Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Palm Sunday in Guatemala City. The procession of Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros celebrates the arrival of Jesus in Jerusalem, when he rode on a donkey and people placed palms on the ground before him. These processions date back to the 1780s. Bearers, known as cucuruchos, carry extremely heavy floats as a painful act of penitence, they arrive fasting and in prayer. The cortege is led by clouds of pine incense. There are moments of silence and from time to time the bands that follow the cortege play solemn music. The atmosphere is charged. 112 men carry Jesus Nazareno de los Milagros, and the cortege is followed by Mary, carried by 56 women. The procession starts at 7am and goes on til midnight, with about 120 different groups taking a turn at carrying the floats.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Semana_Santa_201204...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Workers carry sacks of coffee across the warehouse. COCASJOL, Cooperativa Agropecuaria Cafetalera San José Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer based in San José de Colinas, Santa Barbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COCASJOL_20120201_03...jpg
  • Police carry away a climate activist arrested during the Extinction Rebellion protests on Waterloo Bridge
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • In a project for clean drinking water in the village of Buenos Aires in Santa Barbara, Honduras, villagers dug trenches for several kilometers and provided all the non-expert labour for the project. Until the project was implemented, drinking water was fetched mainly by the women, many of whom had to carry heavy water containers for an hour a day.
    honduras_hawkey_20110615_408.jpg
  • Workers carry sacks of coffee into the COMSA warehouse. COMSA, Café Orgánico Marcala, is a Fairtrade-certified organisation based in Marcala, La Paz, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COMSA_20120207_113.jpg
  • Miguel Sac Uquiatap carried several bunches of bananas home. He uses a 'mecapal' on his head to carry them. The bananas are marked with paint as they get close to maturity, to prevent robberies.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Nahuala_20120321_06...jpg
  • Workers cut, carry and prepare organic Fairtrade bananas in a plantation at Querecotillo for Valle de Chira.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_631.jpg
  • Police carry away an arrested climate actiivist during the Extinction Rebellion protests
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Workers carry sacks of coffee into the COMSA warehouse. COMSA, Café Orgánico Marcala, is a Fairtrade-certified organisation based in Marcala, La Paz, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COMSA_20120207_114.jpg
  • Workers carry sacks of coffee into the COMSA warehouse. COMSA, Café Orgánico Marcala, is a Fairtrade-certified organisation based in Marcala, La Paz, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COMSA_20120207_112.jpg
  • Workers cut, carry and prepare organic Fairtrade bananas in a plantation at Querecotillo for Valle de Chira.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_601.jpg
  • Workers carry sacks of dry parchment coffee in front of the COCAOL cupping laboratory named after Kieran Durnien, manager of the fairtrade labelling organisations in Central America. COCAOL, Cooperativa Cafetalera Olancho Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Santa Maria del Real, Olancho, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COCAOL_20120223_048.jpg
  • Workers carry incoming coffee to be weighed at the UCCEI coop, Matagalpa, Nicaragua. The coop is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UCCEI_20111025_027.jpg
  • Workers cut, carry and prepare organic Fairtrade bananas in a plantation at Querecotillo for Valle de Chira.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_632.jpg
  • Farmers load up sacks of cassava onto a donkey to carry it home. Finca La Alemania, Sucre, Colombia
    colombia_hawkey_20100701_329.jpg
  • This Q'eqchi man carries a load of firewood he has cut and bundled from Concepción Actelá to Santa Catalina de la Tinta in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. It's two hours walking very fast. With luck he'll get 20 Quetzales, that's $2.60 or £2.00. Then he'll walk home. He carries this very heavy load with a headband called a 'mecapal'.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • This Q'eqchi man carries a load of firewood he has cut and bundled from Concepción Actelá to Santa Catalina de la Tinta in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. It's two hours walking very fast. With luck he'll get 20 Quetzales, that's $2.60 or £2.00. Then he'll walk home. He carries this very heavy load with a headband called a 'mecapal'.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • This Q'eqchi man carries a load of firewood he has cut and bundled from Concepción Actelá to Santa Catalina de la Tinta in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. It's two hours walking very fast. With luck he'll get 20 Quetzales, that's $2.60 or £2.00. Then he'll walk home. He carries this very heavy load with a headband called a 'mecapal'.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Asmitaben carried three water containers to her house. The local water system was supported by Fairtrade premium.<br />
<br />
Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand support cotton producer groups in India. Fairtrade-certified groups benefit from Fairtrade through guaranteed prices for their produce, technical assistance to improve quality and output, and the Fairtrade premium which the producer groups decide what to do with, often using it for education and health care for their members' communities.<br />
<br />
RDFC (formerly Agrocel) is a Fairtrade-certified group of thousands of farmers who grow cotton in the Rapar, Kutch region of Gujarat in western India.
    India_Hawkey_Gujarat_20170110_256-2.jpg
  • Martha Marak carries firewood home in Nongladew, a small village in the mountainous indigenous area of Meghalaya, in Northeast India.
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170406_326.jpg
  • A worker carries a sack of coffee at RAOS. RAOS, Cooperativa Regional Mixta de Agricultores Orgánicos de la Sierra, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer based in Marcala, La Paz, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_RAOS_20120206_097.jpg
  • A farmer in Léogane carries a large batch of beans.
