A number of Muslims have
held a demonstration outside the Trump Tower in Manhattan in New York
City to protest against US President Donald Trump's rhetoric against
Islam.
Around 100 Muslims who were invited by two
advocacy groups, MPower Change and the New York State Immigrant Action
Fund, showed up for the “Iftar” event on Thursday. The event turned into
a protest rally against the president's anti-Muslim policies.
Iftar is the first meal eaten by Muslims after sunset during Ramadan, the Muslim holy month of fast and prayer.
Participants
prayed and shared meals as the police officers stood on Fifth Avenue,
one of the busiest streets in the country, closely monitoring the area
near the building.
Muslim
men and women pray during a demonstration and Iftar celebration during
Ramadan outside of Trump Tower in New York, US, June 1, 2017. (Photo by
Reuters)
“Everyday American Muslims are
confronted with bigotry and hate while commuting to work and school,
applying for jobs, practicing their faith and simply living their
lives,” said Anu Joshi, deputy director of the New York State Immigrant
Action Fund.
Fatoumata Waggeh, a 26 year-old Muslim-American woman
with Gambian roots, said she had taken part in event as a means to
denounce the negative “rhetoric they are spreading around Muslims.”
Maggie
Glass, a 31 year-old New Yorker active with a Jewish refugee
association, said she was there “to support all our Muslim neighbors and
friends.”
“I just thought it was an opportunity for us to come together as a community, to show that we are united.”
Volunteers
distribute food to Muslim and supporter for Iftar, during Ramadan
outside of Trump Tower in New York, US, June 1, 2017. (Photo by AFP)
The event comes several days after Trump also issued a statement, wishing “all Muslims a joyful Ramadan.”
However
his message was laced with warnings against terror and violence, even
mentioning the recent bombing at a concert in the British city of
Manchester. He called out the “perverted ideology” of the ISIL-linked
attackers deemed responsible for the bombing.
The Republican president has also been criticized for using an Islamophobic rethoric during his presidential campaign.
Last week, it became public that Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson turned down a request to hold a Ramadan event at his
department, breaking with a 20-year-old tradition observed by both
Democrats and Republicans.
On
Friday, Tillerson marked the beginning of Ramadan in a statement,
describing it as "a month of reverence, generosity, and
self-reflection."
All US state secretaries have hosted Ramadan
events at the department since 1999, the year then-Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright held the first event.
“To be honest with you,
even if they did, I would ask Muslims not to endorse an administration
that is acting so divisively,” event organizer Linda Sarsour said.
Activist
Linda Sarsour prepares for the beginning of a demonstration and Iftar
celebration during Ramadan outside of Trump Tower in New York, US, June
1, 2017. (Photo by Reuters)
“So they are not inviting us, but we don't want to go anyway.”
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