
No, Jesus Was Not a Palestinian
Claims that Jesus was a Palestinian distort history and force a modern identity onto a 1st-century Jewish man.
Every December, the claim resurfaces with renewed confidence: ‘Jesus was a Palestinian’ — sometimes expanded to ‘Jesus was a Palestinian living under occupation’.
In recent days, this phrase has been repeated by Palestinian Authority media, prominent activists, and high-profile public figures. It has even been displayed on a billboard in Times Square, New York City.
The claim is presented as a moral truism, yet it is historically false.
So, in the interest of stating a truth so obvious it should not require repetition: Jesus was not a Palestinian.
Inflammatory Times Square billboard proclaiming ‘Jesus is Palestinian’ slammed by holiday tourists: ‘A divisive message’ https://t.co/KKgrpTuvYz pic.twitter.com/9x5YiSmtXr
— New York Post (@nypost) December 25, 2025
What Was Jesus, Historically?
When Jesus walked the earth, both in the biblical narrative and in non-Christian historical sources, his people were known to the Romans as Iudaei and to the Greeks as Ioudaioi: Judeans. These were not vague religious labels but concrete ethno-geographic identifiers.
The lands in which Jesus lived and preached were known administratively as:
- Provincia Iudaea — the Roman Province of Judea, and
- The Tetrarchy of Galilee and Perea — a Roman client state formed from the dissolution of the Herodian Kingdom
These were Roman exonyms. The endonyms used by the local Jewish population to refer to themselves — attested in inscriptions and contemporary writings — were Israel and Yehudim, or Israelites and Judeans.
The everyday spoken language was Aramaic, in which these Hebrew terms were used with little alteration. The regions were called Yehudah (Judea), Ha-Galil (Galilee), and Shomron (Samaria). These names were neither symbolic nor theological; they were the normal, everyday geographic terms used by the population living there.
Recall that Jesus was crucified with the title ‘King of the Jews’. Neither Jesus nor any of his contemporaries would have described him as a ‘Palestinian’ — nor would they have referred to the land in which he lived as ‘Palestine’.
What About ‘Palestine’?
The term Palaistinē did exist in Greek geographical writing centuries before Jesus, deriving from Philistia, the land of the Philistines. In Greek usage, however, it referred loosely to a broad eastern Mediterranean region that could include parts of what we now call Syria, Lebanon and Israel.
This usage is comparable to how we use the word Levant today. We speak of the Levant as a region — but we do not identify a distinct ethnic people called ‘Levantines’. Likewise, Greek writers of the Roman period did not recognise a people called ‘Palestinians’.
The inhabitants of the region were identified as Judeans, Samaritans, Phoenicians, Syrians, and others but — never Palestinians.
Syria Palaestina: A Political Renaming
More than a century after Jesus’ death, following the suppression of the Bar Kokhba revolt (AD 132–135), the Romans reorganised the territory and renamed it Syria Palaestina.
This was not a recognition of a Palestinian people. It was a punitive, political act designed to sever the land’s official association with the Jews by erasing the name Judaea. Jews remained Iudaei in Roman records; Samaritans remained Samaritans. No new ethnic group was created, and no population identified itself — or was identified by others — as Palestinian.
The modern analogy would be forcibly renaming a country with a neutral geographic label to deny its historical association with a particular people.
The Modern Palestinian Identity
The word Palestinian as an ethnonym — that is, denoting a distinct people — does not appear prior to the early 20th century. For centuries, including during Roman, Byzantine, early Islamic and Ottoman rule, ‘Palestine’ remained a geographic or administrative term, not a national identity.
Notably, both Arab and Ottoman sources did not recognise a distinct Palestinian people. The borders of historical ‘Palestine’ also varied widely and do not correspond neatly to modern political claims.
Ironically, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Jews living in the region — including Zionist immigrants — freely referred to themselves as Palestinians in the geographic sense. Jewish newspapers, businesses, and institutions used the term without controversy, because it implied no exclusive ethnic ownership.
The shift occurred after World War I, during the British Mandate, when Arab leaders began asserting that only Arab Muslims were Palestinians — and that Jews were categorically excluded from Palestinian identity. Thus, what had been a geographic descriptor was recast as an exclusive national identity, retroactively projected into the ancient past. This identity was solidified by the KGB and Yasser Arafat in 1964 in a purely Cold-War political move.
Would Jesus Be a Palestinian Today?
