#WeBelongTogether Youth to Trump: ‘We Are Not Afraid of You!’
"I will be put in foster care if she gets deported. No child or family should have to suffer like me. [Immigrant and Customs Enforcement] and Trump do not care about us. Why can't I enjoy just being a kid? I cannot even sleep or do my homework. All I can think about is my mother being taken away from me," Leah said. Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
"I just get mad, because Donald Trump is making the wrong decisions. Why is he doing all this? Why is he wanting to build a wall?" said Roberto. "We're not different at all. We're the same—we're all human beings. We're not some different types of animals."
"It's not fair for children to live in fear, or for parents to not be able to be with their children, because families should be united," said Luna.
Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
"I wrote a letter to then-President Obama. Not only did he write me back, but came to Flint to meet me. President Trump also came to Flint. I met him. He was not so very nice to me at all. He didn't even let me ask one question! Later on the campaign trail, he promised that he would fix Flint. Unfortunately, this was one promise that he failed to keep. One promise he's made sure to keep is to build his wall. Trump is tearing families apart with his polices on immigration, and us kids are here to tell him 'No More! We belong together!'
She encouraged the children gathered to never give up on speaking out. "We are not just the future, we are the present as well!" Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
"Black immigrants are three times more likely to be detained and deported as other immigrants—another example of how Blackness is criminalized in this country, and how anti-Blackness permeates our immigration system," Sumbwe said.
President Trump, she continued, has waged war on immigrant communities "since day one by dehumanizing us and threatening our very existence."
"We're in a state of emergency. Our families and communities are being targeted, incarcerated and deported," said Sumbwe. "I am here because I believe the threats against our communities warrant the leadership of these kids!" Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
Mercado continued, "It has been an honor to witness the collective courage of young people and kids who are standing up for the kind of nation that we need and that we deserve." Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
"We're here today to look at that White House and stand up for our families, friends, neighbors, and communities," said Mercado. Lauryn Gutierrez/Rewire
On Thursday, April 13, 40 children and youth from seven states—including Colorado, Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Virginia—gathered in Washington, D.C., with the We Belong Together Kids Caravan. As Rewire Immigration Reporter Tina Vasquez explained on Thursday, the four-city tour “forces the public to bear witness to youth of colors’ fears around immigration.”
“I live with the fear of being separated from my mother every day,” said Leah, 11, of Miami. “We don’t have to destroy communities only because Trump says so. That is why I’m here in front of the White House with the #WeBelongTogether Kids Caravan. I want to tell Mr. Trump that he is a bully, and no matter how mean he is or how hard he tries, he will never break our spirit! We are strong kids and youth, and we are ready to protect our families just as they protect us every single day. We are not afraid of you!” (Rewire is not using the last names of the children in this slideshow due to privacy concerns.)