White House hosts muted Ramadan event as Biden’s Israel policy draws anger

President Joe Biden will meet Muslim leaders, then have a small dinner with senior Muslim officials in his administration. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON – The White House held a scaled-down iftar dinner on April 2 to mark Islam’s holy month of Ramadan, after some invitees turned President Joe Biden down over frustrations in the Muslim community due to his policy towards the Israel-Gaza war.

Mr Biden met Muslim leaders before having a small dinner with senior Muslim officials in his administration, First Lady Jill Biden, Vice-President Kamala Harris and her husband.

“President Biden will host a meeting with Muslim community leaders to discuss issues of importance to the community,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on April 2, explaining these leaders would rather have a meeting than a dinner.

The White House “adjusted the format to be responsive”, she added.

One of the attendees, Dr Thaer Ahmad, an emergency room doctor who spent at least three weeks in Gaza, told CNN that he walked out of the meeting before it ended.

“Out of respect for my community, out of respect for all of the people who have suffered and who have been killed in the process, I needed to walk out of the meeting,” he said.

Dr Ahmad, who said he was the only Palestinian-American in the meeting, added that “there wasn’t a lot of response” from Mr Biden.

“He actually said he understood, and I walked away,” Dr Ahmad told CNN.

The event was a sharp contrast to May 2023, when Mr Biden hosted a reception for Eid to mark the end of Ramadan.

Dozens of attendees cheered Mr Biden at the White House as he told the crowd: “It’s your house.” 

Muslim members of Congress who attended that event, including Representatives Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, who is Palestinian American, are now among the biggest critics of his Gaza policy.

Emgage Action, a Muslim American advocacy group, said it declined an invitation to the April 2 dinner, citing Mr Biden’s “continued unconditional military aid to Israel”, which they say has led to a “humanitarian catastrophe of epic proportions”.

Many Muslims, Arabs and anti-war activists have been angry with the administration’s support for Israel and its military offensive in Gaza that has killed tens of thousands and caused a starvation crisis in the narrow coastal enclave of about 2.3 million people.

Israel is the leading recipient of US foreign aid, and the United States vetoed multiple votes at the United Nations calling for a ceasefire in the Gaza assault that began after Palestinian Islamist group Hamas’ Oct 7 attack on Israel.

The US abstained from a vote in late March.

Hamas’ Oct 7 attack on Israel killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s subsequent military assault on Hamas-governed Gaza has killed more than 32,000 people, according to the local Health Ministry, displaced nearly all its population and led to genocide allegations that Israel denies.

Muslim and anti-war groups plan a protest iftar in Lafayette Park near the White House.

They said they will distribute dates and water bottles to break fast at sunset. REUTERS

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