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Protestra 2025: Presidential Transition Protest

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St. Paul & St. Andrew United Methodist Church
new york, united states
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Sat, Mar 1, 2pm - 3:30pm EST

Event description

This is the official ticket page for Protestra 2025: Presidential Transition Protest. If you cannot attend the concert and still want to donate to The New York Immigration Coalition, please go to https://donorbox.org/presidential-transition-protest.

Concert Details
Saturday, March 1, 2025 at 2:00 PM
St. Paul and St. Andrew United Methodist Church 
263 W. 86th Street
New York, NY 10024

Tickets*
Advance:
$30
Door:
$35
Pre-Concert Zoom Lecture:
 $5

PROTESTRA Monthly Members receive 2 free tickets to every concert and access to the pre-concert zoom lectures.

*If a ticket for general admission presents a financial burden, please contact us through our website if you would still like to attend.

Program 

Symphony No. 5 by Dmitri Shostakovich
Desert Shelter by J.E. Hernández
Unidad de Fuerza by Edgar F. Girtain IV
- Conducted by Founder and Music Director Michelle Rofrano

PROTESTRA will hold a benefit concert to raise funds for The New York Immigration Coalition, an umbrella policy and advocacy organization that represents over 200 immigrant and refugee rights groups throughout New York. The performance will take place on Saturday, March 1, 2025 at 2:00 PM at St. Paul and St. Andrew United Methodist Church (263 W. 86th Street).

Founded in 2017 with their first concert titled “#NoBan” in response to the first Trump Administration’s xenophobic immigration policies, PROTESTRA has gone on to explore a variety of societal issues and use music to advocate for equality and human rights. They will once again convene to take a stand against this new administration’s revival of anti-immigrant sentiment and attacks on individual liberties, with the hope of inspiring audiences to hold elected officials accountable for their actions.

The upcoming concert, named Protestra 2025: Presidential Transition Protest, is a critical response to the onslaught of executive orders and policy proposals since President Trump’s inauguration that threaten individual rights and intentionally target marginalized groups. The title satirizes the Heritage Foundation’s “Project 2025: Presidential Transition Project,” a primary influence for many of these discriminatory policies. (While the organization has claimed that it is not affiliated with the President, it has boasted about its outsized influence on his first term in office.)

As was the case eight years ago, PROTESTRA is deeply concerned by government overreach that will deprive those on American soil—including many members of the PROTESTRA community—of their civil rights, such as restricted access to gender-affirming care for trans people, a basic disregard for the importance of diversity, government censorship of educational materials, and eliminating birthright citizenship. At the March 1 concert, PROTESTRA has therefore chosen to perform Dmitri Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 5. There is perhaps no composer who better exemplifies the struggles of daily life under oppressive government censorship. Written in 1937 during the USSR’s totalitarian regime, this symphony and its subversive messaging alongside hope for rebirth remain ever relevant today.

Through this concert, PROTESTRA specifically aims to support those most urgently threatened by the federal administration's recent executive orders: immigrants and migrant groups. The Trump Administration has officially labeled the current influx of migrants entering the United States at the southern border as an “invasion" to justify detaining and removing people forcefully, while simultaneously barring pathways for individuals to come to or remain in the country legally. In protest of mass deportations that separate families and threaten the safety of tens of millions of people, the concert will feature chamber work Desert Shelter by J.E. Hernández. Scored for string sextet and choreography, Desert Shelter is inspired by real stories of migrants crossing the Sonoran Desert that Hernández himself heard while detained by ICE in 2013. In his notes about the composition, Hernández writes: “I couldn't imagine a reality where these stories would go unheard, misunderstood, or serve as propaganda pieces for someone to use for their own gain. The sheer humanity and scale of these passages struck me to my core.” The work is a reflection on the difficulties many migrants face in search of a better life.

The third piece on the program will be Unidad de Fuerza (Unity of Strength) by Edgar F. Girtain IV, which was originally written for PROTESTRA’s inaugural performance and will now receive its New York City premiere. From the composer: “Unidad de Fuerza is a celebration of the joy and strength that come from solidarity…because when people work together, new horizons become visible and anything is possible.” Founder and Music Director Michelle Rofrano shares that “PROTESTRA is thrilled to return to an orchestral work so close to our origins as an ensemble. It’s emblematic of the community of musicians we’ve created, and we are more prepared than ever to use art to elevate human rights and stand up to injustice.”

Advance tickets are $30, and PROTESTRA will donate a portion of ticket proceeds directly to the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC). Those unable to attend can still make an impact by donating to PROTESTRA’s ongoing crowdfunding campaign for NYIC. For those who want to learn more about the works and composers featured in this concert, PROTESTRA co-founders Michelle Rofrano and Ian Vlahović will host a pre-concert Zoom lecture on Thursday, February 27 at 7:30 PM ET, with additional tickets available for purchase.

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St. Paul & St. Andrew United Methodist Church
new york, united states
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