A St. Cloud Muslim, author and teacher, Hudda Ibrahim hosts regular "Dine and Dialogue with a Muslim Neighbor" events in her family's St. Cloud apartment building to help foster better understanding of immigrants and refugees.
The city's mayor, Dave Kleis, holds chili feeds at his house to bridge the cultural gaps among different races and religions.
And on Nov. 6, the group #UniteCloud will hold a panel discussion called "I Don't Mean to Offend You, But …" to allow people born in or around St. Cloud to ask lingering or nagging questions of Muslims from several different countries.
All are attempts to bring transparency and civil discussion to the issue of how immigrants and refugees are changing central Minnesota. All will get local media coverage.
Unfortunately, on the same day as the panel discussion, City Council Member Jeff Johnson is expected to call for a moratorium on new immigrants to the city while studies are done on their impact. It's a proposal both doomed to fail and assured to bring statewide, if not nationwide, attention.
"It's extremely embarrassing to be in the news for this," said Natalie Ringsmuth, director of #UniteCloud, a nonprofit that seeks to ease racial, religious and cultural tensions in St. Cloud. "It's something that will create fear in what is already a fearful situation."
Ringsmuth has heard the myths that get spread, such as the belief that all immigrants get free cars when they arrive in this country.
"People are angry for a reason," said Ringsmuth, who pointed out that while unemployment in the region is low, so are wages — so low that many working poor from St. Cloud use social services. Instead of attacking that problem, she said, they blame people who don't look like them.