Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • A woman picks coffee on a farm associated with the Maya Ixil coop in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • A young woman picks coffee on a farm associated with the Maya Ixil coop in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • A worker carries a sack of coffee to the top of a stack in a warehouse at the Maya Ixil coffee cooperative in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • A woman picks coffee on a farm associated with the Maya Ixil coop in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • A young woman picks coffee on a farm associated with the Maya Ixil coop in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Miguel Ostuma Raimundo waiting at the scales. Maya Ixil coffee cooperative is a Fairtrade-certified coffee-producing organisation in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala. Maya Ixil farmers are from the surrounding communities of San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Odilia Villatoro with her baby Domingo Isaac. Odilla's family work with the Maya Ixil coffee cooperative in the department of Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • A typical rural household in the mountains of the tropical Ixcan region in the department of Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Market stall in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Two Maya Ixil women in a market scene
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Maya Ixil people during a political rally in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • Maya Ixil people raise their fists during a political rally in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • Two Maya Ixil women in a market scene
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20120312_...jpg
  • Maya Ixil people during a political rally in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • Maya Ixil people raise their fists during a political rally in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men work with hoes during the occupation of land to secure some farmland for the indigenous people.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Jesus_20031013_001.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí woman and her daughters at a standpipe in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_077.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2708.jpg
  • Manuel, Maya Chortí indigenous leader
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180318_2353.jpg
  • An indigenous Maya Chortí girl at Sinaí Chimichal, near Copán Ruinas
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2235.jpg
  • A young girl on a hammock in Sinaí, a Maya Chortí village in Copán, Honduras.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_156.jpg
  • Reina, a Maya Chortí woman in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_027.jpg
  • An indigenous Maya Chortí girl carries her brother who is suffering from malnutrition. The infant mortality rate in this area of Copán, Honduras, among indigenous people was as high as 50% in the 1990s.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_146.jpg
  • An indigenous Maya Chortí man during the occupation of land to secure some farmland for the indigenous people.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_121.jpg
  • Manuel, an indigenous Maya Chortí leader, sits on a hammock and smokes a cigarette
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_107.jpg
  • A young Maya Chortí woman degrains maize in her kitchen in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_049.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2750.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2730.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2710.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2692.jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men work with hoes during the occupation of land to secure some farmland for the indigenous people.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Jesus_20031013_002.jpg
  • José Rufino, an indigenous Maya Chortí man in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_044.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí man and his children at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_033.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí baby girl in a hammock.
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_013.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí girl carries her brother
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_011.jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí man and woman operate a video camera in Copán, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_003.jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men work with hoes during the occupation of land to secure some farmland for the indigenous people.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_140.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí family at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_103.jpg
  • Maya Chortí men help a water engineer take topographic readings for a drinking water system. The water system was never built because of threats from local landowners.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_104.jpg
  • Manuel, a Maya Chortí leader, makes a rude joke about his indigenous peach.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_105.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí woman and her children at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_099.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí family at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_094.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí family at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_078.jpg
  • Maya Chortí girls in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_071.jpg
  • Two Maya Chortí sisters in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_048.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí woman preparing food in her kitchen in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_051.jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Ixil omen talk to each other during a forum on food security and eating healthily, organised by CWS partner CIEDEG in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...jpg
  • Portrait of Maya Ixil woman Maria Guzaro Reymundo.<br />
<br />
Maria was attending a forum on food security and eating healthily, organised by CWS partner CIEDEG in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Ixil omen talk to each other during a forum on food security and eating healthily, organised by CWS partner CIEDEG in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...jpg
  • Maya Ixil boys during a meeting in Turanza, Nebaj, Guatemala.<br />
<br />
Staff from CWS-partner organisations were meeting in Nebaj, Guatemala, to share experience and learning on food security and nutrition in the region. The boys families take part in a food production programme run by CIEDEG.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...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
  • Maya Chortí indigenous girls with their grandmother, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_034.jpg
  • Indigenous Maya Chortí men work with hoes during the occupation of land to secure some farmland for the indigenous people.
