On this Day of Service

We at WWS know that many of you are feeling scared, drained, and at a loss on how to help. In response to the murders of Renee Nicole Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 7, 2026, Keith Porter by an off-duty ICE agent in Los Angeles on December 31, 2025, Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez by an ICE agent in Chicago on September 12, 2025, and the more than 20 people killed in ICE detention in 2025 alone, WWS has put together a short list of resources on how to get involved. 

In honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s memory and message, we encourage you to take a few minutes today to look over our list and find a couple of places to donate to, volunteer with, or follow.  

You can also find a list of resources specific to Los Angeles at our statement on ICE from June 2025. 

Places to Donate:

GoFundMe for Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, the man killed by an ICE agent in Chicago, Illinois on September 12, 2025: https://www.gofundme.com/f/silverio-villegas-gonzalez

GoFundMe for Keith Porter, the man killed by an off-duty ICE agent in Los Angeles, California on New Year’s Eve: https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-keiths-daughters-after-tragedy

GoFundMe for Renee Nicole Good, the woman killed by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, Minnesota on January 7, 2026, is now closed, but you canl visit the site to read her wife’s statement: https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-renee-goods-wife-and-son

Minneapolis Rapid Response: 

Monarca: https://monarcamn.org

612-441-2881 

Immigrant Defense Network: https://immigrantdefensenetwork.org/

612-255-3112

Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee: https://www.miracmn.com

miracmn@gmail.com

Minneapolis Mutual Aid:

linktr.ee/mplsmutualaid?utm_source=linktree_profile_share&ltsid=e71e5788-ab78-4ca7-ab75-a1629f459d10

Los Angeles Rapid Response: 

NDLON: https://ndlon.org/

(626) 799-3566

CHIRLA: https://www.chirla.org

888-624-4752

Órale: https://www.orale.org

(562) 245-9575

DSA-LA: https://www.instagram.com/dsa_la

Los Angeles Mutual Aid:

https://mutualaidla.org/

Reading List:

“On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs,” award winning poem by Renee Nicole Good: https://poets.org/2020-on-learning-to-dissect-fetal-pigs

“My Minnesotans Fear Ice” by Minnesotan poet/activist Bao Phi: https://time.com/7345628/anti-ice-minneapolis-minnesota-protests-fear

“An Elegy for My Neighbor, Renee Nicole Good” by poet Danez Smith: https://www.harpersbazaar.com/culture/features/a69957102/elegy-for-renee-nicole-good/

“Renee Nicole Good’s Award-Winning Poem: Read Excerpt” by Mandy Taheri: https://www.newsweek.com/renee-nicole-goods-award-winning-poem-read-in-full-11336593

Instagram Statements & Reflections:

“Statement on Recent ICE Murders of Community Members” from California Faculty Association: https://www.instagram.com/p/DTTMO_qAafQ/?img_index=2

Thoughts from Rajiv Mohabir, poet and professor, who selected “On Learning Dissecting Fetal Pigs” for the ODU undergraduate poetry prize in 2020: https://www.instagram.com/p/DTO04M6DDAA/?img_index=1&igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ%3D%3D

On the importance of community gatherings from Bay Area musician, A1: https://www.instagram.com/p/DTTcV9Ukm1y/

Women Who Submit Stands with Palestinian Authors: A Response to the LA Public Library’s Decision to Cancel an Event with Jenan Matari and Nora Lester Murad

In response to the LA Public Library’s decision to cancel an event during Read Palestine Week (the original LA Reporter article can be read here), we at Women Who Submit (WWS) have worked together to write the following statement in solidarity with the Palestinian and Jewish authors whose author talks were redacted from the program without explanation.

Women Who Submit, our members, authors, and affiliates, support and uplift diversity and equity in our storytelling, programming, and actions. Our organization was founded with the intention to promote women and non-binary people to tell their truths in writing. In a society that too often amplifies white Christian heteronormative stories to promote a homogenous American lie, WWS especially aims to uplift underrepresented voices to promote complex and compassionate visions of humanity. 

