Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Kosher meals labeled ‘Free Palestine’ served on Iberia flight

Argentina’s umbrella Jewish group condemned the incident aboard the Spanish airline plane as a “serious antisemitic incident.”

A kosher meal labeled "Free Palestine" aboard a flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid, Spain on Aug. 5, 2025. Credit: DAIA.
A kosher meal labeled “Free Palestine” aboard a flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid, Spain on Aug. 5, 2025. Credit: DAIA.

Jewish passengers aboard a flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid had the phrase “Free Palestine” scribbled on their kosher meals on Tuesday, according to an Argentine Jewish group.

DAIA, the umbrella group of Jewish communities in Argentina, wrote on X that one Jewish passenger aboard flight IB0102, Salvador Auday, received the full phrase written in black ink on the label of his kosher meal, whereas others had only the initials “FP” written on their meals.

“We condemn this discriminatory act and have contacted the airline’s authorities to demand explanations and immediate actions,” wrote DAIA, which also called the case a “serious antisemitic incident.”

In a statement, Iberia confirmed that some passengers on the flight had reported “handwritten pro-Palestinian messages” on their meal packaging, the AFP news agency reported. Iberia said it was looking into the circumstances that led to this.

“The Iberia crew documented the incident and took action to assist those affected. The captain personally approached them to apologise on behalf of the airline,” according to AFP.

The kosher meal incident closely follows the controversy around a flight operated by Vueling, a Spanish low-cost airline, in which 44 French-Jewish teenagers and eight adults were taken off a flight from Valencia to Paris, allegedly because they had sung in Hebrew.

The airline claimed the teenagers were being disruptive, but witnesses disputed this. An instructor of the teenagers, who were returning from a Jewish summer camp experience, was handcuffed and arrested on the boarding bridge. While she and others said that the real reason for the disembarkation was antisemitism, Vueling denied this.

Spain’s government is leading one of the most virulently anti-Israel policies within the European Union. Its prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, in May called Israel a “genocidal state” and his country has imposed a blanket arms embargo on the Jewish state.

In recent weeks, several cases have been reported in which Israelis were harassed, intimidated and even assaulted in Spain.

On July 8, Israeli tourists were chased out of a restaurant in the Spanish city of Vigo. Also in July, a group of Israelis said they had been followed and intimidated outside their hotel near Barcelona.

A group of men had stalked the three Israeli tourists, who said they were threatened several times during their vacation until, at a certain encounter, the perpetrators, armed with sticks, chased the Israelis on the street in Lloret de Mar, the Israelis said. The tourists made it back to their hotel safely, Israel’s Channel 12 News reported.

Earlier in July, Spain’s Observatory against Antisemitism—an entity co-founded by the country’s Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain (FCJE)—published its annual report for 2024, in which it documented 193 antisemitic incidents—a record tally that constitutes a 321% increase over 2023 and an increase of 567% over 2022.

Most of these acts documented were linked to the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, the report said.

Canaan Lidor is an award-winning journalist and news correspondent at JNS. A former fighter and counterintelligence analyst in the IDF, he has over a decade of field experience covering world events, including several conflicts and terrorist attacks, as a Europe correspondent based in the Netherlands. Canaan now lives in his native Haifa, Israel, with his wife and two children.
“Opining on world affairs is not the job of a teachers’ union,” said Mika Hackner, director of research at the North American Values Institute.

“We’re launching a campaign to show the difference in the attitude towards Israel and towards Iran,” Daniel Meron, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, told JNS.
Sara Brown, of the AJC, told JNS that “today we saw the very best of the democratic process.”
“Campaigns defined largely by opposition to AIPAC, our members and the values we represent continue to fall short on election night,” the pro-Israel group said.
Jewish organizations are urging Toronto police to lay hate charges after antisemitic caricatures of Jews were displayed at a Bathurst and Sheppard protest.
“It’s just absolutely critical that we get more funding appropriated, and at the same time, we also need to make sure that we break the log jam,” the Florida legislator said.