New York Times sparks backlash for op-ed by Gaza City mayor

The New York Times is dealing with criticism after it printed an opinion piece by the mayor of Gaza City that particulars what it’s like within the ruins.

The op-ed, titled “I am Gaza City’s Mayor. Our Lives and Culture Are in Rubble,” was written by Yahya Sarraj. The Sunday piece describes the destruction in Gaza and the way the Israelis have “pulverized” the town’s “cultural riches and municipal institutions.”

He wrote, “The unrelenting destruction of Gaza — its iconic symbols, its beautiful seafront, its libraries and archives and whatever economic prosperity it had — has broken my heart.”



He additionally criticized Israel for killing greater than 20,000 folks. The destruction has been in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 raid that massacred Israelis.

“Why did the Israeli tanks destroy so many trees, electricity poles, cars and water mains? Why would Israel hit a U.N. school? The obliteration of our way of life in Gaza is indescribable. I still feel I am in a nightmare because I can’t imagine how any sane person could engage in such a horrific campaign of destruction and death,” he wrote.

The Times’ resolution to publish the piece by Mr. Sarraj — who was appointed mayor in 2019 by Hamas terrorists — acquired the eye of individuals on social media.

“Oh, nothing to see here. Just @nytimes publishing an op-ed by Hamas appointed mayor of Gaza, Yahya Sarraj,” Arsen Ostrovsky, a world human rights lawyer who identifies himself as a Zionist, wrote on X. “I wonder, would NYT also publish an op-ed from al-Qaida justifying 9-11? Of course not, but there is no red line to this paper’s Jew hatred.”

Chaya Raichik, a contributor at Turning Point USA and creator of the TikTok account @libsoftiktok, slammed The Times for posting the opinion piece.

“Remember when the journalists lost their minds and a chief editor had to resign because they ran an op-ed by a sitting U.S. senator? Well, now The New York Times is running opinion pieces written by Hamas. Are their journalists outraged? NYT showing their true colors,” she wrote.

Ms. Raichik was referring to opinion editor James Bennet resigning in the summertime of 2020 after publishing a chunk by Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas that referred to as for using army pressure towards violent Black Lives Matter protesters. The op-ed created an uproar amongst Times staff.

The Washington Times has reached out to The New York Times for remark.