Who is the Quaker? The belief group marches 300 miles against Trump’s immigration crack

Ross Brubech and other members of The Quake March Washington (Image: AP)

A group of quakers more than 300 miles – from New York City to Washington, DC – is marching to protest against the treatment of immigrants of Trump administration.

Who is the Quaker?

Quakers are friends of religious society, a Christian group founded in 1650 by George Fox. They believe in peace, fairness, and that all have a light from God inside. They often oppose peacefully that they stand to stand for what they believe.Historically, Quakers have staged peaceful protests to end war and slavery and support women’s voting rights. Recently, he has sued the federal government for a new rule, which has allowed immigration agents to arrest people inside the worship sites like churches or temples. Quakers believe that these places should be safe and preserved, and the government should not arrest the houses of worship.Quakers are marching to show solidarity with migrants and other groups that are targeting the administration of US President Donald Trump. They believe that immigrants are being wrongly targeted. 25 -year -old Quaker and March organizer Jess Hobbes Piffeer said, “It seems really such important and difficult to be against existence threats in some ways.”He said, “I just have to lay one foot in front of the other to do something better, something else is true for the quakers we see for this country and what people saw for American experiment, American dreams,” he said.Flushing, starting to walk at a Quker meeting house in New York, they are planning to run from New York, New Jersey, Maryland and Pennsylvania to US Capital in Washington, DC. After his arrival, he would distribute a copy of the flushing rimstens- a 17th-century document that called for religious freedom and opposed the ban on Quaker Puja.Policies of Quakers and Trump:Earlier this year, five Quker groups sued the Trump administration for allowing immigration officials to arrest people in churches. He later joined the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and a Sikh temple. Subsequently, more than two-pain Christians and Jewish groups filed a similar lawsuit, but a federal judge ruled against him.During the President’s campaign, Trump said that immigrants are an existential threat to America. The immigration, both legal and illegally, increased during the administration of former US President Joe Biden. After returning to the White House, Trump started strict action against the immigrants. He used his President’s powers extensively. Despite the efforts by the federal judges to limit their rights, they continue to pursue it.One of the marchers, Ross Brubch said, “Immigrants are experiencing the most intense oppression in the United States.” He wanted to send a message to Trump: “Not to make Shakti.”

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