The rapper, who is also known as Ye, is booked to perform in front of around 150,000 revellers for three days in July at the open-air festival in London's Finsbury Park.
Organisers are under mounting pressure from sponsors and politicians to cancel the gigs by the rapper, who has drawn widespread condemnation for making anti-Semitic remarks and voicing admiration for Adolf Hitler.
In 2025, He released a song called Heil Hitler and advertised a swastika T-shirt for sale on his website.
The 48-year-old apologised in January with a letter, published as a full-page advertisement in The Wall Street Journal.
He said his bipolar disorder led him to fall into "a four-month long, manic episode of psychotic, paranoid and impulsive behaviour that destroyed my life".
Wireless sponsors Pepsi, Rockstar Energy and Diageo have pulled out of the festival since West was announced as the headliner, and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the booking "deeply concerning".
West said he "would be grateful for the opportunity to meet with members of the Jewish community in the UK in person, to listen".
"I know words aren't enough - I'll have to show change through my actions," he said in a statement on Tuesday.
"If you're open, I'm here."
Phil Rosenberg, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, said the group would be willing to meet the musician if he pulled out of the festival.
"The Jewish community will want to see a genuine remorse and change before believing that the appropriate place to test this sincerity is on the main stage at the Wireless Festival," Rosenberg said.
Organiser Festival Republic stood by West.
Managing director Melvin Benn urged people to offer the performer "forgiveness and hope".
"We are not giving him a platform to extol opinion of whatever nature, only to perform the songs that are currently played on the radio stations in our country and the streaming platforms in our country and listened to and enjoyed by millions," he said in a statement.
UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting dismissed the organisers' statement as "absurd" and said West should "absolutely not" perform at Wireless.
He said Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is considering whether to ban the rapper from entering the UK.
Benn acknowledged that Mahmood had the power to revoke Ye's visa to come to Britain.
"If she does, she does, and then the issue is over," he told the BBC on Tuesday.
A representative for West did not reply to a request for comment.
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