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- Havdalah #58: CARI, Tomaquag L&L, and Goodbye to Jackie
Havdalah #58: CARI, Tomaquag L&L, and Goodbye to Jackie
4 Cheshvan, 5785 / October 25, 2025


Hello all, and welcome to Havdalah #58 —
It has certainly been a week, between protests and shutdowns and unauthorized demolition projects, but most important here at White Rose is that one of our contributors, Jackie, will be leaving us for job opportunities out of state. It’s been great having her as part of the team, and she will be missed. Good luck!
Goodnight, and mind how you go —
Katherine (she / her)
PS: We’d like to hear from you! Let us know how we’re doing!

Workers and Renters: Providence General Assembly
When: Saturday, November 8, 12:00pm and every other Saturday
Where: 134 Mathewson Street, Providence, RI 02903
From their Instagram:
Worried about Trump?
Want to defend our communities?
Want a world that works for everyone?
Come to the Providence General Assembly!
Spanish, ASL interpretation and childcare available upon email request
Masking requested and masks will be provided
Direct questions to [email protected]
Public Workshop on Natural Gas Moratorium
When: Wednesday, October 29, 5:30pm
Where: Newport City Hall, 43 Broadway, Newport RI 02840
From CARI’s newsletter:
We all want the same thing: clean air, affordable bills, and the lights staying on. But you can’t count on natural gas for that. Every neaw gas hookup deepens our dependence on costly, polluting infrastructure that strains the system, risks another outage, and locks residents into decades of volatile prices. Natural gas is not a long-term energy solution for the Island. And now you can take action.
Newport is hosting a public workshop to explore the concept of a pause on new gas hookups. You’re invited to attend, ask questions of experts, and state your opinion.
CARI October Community Meeting with Rep David Morales
When: Thursday, October 30, 7:00pm
Where: Hamilton House, 276 Angell Street, Providence RI 02906
For their October Community meeting, join Climate Action RI (CARI) for a conversation with Representative David Morales. Rep. Morales will share his comprehensive vision to make Providence a more climate resilient city for all our neighbors, and how we can effectively advocate for statewide solutions to address the climate crisis.
The Womxn Project Call to Actions
Not quite an event, but the Womxn Project has provided a couple of actions to do to respond to the health and food crisis in Rhode Island:
Call to Action #1: Help Your Neighbor! Let’s build food security for our community into our daily actions!
With the expanding food crisis, The Womxn Project, in partnership with the RI Food Bank, RI Food Policy Council, RI State Council of Churches, and Youth Pride, is issuing a statewide call to action, STAT!
Every nonprofit organization or for-profit business—from sports teams and scouting troops to art collectives and faith communities—is being asked to include a food collection at every one of their events.
In a recent interview with Rhode Island Public Radio, RI Food Bank Executive Director Melissa Cherney reported that nearly 40% of Rhode Islanders are experiencing food insecurity. “RI has many committed non-profit organizations. That means we have the reach and the power to make an enormous difference if we act together. This is how we show what community care really looks like.” Jocelyn Foye, Executive Director of The Womxn Project.
As the smallest state in the nation, Rhode Island can prove it’s also the biggest in heart. This initiative—called “Big Table Rhode Island!”—urges organizations to normalize giving by encouraging attendees to bring canned or nonperishable goods to every meeting, practice, or event, creating a culture of consistent, everyday support for local pantries. Read more
Call to Action #2: Voting Transparency: The Bodily Freedom Forever Index Questionnaires are out!
This past week, the Womxn Project sent the Bodily Freedom Forever Index questionnaire to every elected official in our state, from town and city school committee or town counselors, to state reps and senators on up.
Through civic engagement, policy advancement, and artivism, TWP takes action to secure reproductive freedom, LGBTQ+ rights, and government transparency in Rhode Island. The BFFI is an ongoing initiative to record and report the stance of each elected official in RI on these issues to promote transparency in our elections.
TWP defines "bodily freedom" as sole decision-making power over one's body, so long as those decisions do not infringe on another’s bodily autonomy. When evaluating an official's stance on bodily freedom, TWP considers two (of many) issues: support for reproductive rights and support for LGBTQ+ equality.
HELP TWP get a response from your local elected officials -- have them fill out the BFFI survey sent to their emails!
Call to Action #3: Our Rhode Island "Kavanaugh" Problem: An Anti-Democratic Nominee for Judge
Earlier this summer the chair of the RI Judicial Nominating Commission (JNC) stated TWP broke precedent for the amount of emails and oral testimony shared against one candidate seeking a district judge position.
Why? Michael McCaffrey is an anti-abortion, anti-marriage equality candidate with the separation of church and state being of no concern. After the JNC voted on him and others, they passed the recommendations on to the Governor who "taps" a few candidates, to then go to the RI Senate for a final vote.
Since the vote, 3 new district judges have retired making it so there are FOUR positions to fill. All the calls and attention to this from the summer is not lost.
We need to call our Senators and say NO to a representative that is not aligned to the majority of RI's values. Remember, there are FIVE names that were passed onto the Governor. Join us in saying no to McCaffrey-"Kavanaugh." Say yes to the four others!
ACLU Rights Explainers
When: Up now
Where: Online
The ACLU just released two updated versions of their explainers about your rights when interacting with immigration agents (ICE) or the police. They have them available in 10 languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Cape Verdean, Haitian Creole, French, Swahili, Dari, Pashto, and Khmer.
Read and save this material – regardless of your own immigration status – and send to friends and family! Click the link below and scroll to the bottom of the page to download PDFs that you can print, plus the ACLU posted on all their social media platforms (@riaclu) if you want to save and share online.
If you have a specific way to distribute larger numbers of the paper copies, please email the RI ACLU at [email protected] or call them at 401-831-7171. They have a limited supply printed, but will provide as many as they are able.

