No sooner had Rashida Tlaib been sworn in as a member of the 116th US Congress last January, than the daughter of Palestinian immigrants caught flak for her off-color cry to impeach Donald Trump. She has been in Americas blazing political glare ever since, said AFP. Whether its her relentless needling of the president, being told by Trump to "go back" to the "corrupt" country she came from despite being born in Michigan, or being barred from visiting Israel Thursday by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Tlaib is a political lightning rod. She became part of an international controversy when she and fellow first-term US lawmaker Ilhan Omar -- together the first Muslim women to serve in Congress -- were denied entry to Israel and the Palestinian territories on a congressional trip. On Friday Tlaib ramped up the heat, rejecting the Jewish states compromise offer to allow her into the West Bank on a "humanitarian" visit to see her grandmother. Accepting that offer under Israels "oppressive conditions stands against everything I believe in -- fighting against racism, oppression & injustice," she said. Tlaib and Omar have clashed with congressional colleagues, especially regarding their support of a boycott of Israel over its treatment of Palestinians, and comments seen by many as anti-Semitic. Trump himself has sought to exploit the controversy, saying the two "are the face of the Democrat Party, and they HATE Israel!" Tlaib is 43, the eldest of 14 children born to Palestinian immigrants. A self-described "progressive warrior," she grew up in modest means in Detroit, eventually becoming a social justice attorney. A mother of two sons, she speaks with genuine affection for her relatives. But that belies a fiery voice which has often led her into controversy. In 2016 Tlaib disrupted a Trump campaign rally to protest what she said was his "hate-filled rhetoric." Also that year she raised eyebrows by supporting a one-state solution, a departure from her Middle East peace stance that envisioned Israel and a Palestinian state side by side. "It has to be one state. Separate but equal does not work," she told In These Times magazine. The comments antagonized Jews who believe a one-state solution could dissolve the worlds only Jewish state. Tlaib has emerged as a member of the self-styled "squad" of four progressive newcomers, ethnic minority women whom Trump has repeatedly demonized. But Tlaib insists she wont be cowed, not by Trump or Israel. She wanted to go to the village of Beit Ur al-Fauqa to "pick figs" with her grandmother, but ultimately declined. "Silencing me with treatment to make me feel less-than is not what she wants for me," Tlaib said. "It would kill a piece of me that always stands up against racism and injustice."
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