Community, Resistance, and Care: Indigenous-Led Movements Reshape Minneapolis Streets and Shelters
Minneapolis's South Asian community shares the city with neighbors whose struggles for dignity and safety mirror our own, and this week two powerful stories remind us of the strength of grassroots, community-led organizing right here at home.
✊ The American Indian Movement Returns to Minneapolis Streets to Counter ICE
The American Indian Movement, long a cornerstone of Indigenous activism in Minneapolis, has resumed active street presence in the city, this time to monitor and counter immigration enforcement operations. The organization draws on decades of experience protecting vulnerable community members in Minneapolis, dating back to its founding roots in the city. AIM's renewed street-level work reflects both its historical mission and an urgent contemporary need felt by many immigrant and minority communities across the metro. For Minneapolis residents from all backgrounds, including South Asians navigating an uncertain immigration climate, AIM's visible community protection efforts carry significant meaning. [5]
🏠 Minnesota Indian Women's Resource Center Opens Its Doors as a Winter Refuge
The Minnesota Indian Women's Resource Center in south Minneapolis operates a warming center on Tuesday nights, offering up to 20 overnight beds along with food, clothing, and safety during dangerously cold temperatures. Volunteers like Margaret Percy keep the center running, preparing hot breakfasts — eggs, sausage, hash browns, and oatmeal — for everyone who walks through the door. The center first opened its warming facility in response to a particularly brutal stretch of winter weather the previous year and has continued the service since. Its model of community-led, culturally grounded care speaks to a kind of neighbor-helping-neighbor spirit that resonates deeply across Minneapolis's diverse communities. [6]
