End Deportations
Court-watch, New York For All, and Deportation Defense
In 2026, JFREJ is organizing:
1. Mitzvah of Presence: Lead daily shifts and training for Court Watch at 26 Federal Plaza and Rapid Response in neighborhoods across the city.
2. Moments of Transcendent Solidarity: Build powerful and sustainable relationships with our immigrant neighbors to support New Yorkers targeted by ICE, and hold corporations accountable for collaborating with ICE.
3. City and State Legislative Pressure: Pass the New York For All Act, NYC Trust Act, and a NYC budget to strengthen New York’s sanctuary status, including direct services for immigrants.
Welcome to JFREJ's End Deportations Campaign! Together we are organizing to accompany our immigrant neighbors at federal courthouses, build solidarity in our local neighborhoods, and fight for city and state legislation that solidifies New York's sanctuary status. We are in a broad coalition with movement partners dedicated to Abolishing ICE and building a city where immigrants thrive and are celebrated, without fear of abduction and deportation
2026 Legislative Priorities:
New York State:
New York City:
- Pass a city budget that allocates $1.5B for legal and other social services for Immigrant New Yorkers.
- Intro 209 (NYC Trust Act) to hold local agencies and law enforcement accountable for breaking sanctuary laws
- Intro 395 and Intro 396 to prohibit transfers and communication between ICE, NYPD, and DOC
- Intro 460 to abolish the NYPD Gang Database
Previous Immigrant Justice Campaigns:
Fighting Mayor Adams' Anti-Immigrant Policies
In 2023, Mayor Eric Adams gutted NYC's longstanding Right To Shelter policy, evicting newly arrived immigrants from city-run shelters every 30 and 60 days, destabilizing immigrant families, and leaving people out on the street with nowhere to turn. In response, JFREJ members organized with Tirdof: New York Jewish Clergy for Justice, VOCAL-New York, Make the Road New York, Never Again Action, and the New York Immigration Coalition and forced the Adams Administration to end the cruel 30/60-day shelter eviction rule.
Protesting the Muslim Ban
In 2017, JFREJ was among the first NYC-based organizations to answer the call from our friends at Make The Road NY to protest at JFK Airport after the announcement of the Muslim Ban. Our members mobilized alongside thousands of New Yorkers to demand entry into the country for Muslim travelers. We held a Havdallah service at the airport, and protested every subsequent Muslim Ban Executive Order.
Jews Against ICE
JFREJ has been fighting ICE for as long as the agency has existed. In 2019, we helped our members to launch a new national organization, Never Again Action, as a home for the millions of #JewsAgainstICE who want to make their voices heard in this moment of moral crisis. ICE is deporting our neighbors, separating families, and putting children in cages, but we won't stay silent. Our families have been refugees, arriving on hostile shores; we know concentration camps when we see them; and when we say, "never again," we mean it.
In June of 2019, JFREJ helped to hold down the very first Never Again Action shut-down of an ICE immigrant prison in Elizabeth, New Jersey. We coached and supported other actions around the country as the movement caught fire. Here in New York, for Tisha B’Av, we held down the largest action of the summer, and likely the largest action ever to take place against Amazon. Joined by our partners Mijente and Make the Road New York, more than 1,000 members of our extended community descended on Amazon’s Midtown Manhattan bookstore to demand that Amazon Web Services cancel its contracts with Palantir and ICE. ICE uses Amazon and Palantir’s database technology to target immigrants for raids and deportation. Members led a two-hour service in the middle of the Amazon store, reading from Lamentations and sharing the testimonies of immigrants detained in Trump’s concentration camps. Forty-four of us were arrested in protest, including a minyan of 11 rabbis.
Let My People Go
As COVID-19 swept through incarcerated populations, ICE detention can be even more of a death sentence for undocumented New Yorkers. In our own backyard across the tristate area, there are 10 concentration camps full of thousands of children, parents, siblings, and friends, caged for their immigration status alone, and facing deportation.
In spring of 2020, Jews For Racial & Economic Justice and partners, including the Brooklyn Community Bail Fund (now the Envision Freedom Fund) and Never Again Action, took inspiration from the Black Mamas Bailout: We joined forces to launch the Let My People Go campaign to bail people out of jail and immigration detention, and to demand that Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio free jailed and detained New Yorkers. By June 30th of that year, with the support of over 60 grassroots fundraisers, 3300 donors, and 20 synagogues and Jewish organizations, the Let My People Go campaign had raised over $370,000 and helped bond out over 50 people from ICE detention across three states.
Our work isn't done — far too many of our neighbors are still incarcerated, without the ability to socially distance or practice even the basic hygiene necessary to protect themselves.
Israel Adeyemi Adeniji worked as a lawyer in Nigeria, where he still has an organization that supports kids without parents to go to school. He was detained by ICE and released on bond after 190 days in 2019 and lives in Staten Island, NY with his family. We were connected through mutual aid networks and collaborated on this video, where Israel shares his experiences in detention and what it has meant to him to be free.