If Jesus was alive today, would he be a Palestinian? Absolutely not — and for a very simple reason: Jesus was a Jew, and under the contemporary Palestinian national framework, Jews cannot be Palestinians. There are no Jewish citizens of ‘Palestine’ (that is, areas A and B of the West Bank, and Gaza).
So, if Jesus was born today, what would he be? By modern political definitions, Jesus would be labelled a settler.
This is not a provocation for its own sake. Short of his mother being held hostage in Bethlehem, the only plausible way for a Jew to be born in that area today would be within one of the Jewish communities nearby. His upbringing would likely take place in a Jewish town in the Galilee, not in predominantly Arab Nazareth.
His preaching would repeatedly bring him to Jerusalem and the Temple Mount — an activity that, in today’s political reality, would almost certainly provoke riots rather than reverence.
Conclusion
History does not bend to modern slogans.
Jesus was not a Palestinian.
He was a Kosher Jew from Judea, living among Judeans, speaking their language, worshipping in their Temple using the Hebrew language, and identifying with their people.
Projecting a 20th-century political identity onto a 1st-century Jewish preacher does not illuminate history — it distorts it.
TL;DR: No, Jesus wasn’t a Palestinian.
___
Image courtesy of Unsplash.
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Absolute NONSENSE ! Jesus was a Jew of the House of David , NOT an Arab invader, ie modern “Palestinian ” . The language he spoke was Aramaic , not Arabic like the “Palestinians”.
Thanks Antonia. Jesus also spoke Hebrew and Greek; possibly a little Latin as well.
Brilliant explanation Kym. Thanks.
If only we could project THIS onto the billboards.
Thanks Leonie. We must speak the truth LOUDLY.
You talk as if Jesus isn’t alive today. According to you it’s all past tense.
Read the billboard – it says Jesus IS Palestinian – not was. Bethlehem is a Palestinian city. If he were to go there today he would be embraced by the Palestinian Christians. Thats why today Jesus is a Palestinian.
Just remember he’s the stone that the builders rejected. Embraced by Palestine, rejected by his own.
Let’s check the facts..
1. God the Son is well alive today, at the right hand of the Father
2. God the Son incarnate was born in Bethlehem Judea as a Kosher Jew, to Jewish parents (3 or 4 BC – calendar issues).
3. As a Jew, per my article, IF born today, he would not be accepted in Areas A or B of the west bank
Never ever a palestinian (which is a fabricated identity anyway)
Braden as a Lebanese woman , Jesus is not Palestinean, never was , never will be. Palestinians are Egyptian /Jordanian at best. Please don’t insult Jesus with this BS
Sadly! I think you’re a little confused Braden!
The Jesus that Muslims revere is NOT the same Jesus Christ that we worship as Lord and Saviour.
Muslims believe He didn’t die on the cross, but that another man replaced Him. They openly believe that , as in their openly observable writing, Allah I’d God and he has no son.
This denies the divinity of Jesus Christ as God incarnate.
The Jesus they say is coming, will be on their side and a force of destruction. against us.
NOT the same Jesus, Yeshua.
Well done Kym.
Braden, respectfully, Jesus’ lineage is of the Jew King David. Also Bethlehem is in Judea. Matthew 2.1
In arguing that Jesus was a Jew and not a Christian it is also worth pointing out that he was baptised by John the Baptist. This was a Jewish baptism, not a Christian one.
It’s not about his religious affiliation (Jew) but where he is from (Palestine). Yes sure, Jesus is not a Christian and Kym has proved that he is a Jew. That’s not the issue, we all agree that Jesus is a Jew (and as Kym has pointed out definitely that Jesus is in no way a Christian).
But right now Jesus is alive and if we were to give him a map and say ‘Our Lord and Saviour, where are you from?
He would point to Palestine.
He’s a Palestinian. A Jew from Palestine. However you want to say it, a Palestinian Jew. Still a Palestinian.
Bit like if I’m to say I’m a Queenslander. And people go, no you’re not! You’re a Christian! And I say I’m a Christian Queenslander! And they put up a billboard that says I’m a Queenslander.
That’s still true, that’s where I am from.
The writer states: ‘IF Jesus was alive today, would he be a Palestinian? Absolutely not — and for a very simple reason: Jesus WAS a Jew.’
Since when on a Christian website did we start asking ‘IF Jesus was alive today’? Since when did we stop believing in the resurrection and believe he was dead? Since when did we start referring to Jesus as if he no longer exists?
This is majorly problematic.