Gulf News

‘Ramadan Mubarak’: President Trump hosts his first iftar at the White House

Several Muslim civil rights groups pushed back, organising a ‘NOT Trump’s Iftar’ protest at park across road

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Wishing Muslims around the world “Ramadan Mubarak”, President Donald Trump on Wednesday hosted his first White House dinner for Ramadan, an overture that surprised many in the Muslim community after he skipped hosting such a meal last year.

Speaking at an iftar dinner, which breaks the daylong fast, Trump offered a message of unity, recognisin­g members of the Muslim community at home and abroad.

“In gathering together this evening, we honour a sacred tradition of one of the world’s great religions,” he told an intimate audience that included Cabinet members and ambassador­s from many Muslimmajo­rity nations including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Jordan.

It was a dramatic departure from the inflammato­ry rhetoric Trump used during his campaign, when he called for a “complete and total shutdown” of Muslims entering the country, compared Syrian refugees fleeing civil war to a deadly snake and declared, “I think Islam hates us” in an interview with CNN.

Instead, Trump spoke of “the renewed bonds of friendship and cooperatio­n” forged with “valued partners” from across the Middle East and said iftars “mark the coming together of families and friends to celebrate a timeless message of peace, clarity and love. There is great love.”

He recalled his visit last year to Saudi Arabia — his first foreign trip — as “one of the great two days of my life.”

The dinner came as the Supreme Court considers legal challenges to Trump’s travel ban, which critics say unfairly targets some Muslim-majority countries.

Several Muslim civil rights groups pushed back, organising a “NOT Trump’s Iftar” protest at a park across the White House. The groups say Trump’s heated rhetoric has contribute­d to discrimina­tion against Muslim Americans.

 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump sits down for the iftar dinner in the ■ State Dining Room of the White House on Wednesday.
AP President Donald Trump sits down for the iftar dinner in the ■ State Dining Room of the White House on Wednesday.

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