Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Celebrity US chef feeding Gaza calls for ‘ceasefire, with hostages released on both sides’

José Andrés, founder of World Central Kitchen, demanded that Israel “stop killing children, targeting humanitarian volunteers and press.”

José Andrés
José Andrés, founder of World Central Kitchen, with Samantha Power, administrator of USAID, on April 12, 2022. Credit: U.S. Agency for International Development.

José Andrés, the celebrity chef and founder of World Central Kitchen who is donating food to Gazans, called on U.S. President Joe Biden to demand that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “stop killing children, targeting humanitarian volunteers and press.”

He also insisted that the U.S. president demand that his Israeli counterpart “open more routes by road into Gaza to feed everyone” and call for a ceasefire, “with hostages released on both sides.”

Many pointed out that Israel is not holding hostages.

“There are absolutely no Palestinian hostages in Israel. This is so disgusting and deeply disappointing,” wrote Karol Markowicz, a prominent conservative columnist.

“I have always admired José Andrés and absolutely adore his food. That said, I cannot stomach the idea that ‘both sides’ have hostages,” wrote Carly Pildis, director of community engagement at the Anti-Defamation League.

“Hamas has hostages, including babies and women who are being raped as we speak,” Pildis added. “Israel has convicted terrorists. It’s not the same.”

“The defendant is a hate-mongering menace, who intended to hurt and kill children in the Jewish community and in other minority communities in New York City,” stated the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
The U.S. Justice Department said the man moved Iranian nationals through Turkey and Mexico into the U.S., including one who admitted to working for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Talking to Michal Herzog at the President’s Conference in Jerusalem, the famous actress shares that being Israeli abroad has become “very complicated.”
“It’s both a Jewish story and an American story at the same time,” a curator at the Washington, D.C., museum told JNS of a series by Mitch Epstein.
The two met as the ceasefire has run up against Hamas’s refusal to disarm.
“Advancing religious freedom protects a fundamental human right that underpins a nation’s security, economic prosperity and stability,” said the chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.