Eight-year-old Ahil Reehum awoke further early on Friday to ensure he was within the entrance row for Eid al-Fitr prayers in Prospect Park.
His purpose on the day marking the top of the holy month of Ramadan was to fulfill Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who was becoming a member of that morning for prayers.
“I’m really so excited, I advised my dad, I wish to take an image with him so badly,” the third-grader advised THE CITY.
His dad, Ahil Hossain Reehum, shared the joy.
“We’re proud right now, we’re excited,” he stated, then joked: “All people is on time right now.” (Younger Ahil didn’t find yourself getting his picture, which he stated later was an “unfulfilled dream.”)

Mamdani, town’s first Muslim mayor, has zig-zagged throughout town all through Ramadan, totally embracing the religion he shares with lots of of 1000’s of New Yorkers.
Earlier than arriving in Prospect Park, he had additionally visited mosques in Jamaica and in East New York on Friday morning. On Thursday, he’d been in Jackson Heights for Chand Raat, a competition to mark the top of Ramadan, after which to prayers in Washington Sq. Park.
Ramadan, which is a month of the Islamic lunar calendar, is his favourite month of the 12 months, Mamdani stated. Over its 30 days that conclude on Saturday, he’s attended and hosted celebrations all throughout town.
“It’s a month the place we additionally get to mirror on who we’re, why it’s that we do what we do, and our a part of a a lot bigger group than simply ourselves,” the mayor stated throughout his remarks at prayers within the Greenwich Village park.
Mamdani additionally visited Rikers Island for the primary time as mayor for an Iftar, the meal to interrupt the all-day quick. He hosted an Iftar at Metropolis Corridor for reporters and one other for social media creators, and joined Knicks participant Mohamed Diawara for a meal.
The mayor additionally hosted Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia College graduate pupil and activist who was detained by ICE, alongside along with his spouse, at Gracie Mansion for an Iftar; the meal was criticized by some together with President Donald Trump, whose spokeswoman referred to as him “anti-American” and stated he participated in “pro-terrorist actions.”
At an Iftar on the Museum of the Metropolis of New York for Muslim metropolis workers, he spoke concerning the challenges of fasting, and the Islamophobia he and others face. The challenges had been all the time current even within the celebrations, he stated.
“For practically so long as there was a New York Metropolis, there have been Muslim New Yorkers,” he stated. “And but for practically simply as lengthy, these with energy and platform have sought to dehumanize.”
Mamdani advised THE CITY on Friday that it’s vital for all New Yorkers to see him totally collaborating in Ramadan, not simply Muslims.

“New Yorkers might be from wherever, we might be a part of any religion, and the fantastic thing about this present day is that, all that so many Muslims need on this metropolis is simply to belong within the place that they know is their house,” he stated.
“And that belonging isn’t one thing that needs to be unique to any faith or anyone group, however for all of us.”
This week, Mamdani started the Christian feast day of St. Patrick’s Day with a pre-dawn meal, often called a suhoor, alongside Mary Robinson, the previous president of Eire. She was his visitor of honor on the Gracie Mansion breakfast he hosted after, which was his first official occasion at his residence.
Though fasting, he feted a room stuffed with leaders from Eire and New York Metropolis who loved Shepherd’s pie, beans and sausage and smoked salmon. He spoke concerning the contributions Irish immigrants made to New York Metropolis, constructing town’s skyscrapers and digging its tunnels.
And he quoted St. Patrick, who wrote in two surviving letters from the fifth century that each one he may do was “weep with those that weep.”
Mamdani tied that concept to modern-day Eire’s help for Palestine, a place strongly shared by the mayor.
He later attended mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and marched within the parade, and in addition attended a luncheon hosted by Archbishop Ronald Hicks, the most recent chief of the Archdiocese of New York.

Mamdani, who was criticized for not attending Hicks’s official swearing-in ceremony, famous the 2 had met earlier within the week, which he stated was “really a pleasure.”
The mayor ended the day praying on the Masjid Islamic Unity & Cultural Middle in his outdated Astoria state legislative district.
One younger attendee, Ahmed, drew an image of Mamdani, writing “Thanks for every part,” and had the mayor signal it. Different youngsters lined up on the stairway inside simply to get a photograph of the mayor.
Adults, too, had been thrilled to wish with town’s new chief.
Amongst them had been Zara Kandić who fled Montenegro, which was part of the previous Yugoslavia, together with different Bosniaks who confronted genocide within the Nineteen Nineties. She ended up in Astoria, which grew to become a touchdown spot for refugees like her.
Though their group is small, she felt Mamdani’s go to to their mosque was a recognition of their function within the metropolis.
Mamdani’s election was “very private” to her, she stated. “It exhibits that the American dream is actual.”

