From left, Nancy Kaumeyer, Erica Angelos and Renee Frances Conn, all of Whitefish, serve soup outside Latitude 48 on Monday. The Matzah Ball Soup Brigade was part of the gathering against a proposed Neo-Nazi march. That march did not take place because, according to Whitefish officials, the group turned in an incomplete permit request.
Flags celebrating diversity hung along Second Avenue in downtown Whitefish on Monday.
Rebecca Norton of Whitefish carries a sign that reads Love Shines during a gathering in downtown Whitefish on Monday afternoon. (Brenda Ahearn photos/Daily Inter Lake)
Organizations gathering in response to a proposed Neo-Nazi armed march lined the intersection of Second Street and Central Avenue in downtown Whitefish on Monday afternoon. Groups traveled from as far as Missoula and Spokane, Washington, to stand in support of Whitefish residents recently targeted by hate groups.
Flags celebrating diversity hung along Second Avenue in downtown Whitefish on Monday.
Rebecca Norton of Whitefish carries a sign that reads “Love Shines” during a gathering in downtown Whitefish on Monday afternoon. (Brenda Ahearn photos/Daily Inter Lake)
Organizations gathering in response to a proposed Neo-Nazi armed march lined the intersection of Second Street and Central Avenue in downtown Whitefish on Monday afternoon. Groups traveled from as far as Missoula and Spokane, Washington, to stand in support of Whitefish residents recently targeted by hate groups.