We are community organizers, ministers, rabbis, imams, lawyers, and teachers. We are mothers, fathers, grandparents, sisters, brothers, and friends. We were born in Somalia, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Mexico, the United States and other countries. We are all in America for different reasons, and we are all here for the same reasons.
We were born here. We came to get an education. We were recruited to work in American industries. We came because our homes and our towns were burned to the ground. We fled threats against our lives and the lives of our families, because we cooperated with the American government or spoke out against corrupt leaders or have the wrong political or religious beliefs.
Some of us may speak differently, dress differently, or pray differently than you do – just as French Canadian and Irish immigrants before us did – but we want the same things.
We are here because we are trying to live the best lives that we can. Because America offers the promise of safety, of freedom, of hope, for ourselves and for our families. This is the American dream.
President Trump’s executive orders are everything the American dream is not. They are meant to drive fear into people’s hearts. They are meant to divide our communities and turn neighbor against neighbor. They value the religious beliefs of some over others. And they ignore the lessons of history, which teach us that when we make policy based on fear, not fact, we always look back in shame.
President Trump’s executive orders have already caused chaos and confusion. They have left families divided by oceans. They have left our Muslim brothers and sisters feeling alienated and unsafe. And they have called into question our president’s commitment to the Constitution.
Today, we join together to call on Maine’s elected leaders to do everything in their power to put a stop to these unconstitutional policies. The very fabric of our nation is at stake.
Signed,
ACLU of Maine |
Belinda Ray, City Council, District One, Portland Catama Productions |
Catherine Besteman, anthropologist |
Community Financial Literacy |
Congregation Bet Ha’am |
Dd Swan, Nonprofit Coach and Minority Health Consultant |
Ethan K. Strimling, Mayor, City of Portland |
Frannie Peabody Center |
Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project |
Immigrant Resource Center Of Maine |
Iraqi Community Association of Maine |
Jewish Community Alliance of Southern Maine |
Kristen Cloutier, City Council President, City of Lewiston |
Mabel Wadsworth Center |
Maine Equal Justice Partners |
Maine People’s Alliance |
Maine Women’s Lobby |
Mano en Mano | Hand in Hand |
Martin Luther King Jr. Fellows |
Morning Glory Arts Therapy |
NAACP Portland Branch New England Arab American Organization |
New Mainers Resource Center |
New Ventures Maine |
Planned Parenthood Maine Action Fund |
Planned Parenthood of Northern New England |
Rev. Christina Sillari, First Parish Portland Unitarian Universalist |
Rev. Jennifer Emrich, First Universalist Church of Yarmouth |
Rev. Maria Anderson-Lippert, St. Ansgar Lutheran Church, Portland |
Rwandese Community Association in Maine Sarah Lewis, nonprofit director |
Southern Maine Workers’ Center |
Welcoming the Stranger |