Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Ricardo Canan Oaxaca, 13. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Handfuls of beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Juan León. Juan is an indigenous Maya-Chortí and lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Handfuls of beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Casey del Carmen Interiano, 7, is an indigenous Maya-Chortí and lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Kenia Interiano García, 9, in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this indigenous Chortí community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_63...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_73...jpg
  • The corn and bean crop was ruined before it could be harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_72...jpg
  • The bean crop was ruined before it could be harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • The corn and bean crop was ruined before it could be harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_72...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • The corn and bean crop was ruined before it could be harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • Damage to the main road in Copán, Honduras, following hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_63...jpg
  • Moises Mancía, an indigenous Maya Chortí man who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras, walks through a ruined field of corn and beans, most are inedible because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_72...jpg
  • A latrine. Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Mercedes Martinez, Carrizalón
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_74...jpg
  • During the heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, the flood plain along the river Copán spread quickly across a lot of fertile land used for farming and causing immense damage to standing crops such as beans, maize and tomatoes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men thresh beans in the hope of rescuing perhaps 10% of the harvest, but most of the beans have sprouted in the pods and can't be dried and saved
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_70...jpg
  • A latrine. Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Mercedes Martinez, Carrizalón
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_74...jpg
  • Damage to roads in Copán, Honduras, following hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_75...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya Chortí who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here he walks through a ruined field of corn and beans, most are inedible because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_72...jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men thresh beans in the hope of rescuing perhaps 10% of the harvest, but most of the beans have sprouted in the pods and can't be dried and saved
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_70...jpg
  • Maya Chortí boys jump into a river pool in Carrizalón, Copán.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_69...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca and Moises Mancía are  indigenous Maya Chortí men who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here they inspect a batch of beans that has been harvested, from a whole year's harvest they say there's enough good beans to make a single meal.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca, is an indigenous Maya Chortí who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here he checks through some beans salvaged from a ruined harvest, most however are inedible by humans because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot, caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Damage to roads in Copán, Honduras, following hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_75...jpg
  • Moises Mancía, an indigenous Maya Chortí man who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras, walks through a ruined field of corn and beans, most are inedible because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_72...jpg
  • Damage to road infrastructure in Copán, Honduras, following hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_63...jpg
  • Ingris Liliana Martinez García, 6, Carrizalón
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_74...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya Chortí who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here he checks through some beans in a ruined harvest, most are inedible because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • An elderly man crosses a stream in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_69...jpg
  • During the heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, the flood plain along the river Copán spread quickly across a lot of fertile land used for farming and causing immense damage to standing crops such as beans, maize and tomatoes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Standing crops of maize and beans have been lost across the country because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and Iota. Some crops rotted, some dried out, many crops- like these beans -  sprouted on the their stems before they could be harvested, most of the staple crops have been lost in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Nutrients have been washed out of the soil too and a huge wave of fungal diseases like canker and leaf rust are just beginning. As well as food for local consumption and survival, cash crops like coffee and bananas are badly affected as well.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_63...jpg
  • Damage to roads in Copán, Honduras, following hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_75...jpg
  • Juana Coria Chel, 24, mother of four, a Maya Ixil woman in Rio Azul, Nebaj, Guatemala. Juana takes part in an FRB-supported regional programme for food security and nutrition run by CWS through its partners CIEDEG in Guatemala, by CASM in Honduras, and by CIEETS and AMC in Nicaragua.<br />
<br />
Staff from CWS-partner organisations (CIEDEG in Guatemala, CASM in Honduras, AMC and CIEETS in Nicaragua) were meeting in Nebaj, Guatemala, to share experience and learning on food security and nutrition in the region. The woman takes part in a food production programme run by CIEDEG.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables in an integrated system. Chicken manure feeds the fish below, and the waste from the fish is fertilizer for the vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Mario David Castellanos Murillo,12, "the Caravan Boy". <br />
<br />
Mario's mother has a long-term mental illness, his father works long hours as a security guard and doesn't earn the minimum salary. Mario had been spending his time in the street instead of going to school, juggling for tips or selling chewing gum at traffic lights in San Pedro Sula. When the caravan left in October last year, Mario decided to join it. Mario's case was highlighted in some media who dubbed him The Caravan Boy.<br />
<br />
"It's dangerous in the street, there are lots of kids in the street, some people take drugs, they smoke glue, sometimes kids disappear. So. I went on the caravan, on my own. I went walking sometimes, sometimes I jumped on lorries, trailers, sometimes I got lifts in little cars. At the border I went through running, with everyone else that was running, everyone was running. They caught me in Mexico, they were using the crying gas and a woman grabbed me and pulled me away, she took me to a clinic. Then they took my details, and took me to a children's home and flew me back to Honduras on an aeroplane. That was sort of okay. It was easy to escape from the place they put me. I got over the wall, I was in the mountains running. I hid in a tree for a while. Then I got back here, I'm living with my uncle [guardian]". <br />
