The City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate School of Public Health is stirring up a bit of controversy with its decision to invite Shariah advocate Linda Sarsour to serve as the school's commencement speaker. New York Assemblyman Dov Hikind, D-Brooklyn, recently spoke out against the appointment, stating that Sarsour "is someone who associates with radical Islamists; supports them; shows support for them."
So, who is Linda Sarsour, an extraordinary Palestinian-American Muslim who co-organized the historic Women's March or New York City's queen of hate?
Ms. Sarsour, Executive Director of the Arab American Association of New York, describes herself as "a working woman, racial justice and civil rights activist, every Islamophobe’s worst nightmare . . . " She also describes herself as one who treasures her religious and ethnic heritage.
Based on Ms Sarsour's slew of statements, one can thus reasonably assume that "empowering the Arab immigrant and Arab American community" is synonymous with allowing for the imposition of Shariah (Islamic law) in certain American neighborhoods.
With Sarsour tweet-raging at such an impressive rate, her views on Shariah are a matter of public knowledge. The thrust of her pro-Shariah stance is that Islamic law is reasonable, if you only had access to her esoteric knowledge. After all, won't replacing American constitutional law with Shariah lead to interest free loans and credit cards?
According to the woman hailed by Time magazine as one of the "Most Influential People of 2017," only ignoramuses and Islamophobes can possibly find fault with her treasured religious heritage.
However, beyond the multicultural fallacy that all cultures are equal and have always been so, across all indices, there's the hard truth. Squirm-inducing facts about Islam's moral, religious, and legal code include its discriminatory and violent attitude towards women and girls, as well as the growing threat it constitutes to the democratic principle of freedom of speech around the world.
In addition, Shariah's hate-filled approach to non-Muslims, Jews and others is enshrined in law, as expressed through notions of Islamic supremacism.
Still, Linda Sarsour and her supporters white wash such inconvenient truths, repeatedly falling back on the image of multiculturalism as bringing together members of society through the celebration of diversity, even though the movement has been predicated on divisiveness from its inception.
Multiculturalism is a fad that has replaced the goal of social solidarity with the reality of tribalism, democracy with identity politics. The ascent of Linda Sarsour is attributable in no small part to multiculturalism; a self-loathing virus that only supports criticism of culture if it's Western culture that's being criticized.
Yet despite some of the more alarming elements of Shariah, Ms. Sarsour should nonetheless keynote the CUNY commencement. Racism, homophobia, and religious fundamentalism should be allowed to compete with democracy, equality and tolerance in the grand marketplace of ideas.
On this level playing field, such wickedness as represented by Linda Sarsour's interpretation of Shariah has virtually no chance of spreading.
However, outlawing her because of her outrageous agenda will only give the current darling of the far left "street cred" and make Ms. Sarsour that much more appealing to the confused, uneducated or generally ignorant.
Or, as Oscar Wilde once succinctly declared, "I may not agree with you, but I will defend to the death your right to make an ass of yourself."
Only by shining the light of reason on Linda Sarsour's dark propaganda will her delusional worldview be dispelled, by principled men and women who are armed with the effective arguments that will expose the weakness and misdirection of her claims.
Gidon Ben-Zvi, former Jerusalem Correspondent for the Algemeiner newspaper, is an accomplished writer who left behind Hollywood starlight for Jerusalem stone in 2009. After serving in an Israel Defense Forces infantry unit from 1994-1997, Ben-Zvi returned to the United States before settling in Israel, where he and his wife are raising their four children to speak fluent English – with an Israeli accent. Ben-Zvi's work has appeared in The Jerusalem Post, The Times of Israel, the Algemeiner, American Thinker, the Jewish Journal, Israel Hayom, and United with Israel. Ben-Zvi blogs at Jerusalem State of Mind (jsmstateofmind.com). For more of his reports — Click Here Now.
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