New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio honored Ahluwalia at a special reception at his official residence Gracie Mansion here yesterday to celebrate the festival of Diwali.
De Blasio presented Ahluwalia a proclamation that declared October 19, 2016 in the city of New York as 'Waris Ahluwalia Day'.
Lauding Ahluwalia's talents of being a fashion designer, writer, actor and model, de Blasio said as a Sikh, Ahluwalia "proudly wears his Dastar (turban) wherever he goes and so he sends a powerful message to our city to our country of countering ignorance, celebrating inclusion and advocating for religious understanding and tolerance in everything he does."
"We believe that when any community is attacked, any individual is attacked because of who they are, because of their faith, because of where they come from, the attack on one is an attack on all of us," de Blasio said.
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Joined by his wife First Lady Chirlane McCray, Ahluwalia and others members of his administration on a stage erected in the sprawling lawns of the Gracie Mansion, de Blasio said whenever any community is affronted, the New York Police Department is present to protect that community.
Amid loud cheers and applause, the Mayor said a special Diwali guide will be distributed to New York teachers through the Department of Education to help them educate students in the city about the "meaning" of the Indian festival of lights.
Ahluwalia thanked the Mayor for the "incredible honor" and said that while Diwali has been celebrated for centuries, this year its message of triumph of good over evil is "more important and relevant than ever."
"That was very confusing for me," he said, adding that six months after the 9/11 attacks, he was assaulted and nearly lost vision in his right eye.
The Mayor and his wife began the reception by lighting the traditional lamp. The city's First Lady was dressed in traditional Indian attire of a yellow salwar kurta.