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Wednesday, March 27, 2024 | Back issues
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Congresswomen Denounce ‘Cruel Reality’ of Israeli Occupation

Democratic Congresswomen Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib sharply criticized Israel on Monday for denying them entry to the country and called on fellow members of Congress to visit, though they cannot.

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Democratic Congresswomen Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib sharply criticized Israel on Monday for denying them entry to the country and called on fellow members of Congress to visit, though they cannot.

Omar, of Minnesota, suggested President Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu were suppressing their congresses’ ability to carry out their oversight role.

"I would encourage my colleagues to visit, meet with the people we were going to meet with, see the things we were going to see, hear the stories we were going to hear," Omar said at a news conference. "We cannot let Trump and Netanyahu succeed in hiding the cruel reality of the occupation from us."

At Trump's urging, Israel denied entry to the first two Muslim women elected to Congress, for their support for the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions global movement. Tlaib and Omar, who had planned to visit Jerusalem and the Israeli-occupied West Bank on a tour organized by a Palestinian group, are outspoken critics of Israel's treatment of Palestinians.

Tlaib, a U.S.-born Palestinian-American from Michigan, also planned to visit her aging grandmother in the West Bank. Israeli officials relented and said she could visit her grandmother after all.

But Tlaib got emotional as she told how her "Sitty" — an Arabic term of endearment for one's grandmother — urged her during a tearful late-night family phone call not to come under such humiliating circumstances.

"She said I'm her dream manifested. I'm her free bird," Tlaib said. "So why would I come back and be caged and bow down when my election rose her head up high, gave her dignity for the first time?"

Tlaib and Omar were joined Monday by Minnesota residents who said they had been directly affected by travel restrictions in the past. They included Lana Barkawi, a Palestinian-American, who lamented that she has never been able to visit her parents' homeland.

Barkawi said she had a chance to visit her father’s village in the West Bank near Nablus during a family visit to Jordan about 25 years ago, but her parents decided not to risk crossing the border.

"My father could not put himself to be in a position where an Israeli soldier is the person with control over his entry into his homeland," Barkawi said. "This is an enduring trauma that he and my mother live."

Before Israel barred the two Muslim congresswomen, Trump tweeted it would be a "show of weakness" to allow them in—a highly unusual case of a U.S. president siding with a foreign power against members of his own Congress. Israel controls entry and exit to the West Bank, which it seized in the 1967 Mideast war along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, territories the Palestinians want for a state.

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley kept up the administration's criticism of the two Muslim lawmakers.

"Congresswomen Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar have a well-documented history of anti-Semitic comments, anti-Semitic social media posts and anti-Semitic relationships," he said in a statement. "Israel has the right to prevent people who want to destroy it from entering the country — and Democrats' pointless congressional inquiries here in America cannot change the laws Israel has passed to protect itself."

“Anti-Semitism” is often used as a code word against people who criticize Israel’s treatment of Palestinians.

Supporters of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement say it is a nonviolent way of protesting Israel's military rule over Palestinians, but Israel says it aims to delegitimize the state and eventually wipe it off the map.

The two congresswomen are part of the "squad" of four liberal House newcomers — all women of color — whom Trump is trying to label as the face of the Democratic Party as he runs for reelection. He subjected them to a series of racist tweets last month in which he called on them to "go back" to their "broken" countries. They are U.S. citizens — Tlaib was born in the United States and Omar became a citizen after moving to the U.S. as a refugee from war-torn Somalia.

"There is no way that we are ever, ever going to allow people to tear us down, to see us cry out of pain, to ever make us feel like our (citizenship) certificate is less than theirs," Omar said. "So we are going to hold our head up high. And we are going to fight this administration and the oppressive Netanyahu administration until we take our last breath."

Categories / International, Politics

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