Tearful Rashida Tlaib says grandmother advised her against Israel trip

US congresswoman's grandmother, who is about 90 years old, lives in West Bank

ST PAUL, MN - AUGUST 19: U.S. Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) and Ilhan Omar (D-MN) hold a news conference on August 19, 2019 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blocked a planned trip by Omar and Tlaib to visit Israel and Palestine citing their support for the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel.   Adam Bettcher/Getty Images/AFP
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A tearful Rashida Tlaib said on Monday that her Palestinian grandmother told her last week not to visit Israel under conditions demanded by the Israeli government.

The US congresswoman said she had considered accepting Israeli demands to not engage in politics so that she could travel to the West Bank and visit her grandmother, who is about 90 years old.

“She said I’m her dream manifested, I’m her free bird, 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?” Ms Tlaib said.

“And so through tears, at 3am in the morning, we all decided as a family that I could not go until I was a free US congresswoman.”

Ms Tlaib and Ilhan Omar, the first two Muslim women ever elected to the US Congress, had planned a trip last week to Israel and the Palestinian territories, where they expected to meet activists and officials on both sides.

But on Thursday Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government bowed to US President Donald Trump and barred them, accusing them of supporting a boycott against Israel.

Shortly after that, the Israelis partly reversed course and offered Ms Tlaib permission to visit her grandmother if she accepted restrictions and promised not to promote the boycott.

Speaking together in Ms Omar’s hometown of St Paul, Minnesota, in their first public appearance since the trip’s cancellation, Ms Tlaib and Ms Omar accused Israel of bowing to Mr Trump and trying to hide the reality of the Palestinian situation.

Ms Tlaib said it was common for US legislators to visit Israel and meet a wide variety of activists.

“What is not common occurrence is members of Congress being barred from entering a country on these fact-finding missions unless they agree to a strict set of rules,” she said.

“It is unfortunate that Prime Minister Netanyahu is apparently taking a page out of Trump’s book, and even direction from Trump, to deny this opportunity.”

Ms Omar called the decision to ban the two of them “nothing less than an attempt by an ally of the United States to suppress our ability to do our jobs as elected officials”.

Referring to the $3 billion in aid the US gives to Israel each year, Ms Omar said: "This is predicated on their being an important ally in the region and the only democracy in the Middle East.

“But denying visit to duly elected members of Congress is not consistent with being an ally.”

She blasted Mr Trump for using the visit as a political cudgel against them and the Democrats.

“We know Donald Trump would love nothing more than to use this issue to pit Muslims and Jewish Americans against each other,” Ms Omar said.