Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Newspapers coming off the printing press, Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_330.jpg
  • Collecting newspapers off the folding machine at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_332.jpg
  • layout on light table in the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_319.jpg
  • Layout tables at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_324.jpg
  • Wall with calendar and Che picture at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_327.jpg
  • large camera for photographing layout to produce print plates at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_323.jpg
  • large camera for photographing layout to produce print plates at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_322.jpg
  • Labourer at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_329.jpg
  • Printing press with colour inks at the Co-Latino newspaper, San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_331.jpg
  • Staff from the Special Unit of the Fiscalía of the Republic of El Salvador attend a voting centre in Mexicanos, San Salvador, to check on an individual using false documents to vote during the election
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_072.jpg
  • The day before the general election in San Salvador, a man wearing an ARENA T-shirt under his shirt was caught by an angry crowd amid suspicions that ARENA was bringing in fraudent voters from Honduras and Guatemala to swing the election.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_021.jpg
  • Young people cheered as the FMLN won the elections in San Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_158.jpg
  • Votes were counted at a voting station in Ayutuxtepeque, San Salvador. Every vote was scrutinised by an officer from each political party. The vote is for the FMLN and the election was won by the FMLN.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_074.jpg
  • The human rights ombudsman talked to a crowd of protesters outside the Villa Olimpica centre in San Salvador the night before the elections. the centre was being used by around 50 buses with Guatemalan number plates, and the crowd was convinced that the foreigners had been brought into the city by the right-wing ARENA party to vote illegally. Gun shots were heard at the back of the centre and hundreds of people escaped from Villa Olimpica over the back fence.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_038.jpg
  • Riot police cleared protestors against illegal voters the night before the elections in San Salvador.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_045.jpg
  • An ARENA vehicle was stopped by an angry crowd in San Salvador and the people inside were accused of travelling armed and accompanying a vehicle carrying foreigners, thought by the crowd to be brought into the country to vote illegally for the right-wing ARENA party.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_027.jpg
  • an invigilator checeds a voters identity against the voting register in San Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_066.jpg
  • Crowds wept and raised clenched fists as the FMLN was announced as the election winner in the general elections in El Salvador, 2009.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_109.jpg
  • A young man in a red FMLN T-shirt sat on the front of a vehicle as people celebrated the FLMN electoral win in El Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_148.jpg
  • Crowds cheered and raised clenched fists as the FMLN was announced as the election winner in the general elections in El Salvador, 2009.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_120.jpg
  • Crowds cheered and raised clenched fists as the FMLN was announced as the election winner in the general elections in El Salvador, 2009.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_125.jpg
  • el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_326.jpg
  • FMLN supporters waved flags and applauded as ex-guerrilla leaders spoke to the crowds while they waited for the election results.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_103.jpg
  • A security guard stood ready to shoot as he guarded the Cuscatlan Stadium. Many foreign buses were in the stadium, thought by crowds outside to be carrying illegal foreign voters to the elections
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_055.jpg
  • A young woman draped in the red FMLN flag walked home after celebrating that the FMLN won the elections
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_156.jpg
  • A couple in clothing celebrated the FMLN electoral win.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_144.jpg
  • Election invigilators checked rulings on each contested vote.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_078.jpg
  • ARENA supporters campaigned inside a voting station during the general elections of 2009. In Salvadorean law, it is illegal to campaign inside voting stations.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_064.jpg
  • Armed police officers guarded a pickup truck carrying Guatemalans, thought by an angry crowd to be brought into the city to vote illegally in the elections for the right-wing ARENA party.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_018.jpg
  • A man was taken by police, accused of travelling armed and accompanying a vehicle carrying foreigners, thought by the crowd to be brought into the country to vote illegally for the right-wing ARENA party.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_024.jpg
  • A flag of the right-wing ARENA party was burned by FMLN supporters in the street as the election results were expected
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_093.jpg
  • Election invigilators checked rulings on each contested vote, by torchlight, because at the moment of counting, mysteriously, the electricity and lights were turned off.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_081.jpg
  • A senior policeman discussed with an angry crowd outside the Cuscatlán stadium the night before the general elections in 2009. The stadium had a large number of buses with Guatemalan and Honduran number plates, believed to have brought illegal voters into the city as part of a fraud by the ARENA party to remain in power.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090315_040.jpg
  • A bus full of children being repatriated to El Salvador arrives from Mexico at the Centre for Attention to Migrants in El Salvador as family members check to see if their child is on board. El Salvador receives several buses and planes full of deported migrants every day. Child migrant deportations from the US and Mexico to Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador are at a crisis level, where government provision to deal with the wave of repatriations is inadequate. In San Salvador, hundreds of children are repatriated daily.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_migrants_20140801...jpg
