Minnesota
Related: About this forumDozens 'dine-in,' rally at immigrant-owned restaurants in northeast Minneapolis to protest ICE
MPR Minnesota Public Radio, 3/1/26
Thats why dozens of people gathered to eat at several immigrant-owned restaurants along Central Avenue in northeast Minneapolis on Sunday afternoon. Some of the businesses included El Taco Riendo, Holy Land and The Golden Nuts.
Yates was one of about 10 people who were eating chicken and beef shawarmas inside of Holy Land, a Palestinian-owned restaurant serving Mediterranean food. They say its important to recognize communities are still being impacted by ICE.
. . .
The raids are still happening, said Yates. Our political leaders haven't done enough to mitigate the effects of Metro Surge.
Others found ways to support restaurants like Maya Cuisine that were closed for the day. Bre Krzyzanowski was among a handful of people standing outside the restaurant holding signs that said ICE Out Now" and "We Love Our Immigrant Neighbors."
calimary
(89,626 posts)Reports like this encourage me. Its a reminder that were not fighting this alone. We have help, comrades, and sympathizers.
progree
(12,882 posts)This is a related story I posted a week ago here in the MN group
https://www.democraticunderground.com/105915887
OldBaldy1701E
(10,896 posts)But, since I have no money to give them and no way to get anywhere to do anything...
progree
(12,882 posts)in all the stories like these I've seen so far are 2-bus trips.
Health reasons keep me from long trip times (more than say 3 hours), lack of time (piles of papers on floor need attending to and a long must-do list, admittedly if I seriously cut back on DU time, I'd make better progress on that),
finally, I rarely eat out (and never order prepared food) because of the extraordinarily high sodium and fat content.
But I do think of finding an immigrant restaurant within one-bus range for the rare times that I do eat out (a couple times a month).
To eat, it's pretty much all groceries that I walk about 55 minutes to Cub Foods for exercise, take the bus rest of way, then home on the bus with groceries (though still have a very exercise-worthy walk with a backpack full of groceries + 4 heavy bags of about 30 minutes) from the bus stop to home.
One bright spot is that as a senior, my bus fare is $1, and that covers the return trip too, because I do the "to" trip and the "from" trip within the 2.5 hour free transfer window.
OldBaldy1701E
(10,896 posts)Now, there is a comparison that I would like to see.
American restaurants vs. non-American restaurants regarding their sodium, sugar, and fat content.
The few that are near us are... not cheap... so I cannot frequent their establishment. In fact, there are a few that we just cannot step foot into because of their obvious higher-end clientele.
It is really frustrating when one wants to help out, but the only help being accepted are things that I cannot do or offer.