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Something historic is stirring inside the American Jewish community. Not a murmur of dissent, but a seismic re-evaluation — of identity, of loyalty, of the weaponised invocation of Jewish safety in defence of mass destruction. Gaza did not merely divide opinion. For a critical and growing fraction of Jewish Americans, it shattered a foundational consensus that had endured for decades: that support for Israel was not just politics, but patrimony.
The numbers are no longer on the fringe. A landmark Washington Post poll conducted in September 2025 — the most comprehensive of its kind — found that 61 percent of American Jews believe Israel has committed war crimes in Gaza. Nearly four in ten — 39 percent — go further, using the word genocide. A University of California, Berkeley and University of Rochester survey released the same year found that only 31 percent of American Jews support Israel’s military campaign, while 58 percent oppose it outright. Among young Jews — those between 18 and 34 — emotional attachment to Israel has collapsed: only 36 percent now feel a bond, down from 68 percent among those over 65.










