Read the full article at Forward.

By Daniel J. Solomon

Organized by Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, co-sponsors and attendees included the Muslim civil rights activist Linda Sarsour, Fatoumata Waggeh of African Communities Together, city comptroller Scott Stringer and Jose Rolando Matalon, the senior rabbi at Manhattan’s influential B’nai Jeshurun synagogue. Six people were arrested at the protest and taken into police custody.

Key items on the activists’ program were promoting the Right to Know Act – a bill that would force New York Police Department officers to clearly identify themselves to the public and limit their power to make stops and searches – and urging the mayor to further limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, which de Blasio has already vowed to do.

“I am a first generation American of Iranian Jewish parents, and my parents felt blessed for the second chance they were given when they came to America as refugees and for the opportunities this country would extend to me and my siblings,” Talia Kamran, a member of JFREJ who was arrested, said in a press release. “All immigrants, documented or undocumented, and all people deserve that same chance, to feel like the place that they live is their sanctuary.”

Read the full article at Forward.