USDAC Statement on Syrian Refugee Crisis

The USDAC calls on all artists and creative activists to use our gifts for compassion and justice, sharing images, performances, experiences, writings, and other works of art that raise awareness, build connection, cultivate empathy, and inspire us to welcome those who are forced from homes that are no longer safe.

More than four million Syrians have been driven from their homes, becoming refugees. Although state governors hold no power to bar entry to the U.S., a short time after the acts of terrorism that took lives in Beirut and Paris, more than half have issued statements rejecting Syrian refugees within their borders. Polls have shown that many Americans oppose accepting Syrian refugees. Poll results from the 1930s and 1940s showed majority opposition to accepting German child refugees and Jews; and from the 1970s majority opposition to the admission of refugees from Southeast Asia.

Once again, we must ask:

  • Who are we as a people? 
  • What do we stand for? 
  • How do we want to be remembered?

As a culture of fear and isolation? Or as a culture that values every human life, extending love and compassion to newcomers needing refuge?

As a people-powered department, we honor the stories of those whose ancestors were brought here by force, those who sought refuge here, and those rooted on this land before others arrived. Together, we can choose to create a culture of belonging, welcoming new culture-bearers. Together, we can live up to the promise inscribed on the Statue of Liberty:

Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome….

We join together in affirming to all public officials and policymakers that a culture of fear and isolation cannot stand. We join together in applying our gifts to sustaining a culture of compassion and justice. We stand together with generations of creative activists in communities across the nation who have been envisioning and working toward a world of equity and belonging for all.

Signed by:

  • Maribel Alvarez, Minister of Public Sentiment, Tucson, AZ
  • Liliana Ashman, Story Hunter-Gatherer, New York, NY
  • Caron Atlas, Minister of Naturally Occurring Cultural Districts, Brooklyn, NY
  • Judy Baca, Minister of Sites of Public Memory, Venice, CA
  • Daniel Banks, Catalytic Agent, Santa Fe, NM
  • Jack Becker, Public Art Mobilizer, St. Paul, MN
  • Roberto Bedoya, Secretary of Belonging, Tucson, AZ
  • Ted Berger, Senior Policy Advisor, New York, NY
  • Ludovic Blain III, Chief Political Wonk, Berkeley, CA
  • Larry Bogad, Minister of Tactical Performance, Berkeley, CA
  • Eric Booth, Head Cheerleader for Teaching Artists, High Falls, NY
  • Amelia Brown, Minister of Emergency Arts, Minneapolis, MN
  • Sarah Browning, Minister of Poetry and Public Life, Washington, DC
  • Con Christesen, Cultural Agent, St. Louis, MO
  • Chrislene DeJean, Cultural Agent, Boston, MA
  • Maria De Leon, Minister of Inclusive Leadership Transformation, San Antonio, TX
  • Martha Diaz, Minister of HIp Hop Education, New York, NY
  • Jayeesha Dutta, Cultural Agent, New Orleans, LA
  • Dana Edell, Secretary of Creative Sparks, Brooklyn, NY
  • Hayden Gilbert, Cultural Agent, Cleveland, OH
  • Arlene Goldbard, Chief Policy Wonk, Lamy, NM
  • Beth Grossman, Cultural Agent, Brisbane, CA
  • Lynden Harris, Cultural Agent, Cedar Grove, NC
  • Mattice Haynes, Cultural Agent, Decatur, GA
  • Jon Henry, Cultural Agent, Harrisonburg, VA
  • Barry Hessenius, Minister of Nonprofit Arts Organizations, San Anselmo, CA
  • Bob Holman, Minister of Poetry and Language Protection, New York, NY
  • Adam Horowitz, Chief Instigator, Santa Fe, NM
  • Denise Johnson, Cultural Agent, Baltimore, MD
  • James Kass, Secretary of Belief in The Next Generation, San Francisco, CA
  • Paul Kuttner, Minister of Cultural Scholarship, Salt Lake City, UT
  • Dave Loewenstein, Cultural Agent, Lawrence, KS
  • Kate McNeely, Action Maestr@, New York, NY
  • Liz Maxwell, Chief Dot Connector, New York, NY
  • Angela Miles, Master of Swag, Philadelphia, PA
  • E. Ethelbert Miller, Minister of Sacred Words, Washington, DC
  • Jaléssa Mungin, Deputy Deputy, Philadelphia, PA
  • Meena Natarajan, Radical Equity Catalyst, Pangaea Division, Minneapolis, MN
  • Martha Richards, Senior Strategist for Women Artists, Berkeley, CA
  • Favianna Rodriguez, Secretary of Cultural Equity, Oakland, CA
  • Julianna Ross, Cultural Agent, Seattle, WA
  • Sebastian Ruth, Secretary of Music and Society, Providence, RI
  • Allison Schifani, Lead Initiative Investigator, Bureau of Speculative Acts & Technologies of Empathy, Cleveland, OH
  • Michael Schwartz, Cultural Agent, Tucson, AZ
  • Shirley Sneve, Tribal Liaison, Lincoln, NE
  • Jessica Solomon, Chief Weaver of Social Fabric, Baltimore, MD
  • Elizabeth Streb, Action Architect, New York, NY
  • Jack Tchen, Secretary of Curiosities, New York, NY
  • Julia Terry, Cultural Agent, Philadelphia, PA
  • Makani Themba, Minister of Revolutionary Imagination, Detroit, MI
  • Fabiola Torralba, Cultural Agent, San Antonio, TX
  • Ali Toxtli, Cultural Agent, Passaic, NJ
  • Carlton Turner, Minister of Creative Southern Strategies, Atlanta, GA
  • Mark Valdez, Minister of Ensemble Creativity, Los Angeles, CA
  • Veena Vasista, ArtReach Coordinator, Santa Fe, NM
  • Lily Yeh, Urban Alchemist, Philadelphia, PA
  • Betty Yu, Cultural Agent, Brooklyn, NY
  • Roseann Weiss, Cultural Agent, St. Louis, MO
  • Yolanda Wisher, Rhapsodist of Wherewithal, Philadelphia, PA
  • Steve Zeitlin, Minister for Art in Everyday Life, New York, NY