The internet can’t get enough of the White House’s ridiculously buff chef

Twitter, Vivian Salama

Wall Street Journal reporter Vivian Salama on Wednesday live-tweeted an event at the White House celebrating the Muslim holiday of Ramadan — and one tweet in particular took the internet by storm.

Included in Salama’s tweets was a photo of three White House chefs preparing an iftar dinner. Throughout Ramadan, Muslims fast between sunrise and sunset, and iftar is the evening meal that follows a prayer that ends the fast.

And upon seeing the photo, the internet went wild.

So who is this guy, exactly?

His name is Andre Rush, and he’s a retired Army Master Sergeant Chef. According to Salama, he is “a master chef trained in classical plating, baking, cake decoration and a master ice carver.”

The buff chef was one of the more non-controversial moments of the day, which drew criticism from many in the Muslim community, citing President Donald Trump’s rhetoric and actions against Muslims and other religious and racial minorities.

“I was not invited to the White House iftar, but I would not attend if I were,” Dalia Mogahed, director of research at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, told CNN. “Attending this event, especially during the holy month, a time of introspection and spiritual growth, would be inappropriate in my view as it would appear to normalize this administration’s behavior.”

Related read: Most Americans think Trump is racist, poll finds

Hate crimes targeting U.S. Muslims rose 15% in 2017, a second year in a row with a sharp rise, according to a report by the Council on American-Islamic Relations. CAIR attributed the increase in part to Trump’s policies, particularly restrictions on immigration from Muslim-majority countries.

“CAIR’s 2018 Civil Rights Report provides concrete evidence that the unconstitutional Muslim ban resulted in more Islamophobic hate and violence,” said Zainab Arain, author of the report and the group’s research and advocacy coordinator.

This is the first year that the Trump administration has hosted an iftar dinner. Every president since Bill Clinton has hosted an iftar dinner to celebrate Ramadan, but Trump did not hold one last year.

Sally French covers drone technology and serves as a social media editor for MarketWatch in San Francisco. You can follow her on Twitter @SAFMedia.

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