  • Family members peer through gaps in the gate to see if their children have arrived at a centre for repatriated migrants in El Salvador. El Salvador receives several buses and planes full of deported migrants every day. Child migrant deportations from the US and Mexico to Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador are at a crisis level, where government provision to deal with the wave of repatriations is inadequate. In San Salvador, hundreds of children are repatriated daily.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_migrants_20140801...jpg
  • Children prepare mud for adobes in a large mud pit in San Francisco Ayutuxtepeque. 1994
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_822.jpg
  • A vote is cast in the ballot box for Presidental Elections
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_065.jpg
  • A man wears a skull mask in front of burning effigies during May 1st march and demonstration in San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_290.jpg
  • Sebastian Cedillos, agricultural technician at FUNDES, a partner of ACT member LWR, inspects a farmers corn field during the current drought. In wide areas across El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, harvests have been completely destroyed by the drought causing enormous hardship for many thousands of poor subsistence farming families. The drought in this area is believed to be an effect of climate change.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Sebastian Cedillos, agricultural technician at FUNDES, a partner of ACT member LWR, inspects a nursery of cocoa that is being grown to replace coffee plantations affected by leaf rust in Las Marias, Usulután, El Salvador. Leaf rust has destroyed the productivity of coffee plantations and the income of the coffee farmers in the region.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Maria del Cid Aguilar, mother of five, community leader and coffee farmer, on her coffee farm in Las Marias, Usulután, El Salvador. Maria explains that leaf rust has destroyed most of her coffee farm, and she is preparing to plant cocoa alongside it, because it is more resistent to the higher temperatures and humidity that have come with climate change. Climate change adaptation is a serious challenge for organisations working in rural areas.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • A scenic view of mountains from Cacaopera, Morazán, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_383.jpg
  • José Alejandro Romero, coffee farmer at Las Marias, Usulután, on his coffee farm. Two years ago he harvested 60 times more than the last two years, because of leaf rust, a fungal disease that has propagated with climate change. Carlos is growing cocoa in this nursery to replace coffee, as cocoa is more resistent to high temperatures and humidity.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Street scene in front of a segment of a mural of the face of Saint Oscar Romero in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú and Cuban government minister, the Rev. Raúl Suárez, speak at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú and Cuban government minister, the Rev. Raúl Suárez, speak at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Bishop Medardo Gómez speaks to the media in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Nobel laureate Dr. Rigoberta Menchú at a meeting in San Salvador, El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • A man sets up to sell drinks in front of mural of Saint Oscar Romero on a government building in San Salvador
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_ACT_meeting_20140...jpg
  • Dulce de panela, or raw sugar, is processed traditionally in this trapiche or sugar mill in rural San Vicente, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051228_363.jpg
  • A protestor painted a message on a wall during the May 1st demonstrations in San Salvador. The message reads 'los pobres necesitan techo' ... the poor need housing.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_294.jpg
  • May 1st 2012, workers took part in a  demonstration in San Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_292.jpg
  • The emplumados (feathered men) of Cacaopera do a variety of dances that are indigenous to El Salvador, from the Pipil and Lenca people, a culture that was nearly exterminated completely in the massacres of 1932. The dances are the main symbol of indigenous resistance to cultural domination in the Cacaopera area of Morazán, El Salvador. There are only a few men who can do the dances now, though several people were taught in the refugee camps of Colomoncagua while the massacres of the 1980s were happening.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_379.jpg
  • The emplumados (feathered men) of Cacaopera do a variety of dances that are indigenous to El Salvador, from the Pipil and Lenca people, a culture that was nearly exterminated completely in the massacres of 1932. The dances are the main symbol of indigenous resistance to cultural domination in the Cacaopera area of Morazán, El Salvador. There are only a few men who can do the dances now, though several people were taught in the refugee camps of Colomoncagua while the massacres of the 1980s were happening.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_381.jpg
  • The emplumados (feathered men) of Cacaopera do a variety of dances that are indigenous to El Salvador, from the Pipil and Lenca people, a culture that was nearly exterminated completely in the massacres of 1932. The dances are the main symbol of indigenous resistance to cultural domination in the Cacaopera area of Morazán, El Salvador. There are only a few men who can do the dances now, though several people were taught in the refugee camps of Colomoncagua while the massacres of the 1980s were happening.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_380.jpg
  • The emplumados (feathered men) of Cacaopera do a variety of dances that are indigenous to El Salvador, from the Pipil and Lenca people, a culture that was nearly exterminated completely in the massacres of 1932. The dances are the main symbol of indigenous resistance to cultural domination in the Cacaopera area of Morazán, El Salvador. There are only a few men who can do the dances now, though several people were taught in the refugee camps of Colomoncagua while the massacres of the 1980s were happening.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_374.jpg
  • A young couple of 18th Street gang members with their baby, La Campanera, Soyapango, El Salvador.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051216_333.jpg