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_134.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí family at home in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_073.jpg
  • Maya Ixil children during a meeting in Turanza, Nebaj, Guatemala. People had gathered to share experience and learning on food security and nutrition in the region. Under Informed Consent rules, the parents of the children would have to be tracked down to give their consent for this photo to be taken or used. The assumption is that without informed consent, the photograph shows the children in an undignified way, or it puts them in danger.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20111...jpg
  • Musicians play in a Maya-Chortí ceremony in thanksgiving for the corn harvest during the Festival de Maíz.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_249.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí man in Sinaí-Chimichal, Copán Ruinas, Honduras.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_200.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Rosa, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_174.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Amparo Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_077.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí people celebrate a mass in thanksgiving for the corn harvest during the Festival de Maíz.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_210.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí people celebrate a religious ceremony in thanksgiving for the corn harvest during the Festival de Maíz.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_222.jpg
  • An indigenous Maya-Chortí family scene in Sinaí Chimichal, Copán Ruinas, Honduras.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_163.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Rosa, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_175.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Rosa, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_164.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Angélica Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_111.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Cecilia Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_104.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Angélica Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_065.jpg
  • María de Jesús Interiano, indigenous Maya-Chortí leader, Copán, Honduras
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180318_2278.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí Jesus<br />
<br />
Jesús Alberto Ramírez, Sinaí Chimichal, Copán<br />
<br />
"Sinai is a holy place. It’s where Moses got the ten commandments. Chimichal is a tree that grows here. That’s why we called this place Sinaí Chimichal. We’ve been here since 1991, when we organised ourselves into a group. <br />
<br />
We organised ourselves because we’d been enslaved by the landowner. We weren’t allowed to plant food to eat, or to put up a fence around our huts, or to wash clothes in the stream. They just made us work for whatever they wanted to pay us, and they’d treat us very badly.<br />
<br />
Organising ourselves was hard on everyone. My brother, Nicolás Ramírez, was shot in the belly and killed. The rest of us were captured, tied up with rope, and taken to prison in Santa Rosa. After 20 days or so I was let out, but I was captured and sent to prison again. Our friend Rufino was also shot and captured and sent to prison without medical treatment.<br />
<br />
While I was in prison the second time negotiations took place, and eventually we were given about 30 acres to plant food and build huts. And here we are.<br />
<br />
We’ve suffered a lot of poverty here. Most of the families here have lost a child. But since we’ve been able to plant food it’s a lot better and not so many children have died."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2146.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí Jesus<br />
<br />
Jesús Alberto Ramírez, Sinaí Chimichal, Copán<br />
<br />
"Sinai is a holy place. It’s where Moses got the ten commandments. Chimichal is a tree that grows here. That’s why we called this place Sinaí Chimichal. We’ve been here since 1991, when we organised ourselves into a group. <br />
<br />
We organised ourselves because we’d been enslaved by the landowner. We weren’t allowed to plant food to eat, or to put up a fence around our huts, or to wash clothes in the stream. They just made us work for whatever they wanted to pay us, and they’d treat us very badly.<br />
<br />
Organising ourselves was hard on everyone. My brother, Nicolás Ramírez, was shot in the belly and killed. The rest of us were captured, tied up with rope, and taken to prison in Santa Rosa. After 20 days or so I was let out, but I was captured and sent to prison again. Our friend Rufino was also shot and captured and sent to prison without medical treatment.<br />
<br />
While I was in prison the second time negotiations took place, and eventually we were given about 30 acres to plant food and build huts. And here we are.<br />
<br />
We’ve suffered a lot of poverty here. Most of the families here have lost a child. But since we’ve been able to plant food it’s a lot better and not so many children have died."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2144.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí Jesus<br />
<br />
Jesús Alberto Ramírez, Sinaí Chimichal, Copán<br />
<br />
"Sinai is a holy place. It’s where Moses got the ten commandments. Chimichal is a tree that grows here. That’s why we called this place Sinaí Chimichal. We’ve been here since 1991, when we organised ourselves into a group. <br />
<br />
We organised ourselves because we’d been enslaved by the landowner. We weren’t allowed to plant food to eat, or to put up a fence around our huts, or to wash clothes in the stream. They just made us work for whatever they wanted to pay us, and they’d treat us very badly.<br />
<br />
Organising ourselves was hard on everyone. My brother, Nicolás Ramírez, was shot in the belly and killed. The rest of us were captured, tied up with rope, and taken to prison in Santa Rosa. After 20 days or so I was let out, but I was captured and sent to prison again. Our friend Rufino was also shot and captured and sent to prison without medical treatment.<br />
<br />
While I was in prison the second time negotiations took place, and eventually we were given about 30 acres to plant food and build huts. And here we are.<br />
<br />
We’ve suffered a lot of poverty here. Most of the families here have lost a child. But since we’ve been able to plant food it’s a lot better and not so many children have died."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2140.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí people celebrate a religious ceremony in thanksgiving for the corn harvest during the Festival de Maíz.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_228.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí girls dressed in blue during the Festival de Maíz, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_235.jpg
  • Maya-Chortí people celebrate a religious ceremony in thanksgiving for the corn harvest during the Festival de Maíz.
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_231.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Angélica Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_113.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Amparo Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_040.jpg
  • A man with a hat walks along a street in Nebaj
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • A man with a hat walks along a street in Nebaj
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Maya_Ixil_20111104_...jpg
  • honduras_hawkey_20170810_063.jpg
  • Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2257.jpg
  • honduras_hawkey_20031013_097.jpg
  • honduras_hawkey_20031013_074.jpg
  • Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in the indigenous highlands of Nebaj, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Paula Bruna Velásquez Pastor tends tomato plants in Totonicapan. CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in Totonicapan in the indigenous highlands, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Indigenous community member Maria (R) with Petrona (L) in the community greenhouse. In the indigenous highlands of Nebaj, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. .
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2223.jpg
  • Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2185.jpg
  • Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2163.jpg
  • a mototaxi crosses a stream in Copán, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_253.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous woman, Irma, 19, de El Chilar, Copán, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_136.jpg
  • honduras_hawkey_20170810_081.jpg
  • Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in the indigenous highlands of Nebaj, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • An indigenous girl in Rio Azul village in Nebaj. CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in the indigenous highlands of Nebaj, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Andrés López García tends tomatoes in a community greenhouse. CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in Toj Mech village in the indigenous highlands, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Juan López García tends tomatoes in a community greenhouse in Toj Mech village in the indigenous highlands of Guatemala. Villagers here increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in Totonicapan in the indigenous highlands, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
  • Chepe's daughter, Rosa
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2248.jpg
  • Indigenous community member Petrona. CWS supports local organisation CIEDEG to run a food production and nutrition programme in several areas of Guatemala. With their support, in the indigenous highlands of Nebaj, villagers have increased their food production by using greenhouses and irrigation. FRB supports CWS to run a food security programme in the region.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_food_security_20110...jpg
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