AFSC - American Friends Service Committee

01/08/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/09/2025 02:32

New York Times rejects Quaker ad for calling Israel’s actions “genocide”

Senna Ahmad

PHILADELPHIA (January 8, 2025) The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) - a Quaker organization that has worked for peace and justice for over a century - has cancelled planned advertising with the New York Times after the paper refused to allow an ad that referred to Israel's genocide in Gaza. The ad read: "Tell Congress to stop arming Israel's genocide in Gaza now! As a Quaker organization, we work for peace. Join us. Tell the President and Congress to stop the killing and starvation in Gaza."

"The refusal of The New York Times to run paid digital ads that call for an end to Israel's genocide in Gaza is an outrageous attempt to sidestep the truth," said Joyce Ajlouny, General Secretary for AFSC. "Palestinians and allies have been silenced and marginalized in the media for decades as these institutions choose silence over accountability. It is only by challenging this reality that we can hope to forge a path toward a more just and equitable world."

After receiving the text for the ad quoted above, a representative from the advertising team suggested AFSC use the word "war" instead of "genocide" - a word with an entirely different meaning both colloquially and under international law. When AFSC rejected this approach, the New York Times Ad Acceptability Team sent an email that read in part: "Various international bodies, human rights organizations, and governments have differing views on the situation. In line with our commitment to factual accuracy and adherence to legal standards, we must ensure that all advertising content complies with these widely applied definitions."

Many human rights organizations, legal scholars, genocide and holocaust scholars, and UN bodies have determined that Israel is committing genocide or genocidal acts in Gaza. This includes U.S.-based organizations like the Center for Constitutional Rights and the University Network for Human Rights, international human rights organizations Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, and several Palestinian human rights groups. The New York Times regularly looks to several of these organizations as sources for its own reporting.

In January of 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a provisional ruling that Israel's actions in Gaza were "plausibly genocidal." The case was brought by South Africa, and now has the support of 14 countries. The same week that the New York Times rejected AFSC's ad, the Washington Post ran an advertisement from Amnesty International that used the language of genocide.

"The suggestion that the New York Times couldn't run an ad against Israel's genocide in Gaza because there are 'differing views' is absurd," said Layne Mullett, Director of Media Relations for AFSC. "The New York Times advertises a wide variety of products and advocacy messages on which there are differing views. Why is it not acceptable to publicize the meticulously documented atrocities committed by Israel and paid for by the United States?"

AFSC has been supporting humanitarian efforts in Gaza since 1948 and currently has staff in Gaza, Ramallah, and Jerusalem. Since October of 2023, AFSC staff in Gaza have provided 1.5 million meals, hygiene kits, and other units of humanitarian aid to internally displaced people. In the U.S., AFSC programs are working to put pressure on the Biden administration and Congress to call for a permanent cease-fire, full humanitarian access, release of all who are held captive, and an end to U.S. military funding for Israel.

"Our courageous staff members in Gaza witness daily horrors and continue to provide vital support despite Israel's relentless attacks on their homes and families," said Joyce Ajlouny. "Our ad campaign aims to shed light on these atrocities while urging people in the U.S. to pressure the President and Congress to halt weapons shipments to Israel and advocate for an end to the genocide."

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The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) promotes a world free of violence, inequality, and oppression. Guided by the Quaker belief in the divine light within each person, we nurture the seeds of change and the respect for human life to fundamentally transform our societies and institutions. We work with people and partners worldwide, of all faiths and backgrounds, to meet urgent community needs, challenge injustice, and build peace.