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A new ‘declaration of interdependence’ makes its way to the ‘Constitution State’

Linda Sarsour, an organizer with Next 250, touches a collection of murals hanging in the Lyceum Center in Hartford during a Next 250 event Wednesday, March 18, 2026 “250 years ago, there were men who sat around and developed a declaration of independence, and they ratified it together,” said Sarsour, “So we decided, 250 years later, for us to bring communities across the country together so that they can co create a declaration of interdependence, which is what we believe we need now.
Mark Mirko
/
Connecticut Public
Linda Sarsour, an organizer with Next 250, touches a collection of murals hanging in the Lyceum Center in Hartford during a Next 250 event Wednesday, March 18, 2026 “250 years ago, there were men who sat around and developed a declaration of independence, and they ratified it together,” said Sarsour, “So we decided, 250 years later, for us to bring communities across the country together so that they can co create a declaration of interdependence, which is what we believe we need now.

While a group of founding fathers of the United States got together to write the Declaration of Independence in 1776, a new national movement wants the next 250 years of the country’s future to be guided by a declaration that includes more diverse voices.

With a sign that said “create with me” in English and Spanish, Joey Battaglia invited community members from Connecticut to join his interactive mural depicting people’s vision for the future.

He drew on poster boards phrases like, “empowered communities”, “proper funding”, and “diverse voices” inside geometric shapes and clouds.

Battaglia is a Hartford resident and the founder of Hip Hop for the Homeless, an organization that raises funds for the homeless through rap concerts. He was one of many community organizers at a town hall event in Hartford Wednesday for a national movement called Next250.

 Joey Battaglia, 42and president of Hip Hop for the Homeless, photographs Linda Sarsour and Khaiim the RapOet before Khaiim performed during the Next250 Town Hall held in Hartford at the Lyceum March 18, 2026. Organizers with Next250 are working to help shape America’s 250th Anniversary conversation.
Mark Mirko
/
Connecticut Public
Joey Battaglia, 42and president of Hip Hop for the Homeless, photographs Linda Sarsour and Khaiim the RapOet before Khaiim performed during the Next250 Town Hall held in Hartford at the Lyceum March 18, 2026. Organizers with Next250 are working to help shape America’s 250th Anniversary conversation.

Next250 is an initiative centered around the upcoming 250th anniversary of the United States’ Declaration of Independence. It aims to unite Americans around a set of values in a new Declaration of Interdependence, created through a series of listening sessions with U.S. residents.

“I think the theme of the Next250 is how many different folks and how many different cultures have felt voiceless and have felt like they haven't had the opportunity to share dreams of their future,” Battaglia said. “The hope is we do create a reality where that exists.”

His interactive mural will join Next250 on its ongoing tour to connect with community groups in various cities ahead of the country’s Independence Day anniversary.

“The hope is that they continually bring it to all their events as a thing for people to feel encouragement from,” Battaglia said, “and hopefully foster some inspiration.”

Safe, Free, Healthy, Thriving

“We believe that we don't need independence, we need interdependence,” Next250 organizer Linda Sarsour said. “We live in a moment where we need one another.”

Linda Sarsour, an organizer with Next 250, speaks at the Lyceum Center in Hartford during a Next 250 event March 18, 2026. Sarsour said the Next250 declaration of interdependence is a living document capturing the shared values and principles of Americans, particularly those from underrepresented communities.
Mark Mirko
/
Connecticut Public
Linda Sarsour, an organizer with Next 250, speaks at the Lyceum Center in Hartford during a Next 250 event March 18, 2026. Sarsour said the Next250 declaration of interdependence is a living document capturing the shared values and principles of Americans, particularly those from underrepresented communities.

Sarsour said the Next250 declaration of interdependence is a living document capturing the shared values and principles of Americans, particularly those from underrepresented communities.

Next250 conducted over 40 listening sessions over the past year with over 2,500 people from various impacted communities.

“Anywhere from black students in Newark, New Jersey, black women in Mississippi, Muslim Americans in Tennessee, trans Latinas in Los Angeles,” Sarsour said.

According to Sarsour, there are five issues that the majority of Americans agree on: liveable wages, sensible gun reform, climate, healthcare and reproductive rights, and the right to vote.

It boiled down to “safety and dignity and respect,” Sarsour said. “People want to thrive. People want to be able to take care of their families.”

‘Just to see my people right here is more valuable’

Connecticut community members added to the conversation during a panel discussion at the town hall.

Youth leaders called for more space at the policy-making table for students, especially Black and brown students. Shineika Fareus with the Connecticut Black and Brown Student Union and Khloé Lawson with the Citywide Action Coalition in New Haven agreed that young people needed to be able to voice their thoughts about decisions that would impact their futures.

Drummer Gavin West, with the Hartford Proud Drill Drum and Dance Company, holds steady in the minutes before performing for the Next250 Town Hall at the Lyceum Center in Hartford, March 18 2026. Organizers with Next250 are working to shape America’s 250th Anniversary conversation
Mark Mirko
/
Connecticut Public
Drummer Gavin West, with the Hartford Proud Drill Drum and Dance Company, holds steady in the minutes before performing for the Next250 Town Hall at the Lyceum Center in Hartford, March 18 2026. Organizers with Next250 are working to shape America’s 250th Anniversary conversation

Connecticut's Deputy Secretary of the State Jennifer Barahona encouraged community members to show up at town hall and committees. She said people should speak up, “even if your voice shakes.”

Teresa Quintana with the immigrant rights group Make the Road Connecticut called for language justice, saying that true democracy needs to make policy-related meetings accessible with language interpretation, so all voices are heard.

Audience members also spoke on the importance of people power to carry forth momentum in the movement, and public libraries which provide resources to all.

The theme that panelists and the applauding audience agreed on as a key Connecticut value was community.

Khaiim the RapOet summed it up in his rap performance when he said, “Just to see my people right here is more valuable than all of the jewelry that we could wear.”

Road trip to Independence Day

Next250 is planning a massive gathering in Washington D.C. on June 27, one week before July 4.

“We have the responsibility to develop a new contract for this country,” Sarsour said. “That means we have to move differently in the current political moment, but also for the future.”

Sarsour said the group is willing to offer bus transportation to help Connecticut organizations bring their membership down to the event at the nation’s Capitol.

Until then, the Next250 is heading to New York for its next town hall. Sarsour said they’ll continue to give people a new sense of purpose and encourage them to sign their names to the declaration of interdependence.

“There will come a better day,” Sarsour said. “We will survive just like our ancestors survived before us.”

Daniela Doncel is a Colombian American journalist who joined Connecticut Public in November 2024.

In 2025, Daniela trained to be a leader in the newsroom as part of a program called the Widening the Pipeline Fellowship with the National Press Foundation. She also won first place for Best Radio/Audio Story at the 2025 NAHJ New England Awards.

Through her reporting, Daniela strives to showcase the diversity of the Hispanic/Latino communities within Connecticut.

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT is an initiative from Connecticut Public, the state’s local NPR and PBS station, to elevate Latino stories and expand programming that uplifts and informs our Latino communities. Visit CTPublic.org/latino for more stories and resources. For updates, sign up for the SOMOS CONNECTICUT newsletter at ctpublic.org/newsletters.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de Connecticut Public, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programación que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para más reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscríbase a nuestro boletín informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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Connecticut Public’s journalism is made possible, in part by funding from Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert Jaeger.