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Singing protests gain momentum as non-violent but emotionally stirring rebukes to ICE

(RNS) — 'We're going to sing and sing and try to touch the hearts of the ICE agents,' said the Rev. Jacqueline Lewis, senior pastor at Middle Church in New York.
Singing protests gain momentum as non-violent but emotionally stirring rebukes to ICE
Jessi Olsen, left, co-musical director of the Resistance Revival Chorus, sings with the Resistance Revival Chorus during an “ICE Out, Sing-In” service at Middle Church, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, in New York. (RNS photo/Fiona Murphy)

(RNS) — At Middle Church, a historic congregation in Manhattan’s East Village, hundreds gathered on Thursday evening (Feb. 26) for a two-hour “ICE Out, Sing-In” service, where prospective protesters were trained to “try to touch the hearts” of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers as they confront them, said Middle Church’s senior pastor, the Rev. Jacqui Lewis.

The singalong, the second such service held at the church this month, included movement and testimony as well as song and honored one congregant’s husband who was absent because he’d been detained.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Two weeks ago, Middle Church hosted its first sing-in, drawing more than 1,000 people online and in person, with crowds spilling onto the street, according to Lewis.

Thursday’s service began with Middle Church’s Jerriese Johnson Gospel Choir, followed by the Resistance Revival Chorus. The groups trained attendees on songs originating in the Civil Rights Movement as well as newer music written by activists in Minneapolis. Selections included the chorus of “Ella’s Song,” about civil rights activist Ella Baker, the Christian hymn “This Joy” and “All You Fascists Bound to Lose.”

At one point, the gospel choir led an original song in Spanish with lyrics that said: “You are not alone. Together we create liberation.”

The Resistance Revival Chorus performs during an “ICE Out, Sing-In” service at Middle Church, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, in New York. (RNS photo/Fiona Murphy)

The crowd included community members, churchgoers and activists, many of whom cried throughout the two-hour event. Nina Resnick, who has attended both sing-ins at Middle Church, though she is not a member, said she views singing as both therapeutic and communal. “I think almost physically, my heart is so open, and physically I feel so much tingling and alive,” Resnick said. “And I love singing anyway, but I think singing songs with meaning, with protest, about important aspects of life — I can’t think of anything that’s more therapeutic.”


Organized in solidarity with faith groups in Minneapolis by the national network Interfaith Alliance, the events are an outgrowth of the Singing Resistance movement that began six weeks ago as ICE combed the city’s streets for immigrants. The movement gained attention on social media as participants sang outside hotel rooms where ICE agents are staying, leading church choirs and clergy to hold similar sing-ins inside sanctuaries and during marches to protest ICE arrests.


“We’re going to sing while we’re walking. We’re going to sing as we mourn those who have been murdered. I’m so deeply moved by it, and it is a repeated response,” said Lewis, who has led Middle Church for more than a decade.

Lewis said longstanding relationships with clergy and members in Minneapolis, including friends whose church helped launch the sing-ins, inspired her to host a similar event in New York. “We’ve seen our family in Minnesota singing as resistance,” Lewis said. “The singing is memory, the singing is hope, the singing is prayer, the singing is power.”

People participate in a singing vigil that started at San Pablo — St. Paul Lutheran Church, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026, in Minneapolis. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)

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