  • Mauricio Funes on the television set of Sin Censura, 2003. He became President of El Salvador in 2009.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_283.jpg
  • A woman held a candle during prayers in the indigenous church of Cacaopera, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_367.jpg
  • In the church of Cacaopera, an effigy of Virgin Mary has crossed eyes.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20060101_371.jpg
  • Santiago who was a presenter on Radio Venceremos, the radio station of the People's Revolutionary Army, Ejercito Revolucionario del Pueblo, ERP, part of the FMLN, during the civil war. He was photographed at the Museo de la Palabra y la Imágen.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_278.jpg
  • The church at San Fernando, Morazán, El Salvador after being bombed by the Salvadorean government airforce. Photo taken in 1991.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_403.jpg
  • Dulce de panela, or raw sugar, is processed traditionally in a trapiche or sugar mill in rural San Vicente, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051228_362.jpg
  • Dulce de panela, or raw sugar, is processed traditionally in a trapiche or sugar mill in rural San Vicente, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051228_359.jpg
  • Dulce de panela, or raw sugar, is processed traditionally in a trapiche or sugar mill in rural San Vicente, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051228_360.jpg
  • Dulce de panela, or raw sugar, is processed traditionally in this trapiche or sugar mill in rural San Vicente, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20051228_355.jpg
  • Arnulfo José Espinoza Gonzalez inspects one of dozens of wells that have dried up near San Francisco Libre, Nicaragua. Drought is affecting large areas of Central America. Across Nicaragua hundreds of cattle are dying, wells are drying up and the harvests have failed.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140820_01...jpg
  • Two girls ride their horses near San Francisco Libre. Drought is affecting large areas of Central America. Across Nicaragua hundreds of cattle are dying, wells are drying up and the harvests have failed.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140820_03...jpg
  • Celebrations in San Salvador for the signing of the peace agreement in Chapultepec, Mexico, ending the war in El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20170116_01...jpg
  • Celebrations in San Salvador for the signing of the peace agreement in Chapultepec, Mexico, ending the war in El Salvador.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20170116_01...jpg
  • The Cathedral of San Salvador, draped with banners from social organisations in El Salvador,  December 1991.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20170116_01...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_00...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_01...jpg
  • A bus in San Salvador draped with a large banner that read: "FMLN Frente Felicano Ama" during the celebrations of the signing of the peace agreement, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20170116_01...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_00...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992. Guerrilla soldiers take part in the celebrations.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_00...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_00...jpg
  • A group of people with drums and red clothing celebrated the electoral win of the FMLN in El Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_128.jpg
  • A young man carries a rock during a community housing project in Ayutuxtepeque, San Salvador, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20031013_308.jpg
  • José René Ramírez, coffee cupper at the UCRAPROBEX laboratory in San Salvador. UCRAPROBEX a certified Fairtrade producer based in El Salvador.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20120229_604.jpg
  • FMLN supported walked up the Paseo Escalón to celebrate the electoral win
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_088.jpg
  • A bridge at Pueblo Nuevo in northern Nicaragua. Without the hoped-for rains, the bridge hasn't seen any water running under it for many months. The rains just didn't come. In wide areas across Central America harvests have been completely destroyed by the drought causing great hardship for many thousands of poor subsistence farming families. The drought in this area is believed to be an effect of climate change.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140811_00...jpg
  • Workers at the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa, inside the clean room where the final product is sorted, cleaned, checked and bagged. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are excombatents of the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Workers at the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are ex-combatents from the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Workers at the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are ex-combatents from the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Workers at the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa, inside the clean room where the final product is sorted, cleaned, checked and bagged. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are excombatents of the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Workers at the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa, inside the clean room where the final product is sorted, cleaned, checked and bagged. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are excombatents of the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Sacks of cashew nuts inside the APRAINORES processing plant in San Carlos Lempa, in the clean room where the final product is sorted, cleaned, checked and bagged. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Members are excombatents of the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • A sack of unprocessed cashew in the APRAINORES warehouse. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Families are ex-combatents from the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • A nursery of cashew seedlings at APRAINORES. APRAINORES is a primary producer association of over 60 families located near San Carlos Lempa, at the mouth of the Lempa River in El Salvador. Families are ex-combatents from the FMLN and subsistence farmers whose main cash income is from small cashew plantations. Together they own a processing plant employing around 60 workers for several months a year. All the cashew production is certified Fairtrade.
