‘Bring the world closer’: Facebook’s Zuckerburg has iftar with Somali refugees

“You are a powerful reminder of why this country is so great,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said to a group of Somali refugees.

Tonight I had my first Iftar dinner with a group of Somali refugees in Minneapolis.
As a refugee, you often don't get to choose which country you end up in. When I asked one man, who had spent 26 years in a refugee camp, whether America now felt like home, he gave a simple and profound answer:
"Home is where you are free to do what you want. Yes, this feels like home."
There are few places in the world he felt comfortable to be who he is: the country he was born, and our country that values freedom.
What a beautiful tribute to America.
Thanks to my hosts for being so gracious at the very end of Ramadan. I left impressed by your strength and resilience to build a new life in an unfamiliar place, and you are a powerful reminder of why this country is so great.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg had his first Iftar supper with a gathering of Somali exiles in Minneapolis on Thursday in what was viewed as an offered to cultivate his organization's new statement of purpose: to assemble groups and bring the world closer.
Zuckerberg shared a photo of the dinner in which he is seen collaborating with hijab-clad ladies around a table and posted a short message alongside it on his Facebook wall about “our country that values freedom”.
“As a refugee, you often don’t get to choose which country you end up in. When I asked one man, who had spent 26 years in a refugee camp, whether America now felt like home, he gave a simple and profound answer: ‘Home is where you are free to do what you want. Yes, this feels like home’,” Zuckerberg recounted.
Expressing gratitude toward his hosts for the dinner, the 33-year-old social media giant founder said he was impressed by the refugees’ “strength and resilience to build a new life in an unfamiliar place”. “You are a powerful reminder of why this country is so great.”
Over 3.17 lakh people have reacted to his post while nearly 26,000 people shared it.
Facebook had earlier, on Thursday, changed its mission statement to, ‘To give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together’, from its earlier one, “To make the world more open and connected’.
Explaining the reason behind the change, Zuckerberg had said, “For 10 years, we focused on doing everything around connecting people with their friends and family.”
“Now I think that there is a whole lot of similar work to be done around communities: Meeting new people, getting exposed to new perspectives, making it so that the communities that you join online can translate to the physical world, too,” he said.
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