Community dancing has long been integral to the human experience. From Bhangra, round dances, and Kizomba to Argentine tango, people dance to express, grieve, pray, be in community, and produce joy in the most celebratory and painful of times. Dance is an undervalued tool in resistance movements, such as in the Farmers protests in India, the Idle No More movement in Canada, and so on. Further, coming together to dance across many differences, build community, and experience joy is an act of resistance to social isolation, political upheaval, and polarization. Yet, dance communities as a place of resistance are understudied. My PhD research explores how Argentine tango can be a space of many types of resistance. After a tango event in Vancouver to raise funds for families affected by war in Lebanon, the Victoria tango community, of which I am a member of, is inspired to build upon that work in our own way. This community-based participatory research project uses decolonial feminisms to build a coalition of dancers interested in resistance efforts. Where community dances are already places of diversity, healing, connection, joy, spirituality, learning, and community care, I am interested in exploring how they might present valuable spaces for embodied solidarity efforts. In this presentation, I will offer preliminary work around my approach to weaving geographies of dance, organizing, and decolonial feminisms together to examine socio-spatial relations between Argentine tango, embodiment, and solidarity movements.