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Jonathan De Camps

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Keep Families Together
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Keep Families Together
Copyright Jonathan De Camps 2024
Date of Work Jun 2018 - Ongoing
Updated Jul 2018
Topics Action, Activism, Arrests and Prosecutions, Black and White, Civil Rights, Community, Confrontation, Discrimination, Documentary, Family, Fear, Freedom, Human Rights, Immigration, Incarceration, Migration, Minority, Oppression, Parenting & Family, Photography, Photojournalism, Politics, Prison, Protests, Racism, Revolution, Street, Youth

Interview from article 

"Protesters demanding migrant families to be reunited march in Homestead" 

by Gina Benitez

Throngs of protesters critical of the Trump administration’s handling of migrant families who cross the U.S.-Mexico border marched more than a mile to a government-run facility in Homestead housing undocumented children, as they let their voices be heard on the contentious issue.

Demonstrators expressed their outrage about the policy of separating migrant children from their parents once they are taken into custody.

For Melissa Taveras of the Florida Immigrant Coalition, the message was clear.

“We’re doing our best to make sure that elected officials are on the right side of history, and that this detention machinery doesn’t keep going,” she said.

This rally comes just days after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to keep families who illegal cross the border together.

But Taveras said that isn’t enough, indicating that the executive order doesn’t change the “zero tolerance” policy.

“There are nonprofit organizations and churches willing to help undocumented people, so give people a chance instead of taking them straight into the detention centers,” she said.

Taveras said many of the people coming into the United States are running for refuge.

“People are coming to this country because they pretty much are finding themselves having very little alternative in their home countries,” she said. “They’re suffering violence. They’re suffering extreme poverty.”

Among those in the crowd on Saturday was actor Christian Slater. He told 7News he’s glad the spotlight is on the issue.

“What’s going on is crazy and criminal,” he said. “How these kids and families are being treated is completely un-American.”

As demonstrators made it to the end of their march, they were greeted by some counter-protesters, and then the skies opened.

But the downpour did not dampen protesters’ spirits.

“Take care of the foreigners in your land,” said a demonstrator.

“It’s traumatizing children, and it really should not be who we are as a country,” said protester Tomas Kennedy.

Organizers estimated about 1,500 people came out to the rally.

6,976

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