The Usage Of ‘Inshallah’ By Joe Biden Caused A Stir On Social Media
- Publish date: Thursday، 01 October 2020 | Last update: Thursday، 25 February 2021
The 2020 presidential debate brought out this traditional Arabic term
- Related articles
- Biden Sparks Controversy with Purchase of Book on Palestine
- TikTok Sues US Government Over Potential Ban
- US President Rejects ICC's Request to Arrest Israeli Leaders
The first US presidential debate of the 2020 campaign, which took place week, made the usage of a particular word quite viral as Joe Biden used the term ‘Inshallah’, when the American public would get to see his long-anticipated tax returns.
فيديو ذات صلة
This browser does not support the video element.
There were quite a few opinions around the word, while some might have taken offense others found humor in the statement.
With a mixture of sentiments from the listeners, below are some tweets on the comment made by Joe Biden.
It's so disheartening that the best thing the Biden campaign seems to be able to offer Muslim Americans in the midst of an uptick in islamophobic violence is an offhand, completely inappropriately applied "inshallah" in the debate.
— Mariem Masmoudi (@MariemRMasmoudi) September 30, 2020
Joe Biden: "inshallah"
habibis, it's happening...
— Siraj Hashmi (@SirajAHashmi) September 30, 2020
joe biden really said inshallah on this debate bruh pic.twitter.com/GW6tZhqdYA
— ya.ya (@yazmen99) September 30, 2020
The phrase's original spiritual purpose is for when people try to fulfill their goal, there could be God-like circumstances that may get in the way. Hence, many believed that the phrase must be used in the correct sentiment without it loosing its purpose.
The debate is divided into parts: the records of the two presidential candidates; the Supreme Court; the pandemic; the economy; election integrity; and "race and violence” all of which is swept across the US cities.
Lead image courtesy of instagram/@joebiden