More than 100 businesses around the Twin Cities shut their doors, immigrant workers left their jobs, and marchers took to the streets Thursday as part of the nationwide "Day Without Immigrants" protest.
The event, organized via social media, urged immigrants, regardless of their legal status, to stay away from work, shutter their businesses, hold their children out of school and refrain from spending money to protest President Donald Trump's views and actions on immigration.
"It was a show of resistance," said Maya Santamaria, owner of La Raza Radio and Telemundo Minnesota. "What it said to us locally was that we can organize … and that we're willing to take the hit economically to make a point and effect change. It shows that people are uniting and that a movement is happening."
Latino restaurants and markets accounted for most of the business closings, but other businesses around the Twin Cities sympathetic to the cause also shut down. Others allowed immigrant employees to stay off the job without repercussions.
In the business realm, the most noticeable effects were seen in the closings of some restaurants and shorthanded kitchen staffs at others. Out on the street, more than 1,000 people marched Thursday morning from the Mexican consulate in St. Paul to the Minnesota State Capitol.
The marchers, joined by members of Black Lives Matter and Native Lives Matter, drew honks of support from passing motorists. Their signs were in English and Spanish. "Immigrants make America great!!!" one read.
"It's beautiful to see this event happen so organically," said Francisco Segovia, the head of Waite House community center in Minneapolis, who was among those who marched to the Capitol. "People who haven't been activists or political leaders or organizers have stood up and organized this."
John Keller, executive director of the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, said anger and fear among immigrants have been simmering since the election, and have been fueled further by Trump's executive order banning travel from seven majority Muslim countries, as well as the stepped-up deportation of undocumented immigrants.