The ICE operations on Minneapolis street corners are often heard before they are seen, as protesters and local residents fill the air with the piercing sound of whistles.
Activists, observers and other concerned residents are using the omnipresent whistles to bring attention to the scene of raids and other ICE activity, as the Trump administration carries out what it’s called the largest federal immigration enforcement effort ever.
At Minneapolis City Hall, state and city lawmakers, including City Council President Elliott Payne and state Sen. Doron Clark, wore bright red whistles around their necks during a news conference last week about ICE’s operations in the city, a sign that the whistle had been adopted as the symbol of resistance to the federal operation.
The use of whistles came out of similar immigration enforcement efforts in Chicago and Los Angeles last year. In Chicago, whistles seemed to de-escalate some situations or motivate agents to leave a scene, according to WBEZ Chicago.
Now, whistles have spread across the Twin Cities through 3D printer files and local businesses.
Since December, women’s sports pub A Bar of Their Own in the Seward neighborhood has handed out more than 1,500 whistles, with half of that number going out in just the past couple of weeks, said owner Jillian Hiscock.
“I have one on every key chain I have,” she said. “People want to help, and they want to do what they can. I think a lot of people feel really helpless right now … and it’s a low-barrier way of stepping up and showing support for our community.”
‘Form a crowd stay loud’
Social media has been flooded with questions about where to find whistles since the Jan. 7 fatal shooting of Renee Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent.