Pop star Ariana Grande accuses Israel of ‘starving’ Gazans

The singer has condemned Israel’s war in Gaza but still refuses to acknowledge jihadism as the motivation behind the 2017 suicide bombing at her concert, which killed 22 of her fans.

By World Israel News Staff

Pop star Ariana Grande shared an anti-Israel post on Instagram Sunday, accusing the Israeli government of using hunger as a weapon of war against civilians in Gaza.

Grande, a Grammy-winning artist with more than 375 million Instagram followers, reposted content from a group calling itself Red Line for Gaza.

“Starving people to death is a red line,” the post read. “The government of Israel is crossing this red line before your eyes.”

The post added that “history will ask each of us what we did while we watched them starve to death. Demand aid be allowed in. Do it now, before it’s too late.”

This is not the first time that Grande has leveraged her platform to promote posts accusing Israel of war crimes.

Several months ago, she shared content from the far-left group Jewish Voice for Peace, which failed to differentiate between Hamas terrorists and civilian casualties.

“Trust Palestinians. The Israeli government is committing genocide,” the post read. The content also alleged that the IDF seeks to displace Palestinians in order to seize their land.

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Grande’s critics have noted the clear double standard in her activism.

In 2017, an Islamic terrorist carried out a suicide bombing at Grande’s concert in Manchester, England, killing 22 people — many of them children and teens — and injuring over 1,000.

The attack was the deadliest suicide bombing on British soil since 2005.

Despite the attack on her concertgoers, Grande has never publicly condemned Islamic extremism.

While she referred to the bombing as “the absolute worst of humanity,” she has avoided any mention of the jihadist motivation behind the massacre of her fans.

Grande, who said she developed PTSD as a result of the attack, has yet to name Islamic terrorism the cause of the bombing, even eight years later.

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