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After Wall Street published a commentary on the southern Michigan city of Dearborn, Biden condemned the anti-Arab rhetoric.
Mayor Dearborn called the Wall Street chapter "bigoted" and "Islamophobic."
Biden said on social media platform X on Sunday (Feb. 4) that "blaming the entire group based on the words of a few people alone" is wrong.
Biden did not directly name Wall Street or the author of the article, but he further said: "This kind of rhetoric is precisely what can lead to Islamophobia and anti-Arab hatred, and that should not happen to the residents of Dearborn or any American town." ”
Wall Street** published an article entitled "Welcome to Dearborn, the capital of American jihad", last Friday (2nd). The article implies that residents of Dearborn, including local religious leaders and politicians, support the Palestinian militant groups Hamas and extremism.
Dearborn has one of the highest percentages of Arab-Americans in the United States, with census data showing that about 54 percent of the city's Americans are of Arab descent.
Mayor Abdullah Hammoud, a rights advocate from the U.S.-Islamic Relations Council and the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee, condemned the article as anti-Arab and racist.
The article, written by Steven Stalinsky, executive director of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), was "reckless, bigoted and Islamophobic," Abdullah said.
Wall Street did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Stalinsky said he stood by his point of view, adding that the ** compiled by his institute showed that Dearborn had held "shocking anti-American sermons and marches in support of jihad."
Reuters was unable to independently verify the location and date of the filming of these **.
Advocates note that Islamophobia, anti-Palestinianism, and anti-Semitism in the United States have all risen since a new round of conflict between Israel and Hamas erupted last October.