A piece of moon and a rug with a presidential stamp ... Biden changes to the "decor" of the white office

The first touches of the new US president, Joe Biden, appeared in changing the décor of the Oval Office in the White House.

Biden unveiled the changes journalists saw while signing the first executive ceremony that kicked off his presidency last Wednesday.

Among the most important changes that Biden made, the office was furnished with a blue carpet bearing the presidential seal that was present in the era of former US Democratic President Bill Clinton, and he also used the golden yellow curtains that were in the era of the former president, instead of the red used by his predecessor Trump.

Biden also chose to place many paintings and busts in symbolic connotations to support and respect civil rights, reject racism and affirm the equality of different races and religions in America.

Among the artworks that decorated the office were paintings of the first founding fathers of the United States, such as a painting of former President Thomas Jefferson, and a portrait of former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton.

Biden also placed a bust of a civil rights advocate of Martin Luther King Jr., next to the famous office fireplace and next to it another statue of the late Senator, Robert Kennedy, who paid with his life for his defense of his principles in defense of civil and democratic rights.

Among the paintings that decorated the Presidential Office, a picture of the late President Benjamin Franlekin, who showed great interest in science and its development, was placed near a rock from the moon that NASA loaned to the White House at the request of Biden.

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