Latest Tie Emerges: Rashida Harbi Tlaib Wrote Op-ed Column for Nation of Islam Publication Founded by Louis Farrakhan

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WASHINGTON – Democratic Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib in 2006 wrote an op-ed column for Final Call, a Nation of Islam publication founded by Louis Farrakhan, in the latest tie to emerge between the congresswoman and anti-Semitic figures.

Tlaib authored the column in 2006, while working as the advocacy coordinator for the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services (ACCESS), two years before she first won election to the state legislature. Tlaib was described as a โ€œguest columnistโ€ in the article, which argued against deporting immigrants found guilty of โ€œminor offenses.โ€

Final Call describes itself as โ€œthe official communications organ of the Nation of Islamโ€ and was founded by the groupโ€™s leader, Farrakhan, according to Final Callโ€™s website.

Farrakhanโ€™s history of unapologetic anti-Semitism including describing Jews as โ€œsatanicโ€ and praising Hitler as a โ€œvery great man,โ€ was well established by 2006.

Final Call has published a steady stream of articles defending Farrakhan from charges of anti-Semitism.

An October 2018 Final Call article quoted Farrakhanโ€™s social media director, Jesse Muhammad, saying the backlash was proof that Farrakhan โ€œmust have sprayed some form of termite repellant that stirred up those that have practiced and continue to practice Talmudic ways by eating at the foundation and the carcass of a dead people chosen by God.โ€

Tlaibโ€™s office did not immediately return a request for comment. The Washington Free Beacon first reported on her Final Call op-ed on Monday.

Tlaib has already come under fire for her ties to other anti-Israel radicals, as well as her support for the anti-Israel Boycott Divest Sanction (BDS) movement, which has often overlapped with anti-Semitic causes.

A key fundraiser for Tlaibโ€™s 2018 congressional campaign, Abdel-qader Maher, repeatedly promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories on Facebook, both on his own page and within a Facebook group that includes Tlaib.

Abdel-qader took credit on Facebook for organizing fundraisers for Tlaib among Arab-Americans, pulling in hundreds of thousands of dollars for her campaign. Photos heโ€™s posted on social media show him speaking at Tlaib campaign events.

Tlaib also came under fire after posing for a picture with Palestinian activist Abbas Hamideh, a supporter of Hezbollah who believes Israel shouldnโ€™t exist, at her swearing-in ceremony.

Tlaib claimed she didnโ€™t know him, though she had previously posted a picture with him on Facebook.

Womenโ€™s March co-chair Linda Sarsour was an early supporter of Tlaib, who has continued to support Sarsourโ€™s organization, despite its own anti-Semitism issues. Sarsour and another co-chair, Tamika Mallory, have faced scrutiny over their support of Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam.

Sarsour was unapologetic about the Farrakhan controversy less than two weeks ago, in a taped podcast with left-wing media outlet Democracy Now.

Sarsour lashed out at critics of her support for Farrakhan, and called for โ€œaccountabilityโ€ within โ€œour communitiesโ€ because โ€œwe made Tamika Mallory and Linda Sarsour and Minister Farrakhan literally the whole story instead of focusing on the real threats to our communities, which is white nationalism.โ€

Sarsour then suggested that Jewish people had mishandled the controversy, and urged them to have โ€œhard conversationsโ€ in order to avoid โ€œimposing [their] traumaโ€ on others:

So, what Iโ€™m, we have been asked and demanded of many things. And we have came out and said we understand and we hear the pain. And I understand. Iโ€™ve been working with Jews for over 20 years. I understand historical trauma. And a lot of this comes from historical, the reasons why people backlash is because they respond from a place of trauma. Black people have historical trauma. Lots of people have historical trauma. But we have to sometimes go back to our communities and say, โ€œLetโ€™s heal. Letโ€™s find ways to deal with this trauma so that weโ€™re not imposing our trauma on others who are also traumatized, and focusing on the people that are causing the trauma to our communities.โ€

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