The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A DAY OF PROTEST

Immigratio­n marches here, elsewhere draw crowds

- By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com

Thousands of people marched peacefully in downtown Atlanta on Saturday as

part of a nationwide protest against the U.S. immigratio­n policy that has separated children from their parents.

A crowd estimated by police at 4,000 braved the heat to walk roughly a halfmile mainly along Peachtree Street from the Atlanta City Detention Center to the Richard B. Russell Federal Building, where they heard U.S. Rep. John Lewis and others

denounce the Trump administra­tion for separating more than 2,000 children from their parents as part of a “zero-tolerance” crackdown on illegal immigratio­n at the Mexican border.

“We must teach people in power that we will not be satisfied with the order of things,” Lewis said, evok- ing his own experience in the civil rights movement during his brief remarks.

The Atlanta march was one of the more than 700 planned to take place across the country as progressiv­e organizati­ons asked people to take to the streets to express

their concern with the family-separation policy. Although President Donald Trump has signed an executive order ending the policy, children remain in detention centers and apart from their families.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t faced crit- icism as the federal agency responsibl­e for enforcing such policies, but earlier in the day Trump tweeted: “The Democrats are making a strong push to abol- ish ICE, one of the smartest, toughest and most spirited law enforcemen­t groups of men and women that I have ever seen. I have watched ICE liberate towns from the grasp of MS-13 & clean out the toughest of situations. They are great!”

As was the case in other cities, the Atlanta march featured signs and T-shirts with pointed messages for Trump, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and others in the administra­tion.

“Hey Trump and Sessions!” read one. “You are descendant­s of immigrants.”

“My God breaks down walls faster than we can build them,” read another.

Jerrica Romero of Marietta said she walked because her husband emigrated legally from Mexico and she under- stands what life can be like in that country.

“I’ve been to Mexico and seen the conditions,” she said. “It’s heartbreak­ing. I

understand what (people coming across the border) are running from.”

Rick Page, a retired nurse practition­er from Atlanta who served as an army medic in Operation Desert Storm, said Saturday’s event, while not the biggest protest he has been part of, should have impact.

“It’s going to make peo- ple hear our voice,” he said. “That’s the most important thing.”

Several organizati­ons used the occasion to register peo- ple to vote. One, the Georgia Associatio­n of Latino Elected Officials, also provided a lifeline by handing out bottles of water on the summer day. A few participan­ts were treated for heat-related issues during the event, which lasted more

than two hours. Outside the detention center, U.S. Rep. Hank John- son began the march with a talk in which he proclaimed that black and brown immi- grants had been treated like “animals.” He then cited the Statue of Liberty and its famous inscriptio­n seeking “huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”

“Rather than welcoming immigrants with that spirit, rather than a light at the door, Trump says these people are criminals,” Johnson said. “He sends the par- ents to jail and the children to detention facilities hundreds of miles from their parents.”

After the march wound it way to the Russell federal building, the crowd cheered as Lewis, who hadn’t been previously listed as a speaker, took his turn.

“You are sending a message,” the congressma­n said, addressing the crowd from the steps of the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Building across the street. “We are getting sick and tired of little children taken from their mothers. It’s not right. It’s not fair. And history will not be kind to us.”

 ?? DANNY ROBBINS / DROBBINS@AJC.COM ?? The Families Belong Together event brought a large crowd together after a roughly halfmile procession that started at the Atlanta Detention Center and ended at the Richard B. Russell Federal Building on Saturday.
DANNY ROBBINS / DROBBINS@AJC.COM The Families Belong Together event brought a large crowd together after a roughly halfmile procession that started at the Atlanta Detention Center and ended at the Richard B. Russell Federal Building on Saturday.

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