Rep. Rashida Tlaib’s grandmother said she doesn’t understand why her granddaughter was barred from entering Israel — and that she is proud of her pro-Palestinian stance.

“I am proud of her,” Muftiyah Tlaib, a resident of Beit Ur al-Fauqa at the West Bank, told the Washington Post. “Who wouldn’t be proud of a granddaughter like that? I love her and am so proud of her.”

But, she added, what was the use of being a lawmaker if Tlaib could be barred from Israel on President Trump’s recommendation.

“She’s in a big position and she cannot visit her grandmother. So what good is the position?” she said from her home on Friday, apparently before learning that Rashida Tlaib had been given a pass but refused to accept the conditions.

Tlaib rejected Israel’s offer to let her travel to the West Bank to visit her grandmother — saying she would skip it after the Israeli government lifted its ban on her entry but imposed “oppressive conditions” to humiliate her.

Tlaib, a Muslim American freshman Democrat from Michigan, has criticized Israeli policies toward Palestinians, and had planned to make an official visit to Israel along with fellow Democrat Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, who is also Muslim American.

But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, under pressure from Trump, on Thursday said he would not allow them to make a planned trip to Israel.

A day later, Israel decided to allow Tlaib to visit her 90-year-old grandmother in the occupied West Bank on humanitarian grounds.

“I can’t allow the State of Israel to take away that light by humiliating me & use my love for my sity to bow down to their oppressive & racist policies,” Tlaib tweeted, using the Arabic word “sity” to refer to her grandmother.

“Silencing me & treating me like a criminal is not what she wants for me. It would kill a piece of me. I have decided that visiting my grandmother under these oppressive conditions stands against everything I believe in — fighting against racism, oppression & injustice.”

Tlaib and Omar have voiced support for the pro-Palestinian Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement, which opposes Israeli settlements and policies toward Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.

Under Israeli law, BDS backers can be denied entry to Israel, a move Trump urged in a pair of scathing tweets in which he said the pair — the only Muslim women in Congress — “hate Jewish people,” a charge they deny.

“It would show great weakness if Israel allowed Rep. Omar and Rep. Tlaib to visit. They hate Israel & all Jewish people, & there is nothing that can be said or done to change their minds, ” Trump tweeted.

“Representatives Omar and Tlaib are the face of the Democrat Party, and they HATE Israel!” he added later.

Both are members of their party’s progressive wing — along with Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, fellow members of “the Squad” — and sharp critics of both Trump and Israeli policy.

With Post wires