From strikes to sanctuary campaigns, sustained resistance continues to sweep the country.
Photo Credit:
Nataly Castaño/Movimiento Cosecha
By Sarah Lazare
/ AlterNet
The Trump
administration’s campaign of hate and mass expulsion targeting immigrants is
being met with sustained resistance by the very communities caught in the
crosshairs.
Thousands of
Wisconsin residents refused to go to work or school and shuttered their business on February 13 to participate in a
state-wide Day Without Latinxs, Immigrants and Refugees. According to the
Wisconsin-based advocacy organization Voces de la Frontera, the aim was to
“resist Trump's executive orders on immigration and the resulting wave of
immigration raids sweeping the country, and to stop Milwaukee County Sheriff
David Clarke from enrolling his department in the federal 287(g) program,
which would deputize his sheriffs to act as immigration agents.”
Germán
Sanchez, an Omro, Wisconsin dairy worker who walked off the job with five
coworkers, said in a press statement: “We love what we do, but we are organized and
ready to fight against people like Trump, Clarke, or any politician who attacks
our families. We have power. Trump needs to know that if he is putting Latinos
at risk, he is putting the dairy industry and the whole economy at risk."
On February
16, thousands of people nationwide followed suit, as workers walked off the
job, shut down their stores and restaurants and stayed home from school to
participate in an immigrant strike to protest Donald Trump’s deportation policies. Mass
demonstrations swept cities and towns across the country, among them San
Francisco, Chicago, Raleigh and Austin. According to news reports, at least 100 people were fired from their jobs
for staying home.
Meanwhile,
people have been using their bodies to attempt to stop the deportation of their
community members. Earlier this month, Phoenix residents staged a 15-hour
direct-action protest against the deportation of Guadalupe García de Rayos,
a mother of two who had been living in the United States for 21 years.
Protesters, including her own son and daughter, sat in the street holding hands
to stop an ICE vehicle from taking her away, resulting in an hours-long
stand-off captured on live-stream. Protesters gathered outside of the
ICE regional office and thousands of people contacted Sen.
John McCain and the ICE field director, urging them to stop the deportation.
Despite the outpouring organized by the group Puente Arizona, García was
deported to Mexico.
Anticipating
an ongoing escalation of deportations, activists are fighting to expand the
sanctuary movement, calling for protection of all communities targeted by the
Trump administration, including undocumented, Muslim, LGBTQ, black, and poor
communities. Immigrant-led organizations are partnering with the Movement for
Black Lives to build and support local campaigns to call on mayors and city
councils to “stand up and defend our cities.” The aim is not merely to return
to the policies of the Obama era, which saw unprecedented deportations and the highest rates of
imprisonment in the world, but to demand an improvement on what came before.
Critically,
the fight to defend and expand sanctuary is not centered only in large cities,
but is heating up in places like Richmond, Virginia, which is seeing ongoing rallies. Meanwhile, activists in Louisville, Kentucky,
are waging their own campaign to expand sanctuary, calling on the mayor and local lawmakers to say “no to
Executive Orders that hurt immigrant families, refugees, black communities,
LGBTQ youth, the disabled, and low-income and working people.”
People can
find and connect with their local sanctuary campaigns by plugging their zip
codes into a resource produced by Mijente. In addition, Mijente has
released a new crowd-sourced guide on how to “defy, defend and expand” the fight for
sanctuary.
While
fighting to expand sanctuary, movements are also preparing to defend their
neighbors and communities from a rise in deportations. Starting next week,
Mijente plans to kick off its Protect and Defend training series,
focusing on how to respond to raids and build response networks.
The last week
of February will also see escalating direct actions to build awareness about
the upcoming general strike on May 1, also known as May Day and International
Workers’ Day. Carlos Rojas Rodriguez, a spokesperson for Movimiento Cosecha,
told AlterNet, “This week we have around 30 cities across the country who will
be promoting May Day through banner drops."
“Movimiento
Cosecha feels tremendous excitement that our message around boycotts and
strikes is resonating heavily with immigrant families,” Rodriguez continued.
“Banner drops are essential to promoting May Day. In Latin America and Africa,
movements rely heavily on street art and political writings to promote their
messages with directly affected communities. Banner drops allow us to capture
the attention of immigrant families with clear and direct call to action."
More
organizations are throwing their weight behind the May 1 call for a general
strike, among them the organizers of Wisconsin’s state-wide actions.
"Following Monday's Day Without Latinos, Immigrants, and Refugees in
Wisconsin, we are witnessing a spontaneous groundswell of immigrant workers,
small business owners, and our supporters taking similar bold action to demand
an end to Trump's deportation raids," said Christine Neumann-Ortiz,
executive director of Voces de la Frontera. "Monday, May 1st, 2017, must
be a national Day Without Latinos, Immigrants, and Refugees to demand Trump
rescind all of his executive orders on immigration."
Sarah
Lazare is a staff writer for AlterNet. A former staff writer for Common
Dreams, she coedited the book About Face: Military Resisters Turn Against
War. Follow her on Twitter at @sarahlazare.
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