UN staffer hospitalized in Israel has pro-Nazi tattoos
A source with knowledge of the matter told JNS that the United Nations employee was injured in a booby trap in Gaza likely set by Hamas.

Flag of United Nations at UN City in Østerbro in Copenhagen.
A staff member at the United Nations Mine Action Service, who is currently hospitalized in Israel, was discovered to have two prominent pro-Nazi tattoos, a source with knowledge of the matter told JNS.
The employee, who was injured in a booby trap attack in Gaza, was first taken to a hospital in Gaza before being transferred to Israel for further care, JNS understands.
The United Nations has blamed Israel for the attack that injured the staffer, although the Jewish state doesn’t operate in that part of Gaza, and the attack was likely a trap set by Hamas, according to the source.
The staffer has a tattoo on an arm that states, in German in heavy black letters, “my honor is loyalty,” which the Anti-Defamation League describes as the motto of the Waffen SS.
“It is a reference to the organization’s loyalty to Adolf Hitler,” per the ADL website. “Since World War II, neo-Nazis and other white supremacists around the world use this German phrase, or its equivalent in English or other languages, as a hate slogan.”
On the other arm, apparently, the U.N. staffer has a large tattoo of the face of an SS soldier or officer, wearing a Nazi hat, sunglasses and a collar with apparent Nazi symbols.
It was not immediately clear if the staffer was alert and aware of his surroundings. JNS sought comment from the United Nations.
Established in 1997, the U.N. Mine Action Service, which is a “specialized service of the United Nations located within the Department of Peace Operations,” per its site, “works to eliminate the threat posed by mines, explosive remnants of war and improvised explosive devices by coordinating United Nations mine action, leading operational responses at the country level, and in support of peace operations, as well as through the development of standards, policies and norms.”
The global body has long faced criticism over Jew-hatred. Israel has presented evidence that staff members of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency participated directly in the Oct. 7 attacks, and that a significant number of UNRWA employees have ties to Palestinian terror groups.
Jewish U.N. employees who spoke anonymously with JNS in 2024 said that anti-Israel propaganda is “completely organized and supported at the highest level by the U.N.” and that the global body “is being instrumentalized by Hamas” since Oct. 7.
“Lots of people are hiding the fact that they’re Jewish,” a Jewish U.N. employee told JNS last year. “They’re not saying they’re Jewish out of fear.”
©️JNS
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