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_APRAINORES_201108...jpg
  • Jesús Lorenzo Martínez, Ojo de Agua, La Paz.<br />
<br />
I don’t know how old I am. I have three girls and a boy. I’m on my own, bringing them up on my own is a struggle, a battle. Six, I had, I had six children but two are dead. Two boys died. They were for God, they weren’t for me, they were for God. One went when he was a month old. The other went when he was one year and four months. Sometimes I grieve. I conform, it’s God’s will. But I am afraid when one gets ill. I can’t get ill or no one will look after them.<br />
<br />
One of the girls is working in San Miguel (El Salvador), may God bless her and look after her and protect her. My kids are like me, they are as big as me now, and they will have to struggle like I’ve struggled.<br />
<br />
Sometimes I sleep with a flower, and I feel like the boys are with me and I feel strong. <br />
<br />
No sé que edad tengo. Tengo tres niñas y un varón. Estoy sóla, criarlos sóla es una lucha, una batalla. Seis, tuve, tuve seis niños pero dos estan muertos. Se me murieron dos varones. Eran para Dios, no eran para mi, eran para Dios. Uno se fue donde él cuando tenía un mes. El otro se fue cuando tenía un año y cuatro meses. A veces me aflijo. Me conformo, es la voluntad de Dios. Pero tengo miedo cuando uno se enferma. No me puedo enfermar yo, nadie más los cuida.<br />
<br />
Una de las niñas esta trabajando en San Miguel (El Salvador), que Dios la bendiga y la cuide y la proteje. Mis niños se parecen conmigo, ya estan igual de grandes como yo y tendrán que luchar como yo he luchado.<br />
<br />
A veces duermo con una flor, y siento que los niños están conmigo y me siento fuerte.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180311_785.jpg
  • Jesús Lorenzo Martínez, Ojo de Agua, La Paz.<br />
<br />
I don’t know how old I am. I have three girls and a boy. I’m on my own, bringing them up on my own is a struggle, a battle. Six, I had, I had six children but two are dead. Two boys died. They were for God, they weren’t for me, they were for God. One went when he was a month old. The other went when he was one year and four months. Sometimes I grieve. I conform, it’s God’s will. But I am afraid when one gets ill. I can’t get ill or no one will look after them.<br />
<br />
One of the girls is working in San Miguel (El Salvador), may God bless her and look after her and protect her. My kids are like me, they are as big as me now, and they will have to struggle like I’ve struggled.<br />
<br />
Sometimes I sleep with a flower, and I feel like the boys are with me and I feel strong. <br />
<br />
No sé que edad tengo. Tengo tres niñas y un varón. Estoy sóla, criarlos sóla es una lucha, una batalla. Seis, tuve, tuve seis niños pero dos estan muertos. Se me murieron dos varones. Eran para Dios, no eran para mi, eran para Dios. Uno se fue donde él cuando tenía un mes. El otro se fue cuando tenía un año y cuatro meses. A veces me aflijo. Me conformo, es la voluntad de Dios. Pero tengo miedo cuando uno se enferma. No me puedo enfermar yo, nadie más los cuida.<br />
<br />
Una de las niñas esta trabajando en San Miguel (El Salvador), que Dios la bendiga y la cuide y la proteje. Mis niños se parecen conmigo, ya estan igual de grandes como yo y tendrán que luchar como yo he luchado.<br />
<br />
A veces duermo con una flor, y siento que los niños están conmigo y me siento fuerte.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180311_790.jpg
  • Jesus, the Bereaved Mother. <br />
<br />
Jesús Lorenzo Martínez, Ojo de Agua, La Paz.<br />
<br />
"I don’t know how old I am. I have three girls and a boy. I’m on my own, bringing them up on my own is a struggle, a battle. Six, I had, I had six children but two are dead. Two boys died. They were for God, they weren’t for me, they were for God. One went when he was a month old. The other went when he was one year and four months. Sometimes I grieve. I conform, it’s God’s will. But I am afraid when one gets ill. I can’t get ill or no one will look after them.<br />
<br />
One of the girls is working in San Miguel (El Salvador), may God bless her and look after her and protect her. My kids are like me, they are as big as me now, and they will have to struggle like I’ve struggled.<br />
<br />
Sometimes I sleep with a flower, and I feel like the boys are with me and I feel strong."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180311_775.jpg
  • The San Vicente volcano in El Salvador, visible from the COSGUAL coop in Honduras. COSAGUAL, Cooperativa de Servicios Agropecuarios Gualcinse Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Gualcinse, Lempira, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COSAGUAL_20120104_22...jpg