Become a Member
Opinion

Hate multiplies when a blood libel goes viral

The rumour starters and spreaders seem invested in making Jews and Arabs enemies, says Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

January 30, 2020 14:42
A flooded street during a rainy day in Gaza City.
3 min read

This week, tragedy — a parent’s worst nightmare —struck an Arab family in Jerusalem. Their sweet son, the “flower of the family” as they called him, fell into a ditch filled with rainwater and drowned.

The torrential rains that hammered Israel this past month caused numerous deaths across the country, from swollen streams in the North to flooded neighbourhoods in Tel Aviv. Yet this tragedy was different. This personal nightmare was used by people far away to create and swiftly spread a blood libel against Jews.

When eight-year-old Qais Abd Abu Ramileh was reported missing, some took the opportunity to start rumours that he had been kidnapped by Jews. Video of a different child was sent around social channels, spread by people who cared more about spreading hate than finding the child.

Once the boy was found lifeless, Twitter user @BitarReal tweeted “KIDNAPPED & EXECUTED 7 year old #Palestinian child Qusai was kidnapped by a Herd of violent #Israeli settlers, assaulted & thrown in a water well was found this morning frozen to death in Beit Hanina, #Jerusalem after #Israeli forces assaulted search teams.”