Bella Hadid calls for home for Palestinians in Vogue feature
California (QNN)- Palestinian-American supermodel Bella Hadid has called for a home for Palestinians in her cover story for Vogue magazine’s April issue.
When Vogue featured Bella on its latest US issue, Bella spoke about her sympathies with the Palestinians.
Bella said that the Palestinian people deserve a place that they feel is home.
She also condemned the Israeli occupation government for their suppressive policies.
Bella also pushed back at claims which ‘Israel’ made that she wants to see the abolition of the state of ‘Israel’.
Israel’s official Twitter account made the accusation after Bella posted a video at a demonstration in Brooklyn last May.
The demonstration was against Israel’s brutal aggression in Gaza.
She joined protesters in chanting “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.”
Bella said that Israel’s accusations were deeply painful.
“I truly respect Judaism, and I think it’s a beautiful religion,” the supermodel told Vogue.
“This is about a government system suppressing people,” she also added.
“After that happened, I spent days miserable in my own thoughts, trying to write everything down.”
Bella also went on to explain how she empathises with the Palestinian people and their plight.
“I would never want anyone not to be able to have a place that they feel is their home.”
“But I feel that Palestinians deserve the same. It’s a big conundrum,” Bella said.
Moreover, Bella spoke of her surgery regrets, in particular, a nose job that she had when she was just 14-years-old.
“I wish I had kept the nose of my ancestors,” she told Vogue.
“I think I would have grown into it,” she added.
Vogue released the interview just days after the magazine censored references to Palestine from an Instagram post of her sister, fellow supermodel Gigi Hadid.
The European Union quickly agreed to expand sanctions on Iran over measures it took following the US-Israeli war, but failed to reach consensus on suspending its trade agreement with Israel despite growing pressure from several member states and human rights groups.
Over 1,100 musicians and cultural figures, including Kneecap, Massive Attack, and Paloma Faith, have called for a boycott of Eurovision 2026, demanding Israel be excluded over its ongoing genocide in Gaza and condemning the European Broadcasting Union of double standards.
Under Israeli military protection, settlers demolished a Palestinian school and nearby homes in the northern Jordan Valley, intensifying displacement pressure on Bedouin communities in the occupied West Bank.