We do not agree with the LA Public Library’s decision to cancel the Read Palestine Week event featuring Jenan Matari, author of Everything Grows in Jiddo’s Garden and Nora Lester Murad, author of Ida in the Middle. The silencing of these Palestinian authors, especially when the Palestinian people are actively experiencing a genocide by the Israeli government is wrong. From Women Who Submit joins the Palestinian-led Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel”published in June 2025: “For over 600 days, the Israeli Occupation Forces have decimated Gaza’s schools, universities, and libraries, attacking the nerve centers of Palestinian knowledge and culture. They have assassinated over 200 journalists, 115 civil defense workers, and over 1,200 healthcare workers…Along with the crime of genocide, the IOF have committed domicide (the destruction of homes), scholasticide (the destruction of schools) and epistemicide (the destruction of archives, libraries and other sites of knowledge production).” 

In a world where the Palestinian people are actively being murdered in their homeland, we consider this an act of racism, anti-Palestinian sentiment, and censorship. 

In Los Angeles, we demand the freedom of libraries to remain public spaces where individuals may access institutional resources, knowledge hubs, and programs from a variety of sources, including those that contend with and center the voices and perspectives of communities the Trump Administration continues to target. As Supreme Court of the United States attacks libraries and creates an uncertain environment for federal funding sources for libraries as centers of knowledge, it becomes all the more important for public institutions not to concede to ostentatious displays of power. 

As the Los Angeles Central Library celebrates its centennial in 2026, “Dedicated in July 1926, the Los Angeles Central Library became an instant architectural icon and guiding light of learning for the city,” we remind the Central Library that to remove this event is not only contradictory to its mission to be a “guiding light of learning,” but is an act of cowardice.

Women Who Submit stands by those who need assistance in uplifting their narrative. We do not tolerate censorship of any kind. We stand by the Palestinian and Jewish authors who were denied the opportunity to tell their narratives at the Los Angeles Library as literary advocates and as a literary organization whose members encompass women and nonbinary people of the global majority. We will not allow for these voices to be silenced.

December 2025 Publication Roundup

Happy New Year! The Women Who Submit members included in this post published their work in amazing places during December of 2025. One of our committed members heard about their publication opportunity through WWS programming and/or another member.

I’ve included an excerpt from published pieces (if available), along with a link (if available) to where the pieces can be purchased and/or read in their entirety. Please take some time to celebrate yourself and your wonderful accomplishments, especially with so many writers published this month. Thank you and happy submitting!

Huge congratulations to Amy Raasch whose poem “My Sister Donates Her Eyes to the State of Minnesota” won the Beullah Rose Poetry Prize.

Kudos to Christine Heriat whose fiction piece “The Ledger” was published in Shotgun Honey.

You carry a heavy case. 

His narrowed eyes, his tight mouth, tell you it would’ a been smarter to carry what’s inside the case in your waistband, or hand. But you worried too much over drawin’ the attention of other gang members, a stray cop, that sorta thing. Really, your big case makes you feel big, even though you left your colors at home. Gotta find a way to look strong when you take this kinda risk. Make a move to improve your circumstance, scratch your way up with one fingernail, one job, one bullet. 

Shoutout to Elizabeth Galoozis whose poem “ode to an adolescent niece” was featured in Sontag Mag.

you’re blazing

hot pink-orange,

an angry sunrise

through wildfire smoke,

a highlighter

obliterating words

you’re expected

to remember.

Please join me in congratulating Diosa Xochiquetzalcoatl who published a new poetry collection MeXicana: poemas y mas poemas with Riot of Roses Publishing House.

Kudos to Viktoria Valenzuela whose poem “Top & Tail Lover’s Knot” appeared in Zócalo Public Square.

Congratulations to Shelley Ettinger whose poem “Disappear” was featured in Radical Catalyst Vol.1, No.2.

Shoutout to Michelle Smith whose poem “Heart of Simon” appeared in LA Art News‘ December Poet’s Place series (excerpt available below). She also published the poem “Look Out Below” and the book Do SoCal Palms have Branches? with Four Feathers Press.

Simon Rodia visionary Italian artist

33 years climbing The Watts Tower

1990 historic California landmark

At 70 years old

a.k.a El Nuestro Pueblos

Is mightier than gold

Globally admired

Symmetrical

Intricate

Magnificent

Ornate

Nuance

Renowned

Original

Daring

Intriguing

Artist

Lastly, huge congratulations to Julia C Gaytan who published a new book Imported Sand with Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social.

*Feature image credit to Margaret Gallagher*