Over 100 protesters marched exterior of the MDC jail the place Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is at present being detained, denouncing the measures the US took to seize him.
Picture by Dean Moses
I got here to New York Metropolis from Venezuela in 1989 and made it my house. This metropolis didn’t simply give me a spot to reside; it gave me objective. When the AIDS disaster was devastating communities within the Nineteen Nineties, I turned an activist with ACT UP New York, working with the Latino caucus. That have reworked my understanding of neighborhood organizing: change occurs when folks most affected lead the combat.
In 1996, whereas working on the HIV clinic at St. Vincent’s Hospital, I based AID FOR AIDS to deal with a easy however lethal injustice: folks with HIV in many of the world have been dying as a result of they lacked entry to lifesaving medicines. We constructed what turned the most important HIV remedy redistribution program on this planet. The primary nation we despatched drugs to was Venezuela. Over time, that work linked me deeply to networks of individuals residing with HIV there and throughout the International South. At this time, we now have supported greater than 30,000 folks in 75 nations.
That connection turned painfully pressing in 2016, when Venezuela’s well being system collapsed. Almost 70,000 folks with HIV have been abruptly with out remedy. I obtained a determined name from the president of Venezuela’s community of individuals residing with HIV, asking for assist. Along with world activists and companions, together with UNAIDS, we mobilized. After two lengthy years, we secured remedy for 35,000 folks. That effort gave me a front-row seat to the devastation attributable to Nicolás Maduro’s regime, not in concept, however in human lives.
By 2018, survival itself required escape. Venezuelans started strolling out of their nation in what turned often known as los caminantes – the walkers. I noticed households traverse South America on foot, from Caracas to Santiago, Chile, fleeing starvation, repression, and whole financial collapse. We expanded providers throughout the area, witnessing trauma at a scale I as soon as believed unimaginable.I used to be flawed. The trauma was deepening it.
By 2022, many Venezuelans who had fled south started heading north, pushed again by xenophobia and instability in host nations. They crossed the Darién Hole, probably the most harmful migration route within the hemisphere, then continued by means of Central America and Mexico. When Texas Governor Greg Abbott started busing migrants to New York Metropolis, 75 p.c of these arriving have been Venezuelan. They have been the identical folks we had supported with drugs in 2016, helped in Latin America in 2020, and now they have been right here, traumatized, displaced, and making an attempt to outlive.
From day one, AID FOR LIFE, one of many organizations I based, stepped in, first with meals and clothes, then authorized providers, psychological well being care, and case administration. Venezuelans turned the most important single migrant group to reach in New York Metropolis in additional than 120 years. In 2022, there have been roughly 15,000 Venezuelans right here. By 2024, greater than 130,000. And in contrast to earlier waves of immigration, there was no established host neighborhood to soak up them.
Now, in 2026, Maduro has been ousted. As a Venezuelan New Yorker, I really feel aid and deep concern. Aid {that a} man who kidnapped a nation, ruled by means of torture, imprisonment, and concern, is not in energy. Concern that his regime could persist by means of his cronies. Concern that the US dialog has shifted to not democracy or human rights, however to grease and management.We should ask a tough query: Which worldwide regulation are we defending? The one which protects dictators within the identify of sovereignty, or the sovereignty of people that have endured state-sponsored abuse and torture? Arms off Venezuela doesn’t imply arms off Venezuelans.
New Yorkers should hearken to Venezuelan voices. Name your legislators. Demand the restoration of Momentary Protected Standing. Urge Metropolis Corridor to create actual pathways for Venezuelans to construct secure lives right here. This neighborhood didn’t select displacement, nevertheless it selected resilience. And New York should select solidarity.
Jesús Aguais is president of AID FOR AIDS, a Manhattan-based non-profit group dedicated to empowering communities susceptible to HIV and the inhabitants at giant.




