Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Los Angeles looks like Gaza a ‘war-torn’ country, Jamie Lee Curtis says

The actress drew criticism for comparing the impact of the wildfires in California and Israel’s war against Hamas.

Actress Jamie Lee Curtis speaks onstage during the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Awards at Palm Springs Convention Center on Jan. 3, 2025 in Palm Springs, California. Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Palm Springs International Film Society.
Actress Jamie Lee Curtis speaks onstage during the 36th Annual Palm Springs International Film Awards at Palm Springs Convention Center on Jan. 3, 2025 in Palm Springs, California. Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Palm Springs International Film Society.

Actress Jamie Lee Curtis compared the recent destruction by the wildfires in California to that of the Gaza Strip, drawing criticism.

“The entire City of Angels is on fire—everywhere, everywhere,” she said last week. “The entire Pacific Palisades looks like, unfortunately, Gaza or one of these war-torn countries where terrible things have happened.”

Joel Petlin, superintendent of the Kiryas Joel School District, wrote that “many Palestinian accounts are celebrating the wildfires in Los Angeles. This Hollywood celebrity should probably rethink her comparison.”

Curtis, whose father is the late Jewish actor Tony Curtis, has sided publicly with Israel since the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

She and more than 700 others from the entertainment industry signed an open letter in support of the Jewish state following the infiltration and assault that left 1,200 people dead and 251 taken hostage into Gaza. “This is terrorism. This is evil. There is no justification or rationalization for Hamas’s actions,” the letter stated.

“These are barbaric acts of terrorism that must be called out by everyone. They are a terrorist organization whose leaders call for the murder of Jews everywhere,” it added.

In recent days, an adviser to the United Nations and Code Pink was criticized for comparing California wildfires and Gaza.

Curtis has been using her social-media accounts to raise money for those affected by the California fires, as well as to call attention to the efforts of firefighters and others fighting the blazes and aiding victims.

Alex Welz is a writer in Erie, Pa., and former National Review fellow and graduate of University of Haifa (master’s in national security) and of Mercyhurst University (bachelor’s in intelligence studies).
If Ismael Jimenez were suspended, it would be “an encouraging sign of the much-needed systemic change for the district,” Mika Hackner, of the North American Values Institute, told JNS.
Prayer notes calling for peace have been sent from Arab countries to the holy site in Jerusalem, and some even from Iran.
Iraq’s Interior Ministry stated that it is using “precise intelligence information” to locate Shelly Kittleson, a U.S. freelance journalist who reports extensively from Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
The Israeli prime minister said strikes on steel production facilities weaken the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as the operation against Iran progresses “beyond the halfway point.”
Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of the U.S. Central Command, and Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, also discussed ongoing efforts to curb Iran’s reach.
“Organizations and individuals tied to terrorism have no place operating under the protection of Canadian law,” the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs wrote.