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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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March 26, 2019
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Linda
Sarsour's NYU Makeover
IPT News
March 26, 2019
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Be the
first of your friends to like this.
She certainly looked
like Linda Sarsour, the flame-throwing Islamist political activist. And the
speaker had Sarsour's voice. But the woman who spoke Monday night at New York University's Skirball
Center for the Performing Arts seemed entirely unfamiliar with Sarsour's
own views.
Arguing that "unity is not uniformity," Sarsour said she's
"cool with" people who don't share her views on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict as long as they can work together on other
causes.
"It doesn't matter to me who you are," she said. "Come to
the aid of people who are the most broken in our country, and that's the
thing that I never just understood. I never went to a movement and asked
people to fill out a form and say, 'please tell me all your political
views.' I mean, that's not how it works."
But that's exactly what she did.
Less than three years ago, Sarsour – who believes "nothing is
creepier than Zionism" – told
an American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) conference that the fight against
what she called a "Muslim registry" didn't have room for people
who don't support anti-Israel campaigns.
"We have limits to the type of friendships that we're looking for
right now," and those limits involve people who "have been
steadfast, courageous, have been standing up and protecting their own
communities, those who have taken the risk to stand up and say – we are
with the Palestinian people, we unequivocally support BDS [boycott,
divestment and sanctioning Israel] when it comes to Palestinian human
rights and have been attacked viciously by the very people who are telling
you that they're about to stand on the front line of the Muslim registry
program."
For anyone else?
"No thank you, sisters and brothers."
She drew similar restrictions around people in the feminist
movement just a year later in an interview with The Nation.
"It just doesn't make any sense for someone to say, 'Is there room
for people who support the state of Israel and do not criticize it in the
movement?' There can't be in feminism," Sarsour said. "You either
stand up for the rights of all women, including Palestinians, or none.
There's just no way around it."
NYU Linda Sarsour should talk with this Linda Sarsour.
Sarsour warned her audience against forces which seek to divide Jews and
Muslims, and Jews and black people.
"So you ever wonder why somebody would want to figure out how to
pin up Jewish Americans and Muslim Americans?" she asked. "Who
benefits from that? Who benefits from dividing these communities? Who
benefits from dividing black people from Jews – who by the way there are
black Jews, let's be clear. Who benefits from the divisions? Not us. Not
Jewish people. Not Muslims. We don't benefit. In fact, you know what that
does? It's divide and conquer. It actually makes us all vulnerable. So I
don't play into that."
At no time did Sarsour acknowledge her own contributions to dividing
Jews from Muslims and from black people.
Her 2016 AMP speech, for example included her frustration at
"Muslims willing to sell Palestine just for a little acceptance and
nod from the white man and white power in these United States of
America."
Last September, she blamed Jews for police shootings of unarmed black
people because of an Anti-Defamation League program that takes police
executives to Israel to learn about fighting terrorism and riots. The ADL
is the most prominent Jewish organization in the United States.
To Sarsour, this leads directly to "what? Stop and frisk, killing
unarmed black people across the country."
She made a similar assertion during a
speech in 2015 at the 20th anniversary of avowed anti-Semite
and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan's "Million Man March."
"The same people who justify the massacres of Palestinian people
and call it collateral damage are the same people who justify the murder of
black young men and women," she said.
On Monday, the same person accused others of trying to divide Jews and
black people.
She also claimed to stand by women in countries like Iran and Saudi
Arabia who are fighting compulsory hijab laws. If she doesn't say it often,
it's because she's already got too much on her plate, she said. And she
endorsed equality for gays, lesbians and transgender people.
"What's so radical about believing that LGBTQIA people deserve to
be safe in every space that they're in?" she asked. "What's so
radical about that?"
There is a place in the Middle East where LGBT people can live safely, can serve openly in the military, and that's Israel.
Sarsour doesn't talk about that reality, and Israel haters dismiss it as "pinkwashing," a transparent
and superficial decision that is not rooted in equality, but a scheme to
make Israel look good.
But contrast that with Palestinian public opinion. A 2013 Pew poll found 93 percent of the Palestinians in the
West Bank and Gaza believe society should not accept homosexuality, while 4
percent thought it should. The question didn't go as far as gay marriage –
just whether society should accept people.
Sarsour didn't address this or any other way Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority serve as obstacles to the peace she says she wants. She twice
described herself as "a visionary" Monday night, but received no
challenging questions except for those shouted from the audience. The
moderator's final question, "What gives you hope?"
We hope her audience didn't fall for this attempt to soften Sarsour's
image as accepting and inclusive.
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