
Well over 10,000 people took to the streets in Austin this May Day to demand justice for immigrant communities. The crowd gathered at the capital, marched down Congress Avenue to Cesar Chavez, and proceeded to Cantu Park for a celebration.
The crowd was overwhelmingly composed of working people of color, students, and their families, supported by a strong presence of activists, academics and other allies. The tone of the event was critical and celebratory with demands for dignity, justice, and sane policy accompanied by affirmations of ethnic, national and cultural identity. It was a coming together of many different groups of people under many banners with rhetoric ranging from calls to vote to calls for prolonged struggle. The march culminated in a community gathering at Cantu Park that had the feel of a festival. Musicians, dancers and speakers reflected the sentiment of the crowd. This crowd was at once creative and oppositional, affirming lives and identities while defying the racist practices, discourses and policies we are all too familiar with.
At the capital, the crowd gathered early, thousands of people were already rallying and chanting as I arrived half and hour before the announced gathering time. I was immediately struck, as with at the other recent immigrant rights demonstrations, with the composition of the crowd. I saw faces of working people, their families and students everywhere. It was amazing to see so many people who took off from work, school, or other responsibilities, possibly at great risk, to stand up, walk, and participate in making history.