“…The rule of “interreligious hospitality” (Cornille , 35) is to welcome the stranger, the refugee, and the migrant with the differences they bring to the table. The Jesuit Refuge Service frames the practice of care for refugees in similar theological terms, calling their unconditional hospitality “incarnational accompaniment” (Ralston ). Such faith‐bound grounding of hospitality does not align well with a position that refuses Muslims to enter this country because of their “otherness.” The fear of their supposed unassimilability into Western culture is no argument to withhold the gesture of hospitality.…”