Tom Gross is a British-born journalist, international affairs commentator,[2] and human rights campaigner specializing in the Middle East.[3] Gross was formerly a foreign correspondent for the LondonSunday Telegraph andNew York Daily News.
He now works as an opinion journalist and has written for both Arab[4][5] and Israeli[6] newspapers, as well as European and American ones, both liberal[7] and conservative.[8] He also appears as a commentator on the BBC in English,[9] BBC Arabic,[10] and various Middle Eastern and other networks.[11][12]
His politics are mixed. The German newspaperDie Welt described Gross as "A liberal in the fight against left-wing liberal hypocrisy".[13] In a profile of Gross in the Saudi-owned pan-Arab newspaperAsharq Al-Awsat in 2019, it was noted that he started as a non-political entertainment and feature journalist before becoming a political commentator.[14][15]
Long involved in discreet behind-the-scenes bridge-building meetings between officials and activists from Israel and nations throughout the Arab world,[16] Gross was the first journalist sympathetic to Israel to be favorably profiled in a Saudi newspaper, at a time when Saudi outreach to Israel was in its infancy.[17]
Gross has also been interviewed by Israeli newspapers includingHaaretz[18] and byIranian opposition media. His call for good relations between Israelis, Jews and (anti-regime) Iranians was viewed on Instagram in Iran more than 2.4 million times the day after the Iranian regime fired 350 missiles and drones at Israel in April 2024.[19]
In 2014, former Pentagon officialMichael Rubin wrote that "Tom Gross is probably Europe’s leading observer of the Middle East".[20] Gross was similarly described in Toronto'sNational Post in April 2019.[21]
Gross's maternal grandfather,Kurt May, was a German-Jewish lawyer who fledNazi persecution toJerusalem, where Gross's mother was born.[28] May later led the legal battle of TheUnited Restitution Organization, which fought to attain restitution from German companies for persecuted Jews, Roma and others, after World War II. May was also a senior advisor to the U.S. chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg war crime trials.[29] Gross's maternal grandmother, Vera Feinberg, also escaped Nazi Germany for pre-stateIsrael, but her parents were deported toTheresienstadt (Terezin) concentration camp and later toTreblinka where they were gassed to death upon arrival.[30][31][32]
Gross has also cited the strong influence during his childhood of his godmother,[33]Sonia Orwell, widow of the writerGeorge Orwell and the model[34] for Orwell's heroine Julia in the novelNineteen Eighty-Four. Gross wrote inThe Spectator magazine that Sonia had no children of her own, and "she became almost like a second mother to me".[35]
Gross discussed his upbringing growing up surrounded by cultural and literary luminaries in London and New York, as well as his later career and work with Roma and human rights, in an interview in 2020.[36]
He has criticized the UN for not doing more to promote freedom in countries such as North Korea[58] and Mauritania.[59] He has also conducted various on stage interviews, including with a French hostage kidnapped byIslamic State[60] in Syria, a Nigerian schoolgirl kidnapped byBoko Haram[61] in Nigeria, and with the wife of the imprisoned Saudi liberal blogger and political prisonerRaif Badawi.[62]
Gross has advocated for the rights of the Roma,[63][64] Domari, Kurdish,[65] Yazidi[66] and Rohingya[67] minorities, and disabled people.[68]
Much of his work has concerned the way the international media covers the Middle East. He has been cited on the subject in papers such asThe New York Times[69] and interviewed inHaaretz[70] and on television[71] about this. He has been critical of theBBC, arguing that their Middle East coverage is often slanted againstIsrael,[72][73] and has subjected the coverage of Reuters,[74]The Guardian[75] and CNN[76] and what he termed the "cult ofRachel Corrie”[77] to scrutiny.
He has also been critical ofThe New York Times, both for their general foreign coverage,[78] and historically for what he terms their "lamentable record of not covering theHolocaust."[79]
Gross has consistently supported the creation of an independent Palestinian Arab state alongside Israel.[80][81][82] Gross, however, has stated that "to be viable and successful it is not only a question of what Israel will give the Palestinians, but of the Palestinians themselves engaging in good governance." He warned that "there is no point in creating a new Palestinian state if it will primarily be used as a launching ground for armed attacks on Israel, which would be likely to in turn only lead to a much bloodier war between Israelis and Palestinians than anything we have witnessed in the past."[83]
Gross has also lived and worked inPrague, where he served as correspondent (covering theCzech Republic,Slovakia, andAlbania) for the (London)Daily Telegraph andSunday Telegraph. He helped launch the Czech edition ofElle magazine, the first international glossy magazine in post-communist central and eastern Europe.[85] In addition, he wrote a regular op-ed column forThe Prague Post and op-eds for the Czech dailyLidové Noviny. He has acted as a consultant to the Prague Jewish museum.[86] InThe Guardian Gross has been critical of the fact that Prague still has no central state-funded Holocaust memorial, unlike most other European capital cities from which Jews were deported.[87]
Tom Gross has also campaigned on behalf of theRomani people. "This is one of the most painful and disturbing problems in Europe today, though it is often neglected or misreported by the mainstream media", he wrote.[88][89][90]
For two years, based in Prague, he served as a special advisor to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) on the plight ofCzech Roma, mainly relating to citizenship issues arising as a result of the breakup ofCzechoslovakia. He criticized the internationally renowned liberal icon and playwrightVáclav Havel, in columns inThe Spectator andThe Prague Post,[91] for not doing enough to help Roma while he served as Czech president.
Tom Gross has worked on a number of television programs and documentary films, includingBBC TV specials on Czech Roma, and onSudeten Germans. On the Middle East, he has appeared as a commentator onBBC World news,[92]CNN,Fox News, andNPR. He has been interviewed on international politics on Sky News Arabia,[93] i24 News,[94] Russia Today,[95] TRT World Turkey,[96] Israel Channel 13[97] and BBC Arabic.[98]
Gross is co-author ofOut of Tune:David Helfgott and the Myth ofShine (Warner Books, New York, 1998) and ofTheTime Out Guide to Prague (Penguin Books, London, 1995).Out of Tune was named the most important biography of a troubled genius byThe Huffington Post in April 2011.[99]
Gross is a voluntary director of theRaif Badawi Foundation[100] named after the imprisoned Saudi liberal dissident, and a member of the International Advisory Board ofNGO Monitor,[101] of Mideast Dig[102] and of Keren Malki, a charity helping special needs children in Israel.[103] He is a founding signatory to The Henry Jackson Society's Statement of Principles in London.[104]
^The Collected Essays, Journalism, and Letters of George Orwell: Volume 1: An Age Like This, 1920-1940 Edited by Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus (reissued June 2019)