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Dayton at Work and Play: Protest Art

December 8, 2025 By Bill Franz

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Trump’s administration has worked hard to portray itself as Christian. The Speaker of the House says that the Bible directs all his political decisions. Many female Trump administration figures wear large cross necklaces, and the president himself sells “God Bless the U.S.A. Bibles.” Some ministers hail Trump as “God’s chosen one” and many of the president’s supporters identify as Christian nationalists.
But a growing number of Christian leaders are saying that the administration’s actions are not Christian, especially its actions against immigrants. They don’t fault the government for upholding the law but for doing so in the cruelest way possible. They condemn, in the Pope’s words, the administration’s “inhuman treatment of immigrants.”
Last Thursday I was invited to a gathering of Christians who are speaking out against the president. One of Michigan’s oldest protestant churches, Dearborn United Methodist Church, held “A Night of Art & Protest on Immigration.”
The church’s Pastor opened the evening by reviewing Matthew 25, where those who want to follow Jesus are told how they are to live. They must actively help people in need, doing things like feeding the hungry, welcoming strangers, and visiting those in prison.
Then people presented protest art they had created. There were songs, poems and even a children’s book. I spoke about the president saying Haitian immigrants in Springfield were eating dogs and cats, and how that led me to learn more about immigration and to make the first protest art of my life. The church had bought all 12 of my NOT CRIMINAL pieces and had them on display. At the end of the meeting the Pastor said that if people felt that a specific piece of my art needed to be part of someone’s life, they could buy them. Nine were taken. The remaining three will be a permanent exhibition at the church.

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Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles

About Bill Franz

In retirement Bill Franz bought a camera, learned how to use it, and became a volunteer photographer. He has done photo projects for the Humane Society of Greater Dayton and for almost two dozen other local organizations.

In 2013 Bill started a project of his own – photographing people at work. Since then he has photographed hundreds of workers, from butchers and bakers and candy makers to clowns and sculptors and fire eaters. The photos have appeared in solo and group art exhibitions and also in less traditional venues such as hospitals, retail stores, nature centers and breweries. They have been seen by hundreds of thousands of people. Profits from photo sales go to Dayton area nonprofits.


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