Thirty-one professors from Harvard and other Boston universities were arrested Thursday when they protested the decision to phase out DACA, a program that protects young immigrants who came to the US as children.
Soha Bayoumi
Alliance San Diego and other Pro-DACA supporters hold a protest rally, following US President Donald Trump's DACA announcement, in front of San Diego County Administration Center in San Diego, California, US, Sept. 5, 2017.
John Gastaldo/Reuters
Egyptian-born physician Ahmed Ragab became a US citizen in Boston last Thursday morning. That afternoon he drove to neighboring Cambridge and broke the law.
Ragab joined 30 of his colleagues from Harvard and other nearby universities to protest President Donald Trump's decision to phase out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which protects young immigrants who came to the United States as children.
Thirty-one professors from Harvard and other Boston universities were arrested Thursday when they protested the decision to phase out DACA, a program that protects young immigrants who came to the US as children.
Soha Bayoumi
"We could disagree on what we believe is right, but disruption is actually a democratic tradition," says Ragab, who directs the Religion and Culture program at Harvard Divinity School. "This country is not built by the acts of a few politicians deciding what the laws should be. Whatever gains citizens have in this country were fought for in the streets."
Ragab was born in Egypt and graduated from Cairo University's medical school. He participated in the Tahrir Square protests that ultimately sparked the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
"The rights of individuals to protest are way more protected here than they are in many other parts around the world," he says. "Because your rights to protest are protected, your duty to protest is even more important."
Ahmed Ragab wrote an op-ed about his decision to engage in civil disobedience, for The Washington Post. Hear more about his experience in the audio, above.
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