Minhaj, who became the first Indian-American to host the White House Correspondents' Dinner this year, was honoured by Blasio and New York City First Lady Chirlane McCray at their official residence here yesterday at theAsian-Pacific American Heritage reception.
Blasio presented Minhaj with a proclamation that declared May 10, 2017 in the city as 'Hasan Minhaj Day'.
Minhaj, accompanied by his wife Beena, described the honour as "unbelievable."
Minhaj 31, whose parents hail from Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh, delivered a memorable and entertaining speech at the annual Correspondents' Dinner which was not attended by President Donald Trump, the first time since 1981 that a US president skipped the event.
Referring to his speech at the annual dinner, Blasio said Minhajgot a message across to America that is nothing less than "memorable."
Blasio slammed the hateful rhetoric emanating from Washington, saying it is an effort to "demonise" all immigrants, divide people andsuggest that there is "something wrong with immigrants."He referred to last month's "horrible assault" on city taxi driver Harkirat Singh, an immigrant fromPunjab, who was attacked and had his turban knocked off by unruly passengers.
He added that the city and its police department stood by Singh, who was "attacked because he was Sikh",andwill continue to ensure such attacks do not go unpunished.
The Mayor called on New Yorkers to staystrong in their belief in a multi-faith and multi-cultural society, saying "we cannot let the hateful rhetoric cause us to shrink from the truth."
He lauded Minhaj forstanding up for values ofequality andjusticeby "using one of the most powerful weapons" of humour and satire.
"Heuses his humour to shine a light on injustice, racism and bias and he does it in a very powerful and effective way," de Blasio said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
