Above photo: Eman Mohammed.
“From Palestine to Mexico, all the walls have got to go!”
Last week, I joined an action hosted by United We Dream in DC’s Capitol Hill. We demanded a ceasefire now in Gaza and permanent protections for immigrants who have made the United States our home.
This action was a response to Senate leaders proposing a bill earlier this month that would fund Israel’s assault on Gaza, the war on Ukraine, more militarization in the Indo-Pacific, and the denial, deportations, and detentions of migrants at the US-Mexico border. Essentially more taxpayer dollars for war and border militarization.
Last week we joined partner organizations in Washington, DC to demand protections for immigrants and a permanent ceasefire now‼️ Our government must divest from violence and militarism here in the U.S and invest in our communities instead! ✊🏽 #ceasefirenow🇵🇸 @UNITEDWEDREAM pic.twitter.com/riETS8Kasr
— NM Dream Team 🦋📣 (@NM_Dream_Team) February 22, 2024
On February 15, 200 immigrant, Palestinian, Jewish youth and allies showed up saying ‘no’ to this deal. We met at Union Station, within eyesight of the nation’s capitol building, dressed in red, black, and green, and with red poppies and watermelons – visuals representing Palestinian solidarity and resistance. Poppies are abundant flowers in Palestine and watermelons have been used as stand-in symbols for the Palestinian flag ever since the Israeli government banned it following the Six-Day War in 1967.
Last week the Senate passed a version of the bill without the dangerous border funding. This was a real victory, but we know that our safety is always at risk. And people’s lives in Gaza are at risk everyday, now more than ever with Israeli attacks extending all the way to the Egyptian border at Rafah, and with 1.4 million people displaced, ill, and hungry.
The border funding segment of the bill would have gutted the asylum system, ramped up border enforcement funding on top of the shameful $25 billion ICE and CBP already get annually, and built Trump’s inhumane border wall – the wall that President Biden campaigned against. While the funding for border militarization is out for now, anti-immigrant legislators constantly threaten to revive these inhumane policies.
And this is our reality as immigrants, always waiting to fight the next cruel policy that threatens our lives and our rights.
At Union Station, a Palestinian scholar and immigrant youth shared with us their stories of moving to the United States at a young age with their families and coming here for school. Immigrants want a sense of belonging and safety in the U.S. backed up by policies that make us secure. Palestinians in Gaza want another day to live.
🇵🇸BREAKING: Immigrants are taking over the streets of DC to call for a #Ceasefire and Permanent Protections! 🍉 pic.twitter.com/EyFZJQ7bfN
— United We Dream 🍊 (@UNITEDWEDREAM) February 15, 2024
After the speeches, we made our way to Capitol Hill chanting for a permanent ceasefire and immigrant protections:
“When immigrants are under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back!”
“Viva, viva Palestina!”
“The people united will never be divided!”
We reached the Cannon building which housed Congressional offices. Thirteen immigrant youth and allies were arrested for staging a die-in at the rotunda, laying down a big banner that said “Ceasefire Now! Permanent Protections for All Immigrants!” sprinkled with red poppies.
Immigrant rights activists were just arrested in the Cannon House office building protesting for a ceasefire in Gaza. Thirteen people unfurled a banner and tossed red flowers in the rotunda, holding a silent die-in as U.S. Capitol police moved in with flex cuffs. pic.twitter.com/jbEn0hws37
— Alejandro Alvarez 🫡 (@aletweetsnews) February 15, 2024
The majority of us went to a nearby church to conclude our action, loudly chanting our demands again. We expressed gratitude for a successful action and for each other, rooted in the same community care we inherit from our immigrant communities.
For years, anti-immigrant politicians have told us that immigration is a bad thing. It’s time to dispel this notion and to accept that immigration is a beautiful thing. Our communities thrive and make the U.S. economy stronger and the social and cultural fabric of the nation inherently more diverse.