Coverage of Israeli and Palestinian Captives Demonstrates Dehumanization in 
Action — FAIR



Three Israeli men held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip were freed on Saturday, 
February 8,  in exchange for 183 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. It was 
the latest round of captive releases stipulated by the January ceasefire deal 
that ostensibly paused Israel’s genocide in Gaza, launched in October 2023, the 
official Palestinian death toll of which has now reached nearly 62,000—although 
the true number of fatalities is likely quite a bit higher (FAIR.org, 2/5/25).

In all, 25 Israeli captives and the bodies of eight others were slated to be 
released over a six-week period, in exchange for more than 1,900 Palestinians 
imprisoned in Israel—the disproportionate ratio a reflection both of the vastly 
greater number of captives held by Israel and the superior value consistently 
assigned to Israeli life.

Hamas halted releases on Monday on account of Israel’s violations of the 
ceasefire agreement, with Reuters (2/10/25) oh-so-diplomatically noting that 
the “ceasefire…has largely held since it began on January 19, although there 
have been some incidents in which Palestinians have been killed by Israeli 
forces.”

But Saturday’s exchange offered a revealing view of the outsized role US 
corporate media play in the general dehumanization of the Palestinian people—an 
approach that conveniently coincides with the Middle East policy of the United 
States, which is predicated on the obsessive funneling of hundreds of billions 
of dollars in assistance and weaponry to Israel’s genocidal army. And now that 
President Donald Trump has decided that the US can take over Gaza by simply 
expelling its inhabitants, well, dehumanizing them may serve an even handier 
purpose.

Granted, it’s a lot easier for a news report to tell the individual stories of 
three people than to tell the stories of 183. But the relentless empathetic 
media attention to the three Israeli men—who, mind you, are not the ones 
currently facing a genocide—deliberately leaves little to no room for 
Palestinian victims of an Israeli carceral system that has for decades been 
characterized by illegal arbitrary detention, torture and in-custody death.
So it is that we learn the names and ages of the three Israelis, the names of 
their family members, and empathy-inducing details of their captivity and 
physical appearance, while the 183 Palestinians remain at best a side note, and 
at worst a largely faceless mass of newly freed terrorists.
‘Like Holocaust survivors’
Take, for example, the Saturday New York Times intervention (2/8/25) headlined 
“Hamas Makes Gaunt Israeli Hostages Thank Captors Before Release,” which 
recounts the plight of the “three frail, painfully thin hostages” who elicited 
the following comparison from Israeli foreign minister Gideon Saar: “The 
Israeli hostages look like Holocaust survivors.”


When we finally get around to the Palestinian prisoners, we are immediately 
informed that “at least some were convicted of involvement in deadly attacks 
against Israelis, who view them as terrorists.” Needless to say, such media 
outlets can rarely be bothered to profile Palestinian prisoners with less 
sensational biographies—like all the folks arbitrarily swept up in raids and 
never charged with a crime.

The article does acknowledge, more than 20 paragraphs later, that “many of the 
released Palestinian prisoners were in visibly poor condition,” too—albeit not 
meriting a comparison to Holocaust survivors—and that “Palestinian prisoners 
have recounted serious allegations of abuse in Israeli jails.” It also mentions 
that “Israeli forces raided the West Bank family homes of at least four of 
[the] men before their release, warning their relatives not to celebrate their 
freedom”—evidence, according to the Times, that Israel has simply been 
“particularly assertive in suppressing celebrations for detainees.”

And yet all of this “assertiveness” is implicitly justified when we are 
supplied with the biographical details of a handful of released detainees, who 
unlike the three Israelis are categorically ineligible for pure and 
unadulterated victimhood, consisting instead of the likes of 50-year-old Iyad 
Abu Shkhaydem, who “had been serving 18 life sentences, in part for planning 
the 2004 bombings of two buses in Beersheba, in central Israel, that killed 16 
people.”

Of course, the corporate media are more interested in obscuring rather than 
supplying context, which is why we never find the New York Times and its ilk 
dwelling too critically on the possibility that Palestinian violence might be 
driven by, you know, Israel’s usurpation of Palestinian land, coupled with 
systematic ethnic cleansing and regular bouts of mass slaughter.