<br />
Mario's guardian says that Mario's case highlights the precarious social reality of many people living in families with very low incomes, or with mental health issues. He spoke at length about problems of poverty around the city of San Pedro Sula, the industrial capital of Honduras. If people are lucky, they have a job, but they work long hours and can't make ends meet. People have a right to escape terrible conditions if they can see a better alternative somewhere else, he says. Through CASM, he says, Mario has been able to start going to school.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190117_45...jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20110614_300.jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables in an integrated system. Chicken manure feeds the fish below, and the waste from the fish is fertilizer for the vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_66...jpg
  • Santos Noelia Interiano is an indigenous  Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • In a school-turned-shelter, people who lost their houses in the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota speak with César Soriano of CASM about their needs. Most of the people left homeless are landless labourers, they express their most basic need as 'a roof'.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_50...jpg
  • Suany Castillo, 35, San Pedro Sula<br />
<br />
"I used to work in textile factories, I was a machine operator, sewing on sleeves. Because my son got ill, I looked for help from a money lender. He lent me the money. Then he'd take all my salary, all of it. He charges 20% a week. I was earning 1,900 Lempiras, sometimes there'd be 80 Lempiras left over after paying the interest. I decided to resign from the job, because it wasn't enough to pay the interest and survive. They gave me 2,000 Lempiras, after working for years there, and I used it to start a small business making tortillas. But I'm a single mother, and the income wasn't enough to survive. When I heard about the caravan, I ran to join it. It was difficult, I was pregnant.<br />
<br />
We went up to Ocotepeque and from there through Guatemala and into Mexico. In Tuxtla we were in a little group, separated from the main group. We were walking for hours and then two trucks with men with balaclavas cut across us, they were armed. It was a place in the mountains, no houses. They wanted us to get onto the trucks. Someone said they were Zetas. Some people died, I ran with my children. I lost my kids for three days, I told them to run to Tecún Umán (the border). They opened fire on us while we ran, some people were killed. I won't get over it. I was raped and later I had a miscarriage, I was carrying twins. My kids got away. We were all covered in cuts and scratches, the thorns in our legs, we ran through the bushes and around the edges of fields. Three days later, I was desperate, I was searching for my kids, then in Tapachula I found my children, they were okay. I didn't know if they were alive. You don't know, I can't say what it was like, seeing them again. <br />
<br />
I turned myself in to the migration officials, I didn't want to carry on, they took us to the border. But, here I am again, alive, returning to live this poverty.<br />
<br />
CASM [a Mennonite organisation] has helped me, they've helped me a lot.<br />
<br />
The money lender wants the money, he wants
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190117_43...jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20110713_639.jpg
  • Wendy Lopez lays a table for a family meal in a rural household in Buenos Aires, Santa Barbara, Honduras. Wendy and her family take part in a programme assisted by CWS and partner organisation CASM that focuses on food production and nutrition. The interventions of the programme are strategic and aim to boost areas of poor nutrition.
    honduras_hawkey_20110615_437.jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20110614_289.jpg
  • Maria Sosa of CASM grafts gourmet cocoa to resistant stock. The trees are being used to reforest a watershed in an environmental crisis in Honduras, and the cocoa provides income for the local communities.
    honduras_hawkey_20080814_157.jpg
  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20110614_276.jpg
  • Santos Noelia Interiano is an indigenous  Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20110614_321.jpg
  • Salvador Hernandez in Piedras Negras, Santa Barbara, Honduras, working on beehives in a community project that produces honey, beeswax and royal jelly. Produce is consumed in the community and sold in local markets. The project, that is part of a broader regional programme on food production and nutrition, is supported by CWS through CASM.
    honduras_hawkey_20120111_1362.jpg
  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • Maria Magdalena Fuentes, Barrio El Tigre, Santa Rita.<br />
<br />
Maria Magdalena was a beneficiary of a food programme during the Covid crisis. CASM supported people in need in the region of Copán. Covid created restrictions in the area, there were curfews, people could only go out once a fortnight, there were problems with transport too. Maria Magdalena makes a living by baking cakes and selling them, but couldn't travel to sell them so found herself in difficult circumstances.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_75...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • Beatriz Interiano, 14, is a Maya Chortí indigenous girl. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_65...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • The Interiano family with their newly-built fish pond. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_65...jpg
  • In a school-turned-shelter, people who lost their houses in the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota speak with César Soriano of CASM about their needs. Most of the people left homeless are landless labourers, they express their most basic need as 'a roof'.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_49...jpg
  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. She is a bus conductor on the route from Chamelecón to San Pedro Sula. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_33...jpg
  • Handfuls of beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_73...jpg
  • In a school-turned-shelter, people who lost their houses in the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota speak with César Soriano of CASM about their needs. Most of the people left homeless are landless labourers, they express their most basic need as 'a roof'.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_49...jpg
  • A family who lost their house in hurricane Eta pray inside a makeshift shelter on the side of the road in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula. One of the members of the family is part of a CASM-supported programme for deported migrants.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.Nazareth is pictured here with her husband Jacobo Amador.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_79...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_79...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg