An iftar dinner at the White House to mark the end of the daily fast during Ramadan was cancelled Tuesday night, following a meeting between President Biden and Muslim community leaders.

Tensions rose during the meeting, with a Palestinian-American ER doctor who recently went to Gaza saying he walked out in protest after addressing the war.
βWeβre just in a different world,β said Waβel Alzayat, who leads Emgage, a Muslim advocacy organization. βItβs completely surreal. And itβs sad.β
Alzayat attended last yearβs event, but he declined an invitation to break his fast with Biden this year, saying, βItβs inappropriate to do such a celebration while thereβsΒ a famine going on in Gaza.β
After rejections from Alzayat and others, he said the White House adjusted its plans Monday, telling community leaders that it wanted to host a meeting focused on administration policy. Alzayat still said no, believing that one day was not enough time to prepare for an opportunity to sway BidenβsΒ mind on the conflict
Outside the White House, activists gathered in the rain for their own iftar on Tuesday evening in Lafayette Park. Organizers distributed dates, a traditional food for Ramadan, for people to break their fasts at sundown.

Democrats fear that Bidenβs loss of support among Muslims could help clear a path for his Republican predecessor to return to the White House. This yearβs election will likely hinge on a handful of battleground states, including Michigan with its significant Muslim population.
No journalists were allowed to capture either the iftar or the meeting with community leaders, a change from previous years. Neither was listed on the presidentβs public schedule. Some people who had attended events in previous years, such as Mayor Abdullah Hammoud of Dearborn, Michigan, were not invited.

