Ramadan Feast: Community Bonding at Its Best from the Turkish Cultural Center

Senator Stewart-Cousins attended the Interfaith Ramadan Dinner hosted by the Turkish Cultural Center (TCC) of Westchester on Thursday, July 25th at the DoubleTree Hotel in Tarrytown, NY
Senator Stewart-Cousins attended the Interfaith Ramadan Dinner hosted by the Turkish Cultural Center (TCC) of Westchester on Thursday, July 25th at the DoubleTree Hotel in Tarrytown, NY


Date posted: July 27, 2013

Krista Madsen

Dignitaries, clergy, and everyday citizens, Jews, Christians and Muslims gathered Thursday night at Tarrytown’s DoubleTree Hotel by the invite of the Turkish Cultural Center for a Ramadan dinner, speeches, and entertainment.

Westchester’s Turkish Cultural Center puts on several public dinners each year to educate the public about and celebrate this unique month of fasting and prayer.

Guests were first greeted by a video explaining Ramadan, including footage from President Barack Obama wishing everyone a blessed month. Then there were several speakers: Dr. Mahjaben Hassan from Phelps spoke of the benefits of fasting – both physiological and spiritual – while Dr. Andrew Skotnicki, chairman of Religious Studies at Manhattan College, spoke of Islam from a Christian perspective.

Hassan said fasting one month out of the year, “teaches me I have more inner strength than I realized.” She noted she was here now, mid-month of fasting, speaking at the podium without so much as a drop of water all day.

Skotnicki said that what is most desirable in life, most valuable, is necessarily most costly and requires such sacrifice. Saying ‘no’ to some things opens one up to saying “’yes’ to what is important.”

After prayers both sung and spoken, it was onto fast-breaking for many with a fabulous buffet dinner, catered by Rye’s organic Andy’s Pure Foods, run by a Turk. The food was fresh and healthy (more healthy than Turkish” noted my tablemate Mustafah. He said when breaking fast you think you want to eat more than you can, and you get full quickly.

Then, there was the four-piece Sufi music with the riveting performance of the whirling dervish, who literally twirls until you think he must be ready to drop from dizziness…but he never does. Only once did his foot stray from the small circle dance floor he was allotted to spin on and on in his white robe, skirt flaring, in this miraculous act of mind over body.

Assemblyman Tom Abinanti admired the feat, amazed he hadn’t fallen. State Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins, seated at his table, praised the far-reaching outreach and inclusivity of this group and the peacefulness of their mission.

tcc-westchester-whirling-dervish

Source: Patch.Com , July 26, 2013


Related News

Turkish Extradition Request Could Strain Relations With US

The news that Turkey will officially request that the United States extradite Turkish Islamic scholar Fetullah Gulen is threatening to strain U.S.-Turkish relations. Ankara insists Gulen is behind a conspiracy to overthrow the government. But analysts warn that Ankara may find it difficult legally to secure his extradition.

Gulen suspect testifies before US Congress on recent coup attempt

An alleged member of the Fetullah Gulen organization was invited on Wednesday to speak to a congressional panel on Turkey, a stunning move that could exacerbate tensions between Ankara and Washington. Ahmet Sait Yayla was added to the original list of speakers to address the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia and Emerging Threats.

Despite father’s arrest, Kanter refuses to be silenced

“I play in the NBA; that’s why people know my story,” Kanter said. “My dad is only one. There are thousands of kids out there who have no mom or dad because of what’s going on in Turkey. I have to speak and let people know what’s going on. I want the whole world to know what’s going on, because they try to hid it.”

Bringing Peace While Breaking Fasts

During the month of Ramadan iftars, or fast-breaking meals, are an important way to strengthen relations in the community.

Anatolia in Los Angeles

We can build better tomorrows by not discounting historical truths, and instead face these truths and reconcile with them when necessary. While doing so, we can of course pay the tribute necessary to the cultures and the peoples that have helped us arrive at this point.

Love is A Verb – forthcoming documentary on the Gülen Movement

Love Is A Verb is an examination of a social movement of Sufi-inspired Sunni Muslims that began in Turkey in the l960s and now spans across the globe. The group is called Hizmet, the Turkish word for “service” or The Gülen Movement after its inspiration and teacher, Fethullah Gülen, a man TIME magazine named as […]

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

Peace Islands Institute donates platefuls of generosity

Nigerian Turkish schools denies links to Turkey coup

South Africa to host 14th International Festival of Language and Culture

9 Months imprisonment for hate crimes against Gülen Movement in Germany

Inside Turkey’s Purge

“Somalis will remember your aid”

Muslim world in transition: Contributions of the Gülen Movement

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News