In the media’s view, the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks that killed some 
1,200 Israelis and saw more than 250 taken captive was just about the most 
savage, brutal thing to have ever happened. Never mind Israel’s behavior for 
the past 77 years, which includes killing nearly 8,000 Palestinians in the Gaza 
Strip from September 2000 through September 2023, according to the Israeli 
human rights group B’Tselem.
But that’s what happens when one side is appointed as human and the other is 
not—and when the US media takes its cues from a genocidal state whose officials 
refer to Palestinians as “human animals.”
‘Shocked Israelis’
On Sunday, the New York Times ran another article (2/9/25) on the “torment” the 
Israeli hostages had endured. Times Jerusalem correspondent Isabel Kershner 
managed to find space in it to discuss the “bright magenta track suit” worn by 
a female Israeli hostage released last month, but not much space to talk about 
Palestinians, aside from specifying that “some” of the prisoners slated for 
release were “convicted of killing Israelis.” (Kershner, it bears recalling, 
was called out by FAIR back in 2012 for utilizing her Times post to provide a 
platform for her husband’s Zionist propaganda outfit. In 2014, it was revealed 
that her son was in the Israeli military.)


While Kershner described the three Israelis released on Saturday as being in 
“emaciated condition,” many other media outlets opted for “gaunt.” Reuters 
(2/8/25) announced that the “gaunt appearance” of the three hostages had 
“shocked Israelis”—and reminded its audience that “some” of the 183 released 
Palestinians were “convicted of involvement in attacks that killed dozens of 
people.”

NBC News (2/9/25) also went with “gaunt,” as did CNN (2/9/25). But aside from 
common vocabulary, a recurring theme throughout media coverage of the prisoner 
exchanges is the sheer humanity infused into the Israeli characters: their 
suffering, their weepy reunions with their families, their heart-rending 
discoveries that certain loved ones have not survived. This same humanity is 
blatantly denied to Palestinians; after all, emotionally conditioning audiences 
to empathize with Israel’s enemies would run counter to US machinations abroad 
and the Orientalist media traditions that help sustain them.

Again, many of the media reports do acknowledge that quite a few released 
Palestinians were looking worse for the wear, had difficulty walking, or had to 
be transferred to hospital. But such information is not presented as “shocking” 
to anyone—perhaps because maltreatment and abuse of Palestinian prisoners is 
business as usual in Israel.
Conspicuously, the continuous invocation of the factoid that “some” released 
Palestinians had been convicted of killing Israelis is never accompanied by the 
corresponding note that “some” of the released Israelis happen to be 
active-duty soldiers in an army whose fundamental purpose is to kill and 
displace Palestinians. When individual hostages’ army service is mentioned, it 
is done so in a positive light—as in Kershner’s recounting of the uplifting 
aftermath of the January 25 release of 20-year-old soldier Daniella Gilboa: 
“Days later, she was singing at a party marking the discharge of the army 
lookouts from Beilinson Hospital near Tel Aviv.”
Weaponization of empathy

To be sure, the media’s effective weaponization of empathy is crucial given 
that Palestinians are killed by Israelis at an astronomically higher rate than 
Israelis are killed by Palestinians. Any objective comparison of fatalities or 
consideration of history unequivocally establishes Palestinians as victims of 
Israeli aggression—hence the need for the US politico-media establishment’s 
re-education campaign.

Meanwhile, speaking of “humanity,” a Telegraph article (2/8/25) published on 
the Yahoo! News website quoted Israeli President Isaac Herzog as detecting a 
“crime against humanity” in the appearance of the three men released on 
Saturday, who had returned from captivity “starved, emaciated and pained.” This 
from a leader of a country that has just bombed an entire territory and a whole 
lot of its people to bits, while also utilizing starvation as a weapon of war. 
Starvation is furthermore par for the course in Israeli prisons; as even CNN 
(2/9/25) observed in one its articles on Saturday’s “pale, gaunt Israeli 
hostages”:


The Israeli prison system has come under fire for intentionally reducing food 
servings to Palestinian prisoners in what’s been described as the minimum 
required for survival, on the orders of then National Security Minister Itamar 
Ben Gvir last year.


It brings back memories of that time in 2006 that Dov Weisglass, an adviser to 
the Israeli government, offered the following rationale for restricting food 
imports into Gaza: “The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to 
make them die of hunger.”

In November 2023, the Associated Press reported that a 78-year-old female 
hostage released by Hamas had “said in an interview that she was initially fed 
well in captivity until conditions worsened and people became hungry.” In this 
case, the AP semi-connected the dots: “Israel has maintained a tight siege on 
Gaza since the war erupted, leading to shortages of food, fuel and other basic 
items.”

In other words, there’s no one but the Israeli government to thank for those 
shockingly “gaunt” faces—the Israeli ones in headlines and the Palestinians 
relegated to the bottom of stories. And with Israel gearing up to renew its 
genocidal onslaught with fanatical US encouragement, there are no doubt plenty 
of crimes against humanity yet to come.
Belén Fernández 


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