Shockingly, an Islamist activist who praised Saudi Arabia's treatment of women and described the serial rapist Mohammed whose abuse of women and girls inspired ISIS is as much of a feminist as her prophet
The Daily Caller has the story.
Allegations of groping and unwanted touching were allegedly brought to Sarsour during her time as executive director of the Arab American Association.
In response, Sarsour, a self-proclaimed champion of women, attacked the woman bringing the allegations, often threatening and body-shaming her, these sources alleged. The most serious allegations were dismissed, Asmi Fathelbab, the alleged victim told The Daily Caller, because the accused (Palestinian emigrant, Majed Seif) was a “good Muslim” who was “always at the Mosque.”
“She oversaw an environment unsafe and abusive to women,” said Fathelbab, a former employee at the Arab American Association. “Women who put [Sarsour] on a pedestal for women’s rights and empowerment deserve to know how she really treats us.”
“It’s always going to be the woman’s fault over there,” she alleges. “And Sarsour was there to protect the men. She’s not for other women. The only women she’s for is for herself.”
“She told me I’d never work in NYC ever again for as long as she lived,” Asmi says. “She’s kept her word. She had me fired from other jobs when she found out where I worked. She has kept me from obtaining any sort of steady employment for almost a decade.”
"Sarsour is only a feminist outwardly,” the insider said on the condition of anonymity, due to the source’s current political position. “Her interactions toward women in that building were atrocious. She would protect the patriarchy and in return they would promote her.”
Welcome to the Middle East. There's no such thing as an Islamist feminist. The very concept I'd a contraction in terms. Sarsour is a product of her culture and religion first.
Her behavior was typical of the Middle East. The very same exact environment prevailed at Al Jazeera America. Leftist hypocrisy covers up the Islamist abuse of women in America and the Middle East