’ to dismiss Kristof’s thorough reporting is dangerous. It’s insulting to the term’s violent history and hinders our community’s ability to call out actual blood libels when they occur.”

by | May 14, 2026 | News | 2 comments

A Jewish-led organization dedicated to fighting antisemitism was among the groups and individuals who on Tuesday condemned attacks on The New York Times and one of its most prominent columnists, who published accounts by alleged Palestinian victims of sexual abuse perpetrated by Israeli soldiers and settlers.

Nicholas Kristof’s column, “The Silence That Meets the Rape of Palestinians,” combines interviews with 14 former Palestinian detainees and information from reports published by United Nations experts and human rights groups to highlight documented rape and other systemic sexual abuse of Palestinians jailed by Israel Defense Forces (IDF) troops, as well as sexual assaults and other abuses allegedly committed by Israeli settler-colonists. The column features the controversial claim by one former prisoner that he was raped by a dog unleashed upon him by Israeli soldiers.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry responded to the column in a social media post alleging that the Times “chose to publish one of the worst blood libels ever to appear in the modern press.”

“In an unfathomable inversion of reality, and through an endless stream of baseless lies, propagandist Nicholas Kristof turns the victim into the accused,” the ministry said.

Responding to the ministry’s post, the Nexus Project – a group “made up of individuals deeply committed to the fight against antisemitism” – said on Bluesky: “To weaponize the term ‘blood libel’ to dismiss Kristof’s thorough reporting is dangerous. It’s insulting to the term’s violent history and hinders our community’s ability to call out actual blood libels when they occur.”

“Kristof’s article is a challenging and important read,” the group added. “It takes courage and care to expose sexual violence.”

On Tuesday, the Israeli Foreign Ministry accused the Times of serving “a Hamas-driven narrative,” claiming the newspaper “deliberately timed its piece to undermine today’s horrific Civil Commission report documenting Hamas’ preplanned, systematic sexual atrocities on October 7, [2023] and against hostages thereafter – attempting to create false equivalence and belittle documented crimes.”

The Times refuted a claim by the ministry that the newspaper “said it was not interested” in reporting on Hamas sexual violence on and after the October 7 attack. In fact, the Times updated its earlier reporting on Hamas sex crimes after Israeli investigator called said critical details were “false.”

Critics of the column also cast aspersions upon the alleged Palestinian victims and rights groups that documented the sexual violence they suffered, linking them to Hamas. The Times and other US media have been accused of accepting Israeli claims at their word but treating Palestinian testimonies with skepticism or outright dismissal.

Numerous other pro-Israel accounts, including the American Jewish Committee and EndJewHatred, have either repeated the “blood libel” accusation against Kristof or amplified social media posts that did so.

Many – including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee – denied or questioned the veracity of Kristof, his sources, and the Times.

Well documented reporting about abuses committed by a particular nation-state is not a “blood libel,” and misusing Jewish history to protect the state of Israel from criticism like this is ultimately going to make people take all of Jewish history less seriously.

Joel S. (@joelhs.bsky.social) 2026-05-12T20:21:22.989Z

This, despite numerous reports by United Nations experts, as well as Israeli and international human rights groups, of Israeli rape and sexual violence against Palestinian men, women, and children in both Gaza and the illegally occupied West Bank – a pattern that goes back to the Nakba ethnic cleansing of Palestine during the establishment of the modern state of Israel.

Senior Israeli officials including Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir have defended soldiers accused of gang-raping a Palestinian prisoner in an attack caught on camera at the notorious Sde Teiman prison. The IDF is investigating the deaths of dozens of Palestinians at Sde Teiman, including one man who died after allegedly being sodomized with an electric baton.

Right-wing Israeli politicians, pundits, and others publicly argued that IDF troops should have free rein to rape, torture, and murder Palestinians as revenge for the Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.

An August 2025 investigation by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation featured Palestinian boys kidnapped by Israeli occupation forces in Gaza who said they suffered or witnessed sexual torture committed by their jailers.

Last year, Israel blocked a request from UN sex crimes experts to probe alleged sexual violence perpetrated by Hamas fighters during the October 7, 2023 attack, reportedly to avoid attendant scrutiny of rapes and other abuses allegedly committed by Israeli forces against imprisoned Palestinians.

Other Israelis and their defenders expressed incredulity or proclaimed the impossibility of dogs being trained to rape people.

“My brain does not know how to process the fact that The New York Times – the paper I grew up worshiping and hoping to work for one day – published, on the front page, that Israelis are training dogs to rape Palestinian prisoners,” tech entrepreneur and anti-progressive commentator Michelle Tandler said Monday on X.

However, in addition to repeated Palestinian claims of such abuse, female Holocaust survivors have said they were assaulted by dogs specially trained by Nazi SS officer Klaus Barbie. Later, Ingrid Oderock, a Chilean raised in a Nazi colony in the South American country, became one of the most feared torturers during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Her specialty, as noted in the Academy Award-nominated animated short film Bestia, was training dogs to rape jailed female dissidents.

Israel has repeatedly attempted to neutralize criticism of its crimes during the Gaza onslaught – from the deadly famine that’s claimed at least hundreds of lives, to the apparently deliberate shooting of children, to attacks on aid workers and civilian “safe zones,” to the torture of Palestinian prisoners – by smearing those who expose them with accusations of blood libel.

Responding to the common Israeli smear, socialist author Owen Jones said on Bluesky: “Israel’s crimes are not a ‘blood libel.’ They are documented truth.”

Brett Wilkins is is staff writer for Common Dreams. Based in San Francisco, his work covers issues of social justice, human rights and war and peace. This originally appeared at CommonDreams and is reprinted with the author’s permission.

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