From Quixote Center <[email protected]>
Subject Correction: Border Buses Continue to Come, and How to Help
Date February 4, 2023 2:35 PM
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*This email contains a correction to the previous eblast, which contained the wrong caption.

Border Buses Continue to Come, and How to Help

Last April ([link removed]), Governor Abbott of Texas began sending migrants from the US southern border to Washington, DC, with Arizona joining soon after. The media attention around this program has largely quieted down, but the buses continue to come.

Despite a lack of coordination from Texas and Florida, and limited communication from Arizona, cities across the country quickly mobilized mutual aid networks to get migrants to their final destinations or help them resettle in their new communities.

Continue reading for the latest news in several cities across the U.S., and how to take action in your local community.

Continue Reading Here ([link removed])

Photo credit: Welcome With Dignity Campaign

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Say NO to Title 42 Expansion

The Biden administration is considering a new regulation that would block migrants from applying for asylum if they did not first apply in a different country or if they entered irregularly. This amounts to a ban on asylum and is a gross violation of international and domestic law.

In January, the administration created a new humanitarian parole program to allow some migrants from Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Cuba to come to the U.S. for two years if they meet certain requirements. Twenty states have announced they will challenge the program in federal court, which, together with the asylum ban, could leave families with even fewer options to seek safety. Remind Congress and the White House that we are a country that welcomes asylum seekers.

Take Action ([link removed])

BHM Series: Artist Corner

To celebrate the start of Black History Month, we're featuring Haitian visual artist, educator, and art administrator Laurena Finéus. Specializing in painting, Finéus explores how Haiti is represented within its diaspora and across the globe, weaving together imagined landscapes and narratives. She combines these with her own personal memories of living in Canada, while exploring how historical narratives are constructed. To see more of her work, visit her website HERE ([link removed]).

Paintings in order:

* "Decadent terror: Bal à Cité Soleil,Acrylic and oil on canvas, 2022 (48x72'')

* The Horses Stood Like Men"

* "Péralte sighting's / Birth of an Idol ,Acrylic and oil on canvas, 2022"
* Anacaona, La fleur d'or des antilles, 2021 Acrylic and oil on canvas/ Acrylique et huile sur toile 30x60''

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