Tomaquag Museum: Lunch and Learn
When: Monday, October 27, 12:00pm-1:00pm
Where: Online (Zoom)
Discover what freedom meant for Indigenous and African-descended communities during the time of the Declaration of Independence in this powerful conversation with Dr. Akeia de Barros Gomes, Director of the Center for Black History at the Newport Historical Society.
Don’t miss this chance to explore deeper narratives of history and freedom. All are welcome!

AMOR Community Fund for ICE Detainees
The Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR) is a grassroots, community-led organization in Rhode Island working to counter state-sponsored and interpersonal violence against marginalized folks.
The AMOR Community Fund for ICE Detainees is looking to support all people experiencing detention in RI, especially those detained by ICE at the Wyatt Detention Center.
Here are some examples of what your donation to the AMOR Community Fund for ICE Detainees can do!
$10 — A ten minute phone call from detention
$25 — The first meal after release from detention
$45 — Clothes after release from detention
$100 — Grocery shopping after release
$300 — Flight back to home state after release
$450 — Filing Fees with USCIS
$500 — Consultation with a lawyer
$1,500 to $7,000 to post bond for an individual and see them released from detention
One element of AMOR's work is support for immigrants in our communities, particularly in the legal realm. As the federal government continues to enforce immigration policies that attack immigrant families, AMOR has fiercely resisted these unjust policies, including connecting clients with legal services, organizing rallies and fundraisers in support of individuals with whom we work, putting on know-your-rights training, accompanying individuals to court dates and ICE check-ins, and more.
However, there are still countless immigrant Rhode Islanders who are seeking assistance, and AMOR hopes to be able to continue to support them tirelessly in the year to come. Please contribute anything you can to their community fund — all money donated will go directly to supporting our community, specifically to pay for legal expenses and bond.
Any donation is much appreciated!
You can find them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter as:
@amornetwork
or at https://amorri.org/

News Round-Up: Local
Butler caregivers raise money and volunteer to restore the Blackstone Boulevard Park (Steve Ahlquist in SteveAhlquist.news, October 19, 2025)
Rhode Island announces first wave of housing bond investments (Steve Ahlquist in SteveAhlquist.news, October 21, 2025)
Cumberland School Committee subcommittee takes up its “Policy Affecting Students Who Identify as Transgender or Nonbinary” (Steve Ahlquist in SteveAhlquist.news, October 22, 2025)
New Providence Police Surveillance Software Has Civil Liberties Groups Asking “Who’s Watching?” (Eric Halvarson in The Providence Eye, October 22, 2025)
News Round-Up: National
ICE keeps detaining pregnant immigrants — against federal policy (Shefali Luthra and Mel Leonor Barclay in The 19th, October 20, 2025)
Pod Recs: It Could Happen Here
Executive Disorder: White House Weekly #38 (It Could Happen Here, October 24, 2025)
