The Trump administration Justice Department’s “zero-tolerance” policy on undocumented immigrants crossing the border into the U.S. has left many of us asking what we can do to help affected families. Part of the initiative pushed by Attorney General Jeff Sessions (which includes prosecuting even those who have fled their homes seeking asylum from threats of violence) includes separating migrant parents and children at the border, a nightmarish cruelty that has been the subject of growing outrage. MSNBC reporter Jacob Soboroff got a glimpse of a government-contracted facility in Brownsville, Texas, that has been housing “unaccompanied minors” who have been separated from their families. In a disturbing report, Soboroff recounted that about 1,500 migrant boys ages 10 to 17 are “effectively” incarcerated at the Casa Padre shelter, a former Walmart that has been pushed to capacity.

So what can you do? The first thing is to know about Families Belong Together (Familias Unidas, No Divididas), an organizing group behind the hashtag and a hub of information on how to lend your voice in protest of the immigration policies’ destructive and traumatic presence at the border. Its mission statement says that “Families Belong Together opposes the cruel, inhumane, and unjustified separation of children from their parents along the U.S. border with Mexico and at other ports of entry into the U.S. We protest the conditions in which these children are kept. We protest the irreversible trauma that has already been perpetrated on these children and their parents for the crime of seeking a better life. To separate immigrant families, victims of violence, hunger, and poverty, is to re-violate them. Children as young as 18 months are torn from their mother’s arms by the U.S. government. This is violent abuse. These families are victimized again by the government to which they turn for help. Families Belong Together opposes the inhumane policies of the Trump Administration, Border Patrol, and ICE and calls for immediate reform.”

The Families Belong Together site lists local events happening near your zip code as well as a network of supporting organizations to give money to. Its Lunchtime for Change initiative is asking people to virtually support wherever they are when they have some free time, likely on a lunch break, by taking as many actions as possible, including donating, calling your local representatives, and signing the following petitions:

ACLU

MoveOn

Women’s March National

National Domestic Workers Alliance

Credo Mobile

Daily Kos