By Stephen C. Webster
Photo: Eleanor Smith poses with Sean Hannity and Vicki Temple
poses with Andrew Breitbart, in photos taken from their Facebook pages.
Hekmati, pictured center, is shown via a screenshot from WSBTV.com in
Georgia. Composite by Stephen C. Webster.
Sehar Hekmati (pictured, center), a Republican activist from Georgia who came to the United States from Afghanistan as a child, filed a lawsuit last week (PDF)
against several county level Republican officials, accusing them of
slandering her as a “terrorist” and a “felon” in a recorded
conversation, emails circulated to other Republicans and posts on
Facebook.
Her attorney,
John Sparks,
told Raw Story on Monday that Hekmati was recently nominated to be a
delegate at the 2012 Republican National Convention (RNC), and has
previously been commended for her activism by Georgia’s former
Republican Governor Sonny Perdue. But that nomination has opened her up
to some unexpected attacks, and she says that some of them simply went
to far.
Of the three women named in the suit, two are Republican officials in
Henry County: Eleanor Smith (pictured, left) and Vicki Temple
(pictured, right) are treasurer and president of the
Republican Women of Henry County, respectively. Temple is also the second vice chair of the
Henry County Republican Party.
Smith appears to have been a supporter of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA),
telling Real Clear Politics in March that she believes “he’s the smartest guy running.” Gingrich, among other things, once
compared supporters of building of a mosque in New York City to Nazis.
Facebook posts by Temple appear to show that she was a supporter of
motivational speaker Herman Cain, who’s similarly said that
he believes a “majority” of Muslims “share the extremist views.”
“[Hekmati is] a delegate to the RNC and she’s been an active
Republican since she got to Georgia, pushing the cause of freedom,”
Sparks said. “The basis of her passion is that she’s seen what a country
is like without freedom. She doesn’t take it for granted, because she’s
lived in a world where it doesn’t exist. It’s extremely important to
her that the ideals of our bill of rights continues. A lot of people
will say, this is free speech, but there are limits to free speech. One
of those limits is defamation. You can’t accuse a person of a crime when
it’s not true.”
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman with the
Council on American Islamic Relations,
suggested that the case is really “just a symptom of the growing
anti-Muslim sentiment in our society, particularly on the right-wing of
the political spectrum.”
“It seems that the conservative poltical platform now has to have one
of its planks being Islamophobia, and that’s unfortunate,” he told Raw
Story. “I think that’s something that the GOP leaders nation-wide need
to deal with. Just in the past week we saw a candidate in Texas calling
for stopping the Islamization of America. Now there’s
a Texas sheriff’s race where Sharia is the big issue in the sheriff’s race. I mean, it’s reached absolutely bizarre levels.”
“It would be laughable if it weren’t so harmful to our nation and any
sense of religious tolerance and diversity,” Hooper added. “You’ve got
these equally bizarre anti-Sharia bills in dozens of state legislatures
at a time… I don’t even know what to say! How do you tell somebody that,
gee, a tiny religious minority that’s under pressure maybe can’t take
over the government and overthrow the constitution. How do you reach
somebody that believes such nonsensical things? It’s like trying to
convince somebody that believes in unicorns that there aren’t any
unicorns.”
Smith, Temple and the Henry County Republican Party did not respond to requests for comment.
“It’s a simple defamation case,” Sparks told Raw Story. “I
don’t think it has anything to do with Republican or Democrat. [Hekmati]
was accused of being a felon, which isn’t true, and she was accused of
being a terrorist, which is also a crime. Both of those accusations are
defamation in Georgia. The basis of their misconduct, I believe, is that
they’re bigots.”
“They don’t like her because she grew up in Afghanistan. She came
over here when she was a child, and she had the audacity of falling in
love with an marrying a man of a different race. The evidence will come
out that — and it’s somewhat subtle, but I believe it will be able to
show that’s the motivating factor — although it doesn’t really matter
why they did what they did and said what they said. Simply calling
someone a criminal and a felon, regardless of why, is defamation.”
(H/T:
WSBTV.com)