
Despite the United States mainstream mediaās backing of Israelās genocidal war in Gaza, more young people in the US are critical of Israelās war and taking leading roles in the movement against it.
A December New York Times/Siena College poll found that younger Americans are far more critical than older voters of Israelās conduct and the administrationās response to the war in Gaza.
Among 18ā29 year-olds, 46% said they sympathise more with the Palestinians, compared with 27% for Israel. Nine percent said they sympathise with both, and 19% either didnāt know or didnāt answer.
Among 30ā44 year-olds, 24% said they sympathised more with the Palestinians compared with 36% for Israel. That number dropped to 13% for 45ā64 year olds and 11% among voters over 65.
āFew of them believe Israelis are serious about peace with the Palestinians,ā reported the NYT. āNearly half say Israel is intentionally killing civilians. Nearly three fourths say Israel is not taking enough precautions to avoid civilian casualties. And a majority opposes additional economic and military aid to Israel.ā
Keesha Middlemass, a political scientist at Howard University, told USA Today āYoung people are finally seeing the impact of Americaās war machine," adding that the poll shows young people are also questioning the governmentās āblind loyaltyā to Israel, āwithout consideration of the rights of Palestinians to existā.
The NYT reported that voters who identified as āregular users of TikTok were the most adamant in their criticismā of the Joe Biden administrationās policies toward Israel.
Disturbing images of civilian casualties and hospital bombings that are filling Tik Tok and Instagram are labeled by the mainstream media, including the NYT, as āinflammatory propagandaā. However, given the absence of on-the-spot coverage from Gaza by the US mainstream media, they provide insight into what is really happening on the ground.
Jewish youth
This generational division is also seen among Jewish youth. According to a December 20 NYT report, āGen Z and young Millennials often see Israel as an occupying power oppressing Palestinians ā a shock to their parents and grandparents, who tend to see it as an essential haven fighting for survival.ā
Louisa Kornblatt, a young Jewish woman from Wisconsin, previously āshared her parents belief that the safety of Jewish people depended upon a Jewish stateā, reported the NYT. However, after being prompted through her postgraduate social work studies to consider āquestions around power, privilege and whitenessā, she ācame to feel that her emotional ties to Jewish statehood undermined her vision for ācollective liberationāā.
Louisa told the NYT she ābecame increasingly involved in pro-Palestinian activism, including through Jewish Voice for Peace, an anti-Zionist activist group and the If Not Now movement.
āI donāt think the state of Israel should ever have been established,ā she said. āItās based on this idea of Jewish supremacy. And Iām not on board with that.ā
As Louisaās political views were changing, her parents decided in 2019 to move to Israel, along with her older brother.
In November, as Louisa prepared to travel to Tel Aviv to be with her family, she told the NYT she questioned āhow her parents could argue about a political solution that felt morally urgent to her: a permanent cease fire. āIt feels so simple ā just donāt murder people. Donāt kill people. Just stop it ⦠It feels so simple, and a lot of my momās responses are like, Itās so complex.āā
ā[T]he day after her arrival, her parents went to the square in Tel Aviv where families of hostages being held in Gaza were rallying for their release, while Louisa went to an antiwar, pro-cease-fire protest.ā
Family tensions grew sharper when Louisa volunteered to help Palestinian families in the West Bank.
Young Blacks turn against Biden
For many young African Americans, Bidenās war mongering and empire building is a signal that he canāt be counted on to fight racism at home.
The Associated Press reported on December 17 that Cydney Wallace, a Black Jewish community activist, visited Israel and the West Bank in September āat the invitation of a Palestinian American community organizer from Chicagoās south side, along with two dozen other Black Americans and Muslim, Jewish and Christian faith leaders.ā
The trip ā which ended abruptly due to the Hamas break out and attack on October 7 ā had a ābig impactā on Wallaceās view of Israel and Palestine.
University student, Demetrius Briscoe, voted for Biden in 2020, but is āon the fence about whether he will support the presidentā.
Briscoe told USA Today he ādoesnāt think many of his peers will vote for Biden because he hasnāt demanded a cease-fireā and that Bidenās support for Israel is āputting a stain on his presidency that I don't think will be easily washed away".
Delaney Leonard, a 19-year-old student who helped organise a pro-Palestine rally in October at Howard University ā a historically Black university in Washington, DC ā told USA Today she has no intention of voting for Biden and is looking for alternative candidates to support.
Khadirah Muhammad, a student at Georgia State University, who took part in a pro-Palestine rally on campus in October, told USA Today she āremembers seeing on social media the Black Lives Matter murals in Gaza and watching Palestinians demonstrating during the 2020 George Floyd protests. For her, it was a symbol of solidarity with Palestinians also in the struggle for freedom.ā
Many Jewish faith leaders, students and activists were key supporters of Martin Luther King Jnr and the Civil Rights Movement. Progressive Jewish anti-Zionist groups are actively calling for solidarity with Palestine.
Black-Palestinian solidarity runs deep
For decades, some segments of the African American community have expressed strong support for the Palestinians and many polls show that Black people are more critical of US policy in the Middle East.
A poll conducted in November by GenForward, operated by the University of Chicago, found that 63% of Black voters plan to vote for Biden in 2024, compared to 17% who said they will vote for Trump if he is the nominee.
In the same poll, 16% of Black voters said they are more sympathetic towards Palestinians than Israelis in the conflict, compared to 13% who said they are more sympathetic towards Israelis. Thirty-nine percent of Black voters said they are sympathetic to both groups and 32% said they did not know.
In Decemberās NYT/Siena College poll, 34% of Black voters of all ages said they are more supportive of Palestinians than Israel in the conflict, compared to 28% who are more supportive of Israel. Eleven percent are sympathetic to both and 27% either didnāt know or refused to answer.
Black revolutionary socialist Malcolm X travelled to Gaza in 1964 when it was still part of Egypt (Israel took it over in the 1967 Six-Day War). He wrote and published his seminal essay in the Egyptian Gazette on September 17, 1964.
A strong opponent of colonialism and exploitation in its various forms, Malcolm X was critical of how Judaism, Zionism, and colonialism were mixing to continue a dangerous precedent, and wrote: āIf the āreligiousā claim of the Zionists is true that they were to be led to the promised land by their messiah, and Israel's present occupation of Arab Palestine is the fulfillment of that prophesy: where is their messiah whom their prophets said would get the credit for leading them there?
āIt was [United Nations mediator] Ralph Bunche who ānegotiatedā the Zionists into possession of Occupied Palestine! Is Ralph Bunche the messiah of Zionism?
āIf Ralph Bunche is not their messiah, and their messiah has not yet come, then what are they doing in Palestine ahead of their messiah?
āDid the Zionists have the legal or moral right to invade Arab Palestine, uproot its Arab citizens from their homes and seize all Arab property for themselves just based on the āreligiousā claim that their forefathers lived there thousands of years ago?
āOnly a thousand years ago the Moors lived in Spain. Would this give the Moors of today the legal and moral right to invade the Iberian Peninsula, drive out its Spanish citizens, and then set up a new Moroccan nation...?
āIn short, the Zionist argument to justify Israel's present occupation of Arab Palestine has no intelligent or legal basis in history ... not even in their own religionā¦ā
Three decades later, South African leader Nelson Mandela said in a 1997 speech on the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People: āWe know too well that our freedom [as South Africans] is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.ā