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Greg Abbott threatens to pull state funding over Islamic water park celebration in Grand Prairie

Gov. Greg Abbott speaks at the State of the State address in February. He signed a $1 billion Education Savings Accounts bill into law on Saturday.
Patricia Lim
/
KUT News
Gov. Greg Abbott speaks at the State of the State address in February. He signed a $1 billion Education Savings Accounts bill into law on Saturday.

Gov. Greg Abbott threatened to pull state funding from the City of Grand Prairie Wednesday over a private Eid al-Adha celebration hosted at a city-owned water park.

The governor threatened to pull $530,000 in state funding if the city did not cancel the event by May 11, citing an early version of the flier that advertised it as “Muslims only.”

The event’s organizer, Aminah Knight, told KERA News Knight the goal of the event was to promote modesty and was never about excluding other faiths from the event.

“We're just saying that for one day, we are curating a space where people who value modesty can come together,” Knight said. “It's a family friendly event, and they will also need to adhere to modesty, which means wearing swim shirts and trunks.”

Knight says she booked Epic Waters, a Grand Prairie-owned water park, for the June 1 event and has paid the associated fees.

“What is being portrayed is that the park is shutting down to have Muslims only,” Knight said. “I am curating this event for the Muslim community for which I am a part of, so that we can gather and have a good time in a modest environment that is rare for water parks.”

Eid al-Adha is a four-day Islamic celebration celebrated annually at the end of May, and focuses on community and charity.

Knight said Grand Prairie has not contacted her about the event but hopes the event is not canceled. The city declined to comment to KERA Tuesday.

It is not the first time Abbott has threatened state funding for Islamic related events and projects.

Late last year, the governor targeted the Muslim-centric housing development The Meadows, formerly EPIC City, for housing discrimination. That battle is ongoing.

Supporters of the Meadows have said Abbott is targeting them based on their religious beliefs.

Additionally, Abbott currently investigating the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the country’s largest Muslim civil rights organization.

The legislature also passed a bill banning “Sharia Law” in Texas — a law Abbott pointed to when addressing the June 1 celebration, calling the event “religious discrimination” and “unconstitutional” in an X post.

Knight said she was frustrated by conservative attacks, calling them hypocritical.

“I think it's quite funny that we're getting pushback from other conservative groups because what people don't realize sometimes is that most Muslims are conservative,” said Knight. “I mean, the thing that we're trying to do with this event is have a modest dress code. That's pretty conservative, right?”

Emmanuel Rivas Valenzuela is KERA's breaking news reporter. Got a tip? Email Emmanuel at erivas@kera.org. KERA News is made possible through the generosity of our members.

If you find this reporting valuable, consider making a tax-deductible gift today. Thank you.

Emmanuel Rivas Valenzuela joins KERA News from El Paso, Texas where he graduated as a first-generation immigrant from the University of Texas at El Paso. Prior to joining KERA, Emmanuel worked at KFOX/KDBC El Paso, El Paso Matters and KERA News as an intern. Outside of work, Emmanuel enjoys collecting physical media like movies, music and comics.