    Haiti_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170616_133...jpg
  • A boy carries a water container to his house in El Burrillo, Valle, Honduras
    Honduras_Hawkey_World_Renew_drought_...jpg
  • Roderico de Jesus Juan Francisco, warehouse assistant, carries a sack of ASOBAGRI coffee in the warehouse. ASOBAGRI is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer based in Barillas, Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_ASOBAGRI_20120316_0...jpg
  • Boys carrying sacks home, two barefoot  at Payacuca, Terrabona, Matagalpa.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_CECOSEMAC_20111021_...jpg
  • carrying firewood on mules at Río Blanco.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_136...jpg
  • A woman worker carries coffee she has just picked at a farm linked to the COSAGUAL coop. COSAGUAL, Cooperativa de Servicios Agropecuarios Gualcinse Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Gualcinse, Lempira, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COSAGUAL_20120104_11...jpg
  • Dixon Ramírez, 19, working in the warehouse of COCAOL, carrying sacks of parchment coffee. COCAOL, Cooperativa Cafetalera Olancho Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Santa Maria del Real, Olancho, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COCAOL_20120223_046.jpg
  • A builder carries an adobe during the construction of a house with reinforcing canes and buttresses that increase the earthquake-resistance of the building
    el_salvador_hawkey_20121206_809.jpg
  • A young man carries a rock during a community housing project in Ayutuxtepeque, San Salvador, El Salvador
    el_salvador_hawkey_20031013_308.jpg
  • A young woman carries firewood from podding coffee bushes at the Las Lajas coop, part of the UCRAPROBEX coop. UCRAPROBEX a certified Fairtrade producer based in El Salvador.
    el_salvador_hawkey_20120229_647.jpg
  • A dock worker carries a box of bananas on his head crossing boats in the dock at Turbo, Chocó, Colombia.
    colombia_hawkey_20100625_116.jpg
  • A worker carries a racime of organic Fairtrade bananas at a plantation of APPBOSA in Peru.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161010_101.jpg
  • A worker carries a racime of organic Fairtrade bananas at a plantation of APPBOSA in Peru.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161010_096.jpg
  • In rural areas the cotton is mainly transported by people and long distances are covered on foot. Fatoumata Diallo carries raw cotton two km from a field to Thiokéthian village. Sometimes she does this several times a day.
    senegal_hawkey_20121212_120.jpg
  • A porter carries a large basket of bananas and plantains at the Huembes Market in Managua, Nicaragua
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Huembes_20140815_20...jpg
  • A boy runs through the rain carrying his little sister. Cacarica is a community of returned displaced people or IDPs, many here have witnessed massacres, assasinations and other violence. This peace community, that aims to exclude all armed groups, was established to protect civilians from military activity and recruitment by paramilitaries, army and guerilla.
    colombia_hawkey_20100626_144.jpg
  • A rickshaw driver carries a huge load in Dhaka, Bangaldesh
    Bangladesh_Hawkey_slums_20150804_007...jpg
  • The Red Brigade Radical Dance Faction provided a theatrical backdrop to arrests of Extinction Rebellion climate activists on Waterloo Bridge
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • A family recovers a bed from their house. They spent three days on the roof of the house waiting to be rescued.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_38...jpg
  • Police arrest activists of Extinction Rebellion on the Waterloo Bridge in London
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • At the NORANDINO de Café warehouse in Piura, workers move batches of coffee for export. The warehouse handles hundreds of thousands of sacks of Fairtrade coffee and provides services to other exporters.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_569.jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Two women on the way to work on their field in Seduya.<br />
<br />
The small village of Seduya, Koinadugu is in a remote district of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping the village with agricultural trainining to improve harvests and with sanitation and clean water supply.,
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • A protestor is arrested while meditating on Waterloo bridge.
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • The Red Brigade Radical Dance Faction provided a theatrical backdrop to arrests of Extinction Rebellion climate activists on Waterloo Bridge
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Police arrest activists of Extinction Rebellion on the Waterloo Bridge in London
    UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Farmers deliver freshly-picked coffee cherries to the CAUFUL coop. Cooperativa Agropecuaria Unión y Fuerza Ltda, CAUFUL was born in 1975 through the agrarian reform, it is based in the Marcala area of La Paz, Honduras. Today it is a certified organic and fairtrade coffee-producing coop with 67 members.
    Honduras_Hawkey_CAUFUL_20120209_081.jpg
  • Larry Rivera, organic Fairtrade banana worker at Valle de Chira in Querecotillo.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_635.jpg
  • At the NORANDINO de Café warehouse in Piura, workers move batches of coffee for export. The warehouse handles hundreds of thousands of sacks of Fairtrade coffee and provides services to other exporters.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_544.jpg
  • Sabina Makongo is a farmer in Nyamuhonda, Tarime district, northern Tanzania, who has adopted Conservation Agriculture techniques taught by World Renew partner AICT Mara Ukewere.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Sabina Makongo is a farmer in Nyamuhonda, Tarime district, northern Tanzania, who has adopted Conservation Agriculture techniques taught by World Renew partner AICT Mara Ukewere.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • UK_Hawkey_ExtinctionRebellion_201904...jpg
  • Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes_20170221_6...jpg
  • At the NORANDINO de Café warehouse in Piura, workers move batches of coffee for export. The warehouse handles hundreds of thousands of sacks of Fairtrade coffee and provides services to other exporters.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161013_539.jpg
  • A worker hooks a racime of organic Fairtrade bananas onto a cable run at a plantation of APPBOSA in Peru.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161010_172.jpg
  • Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170601_24...jpg
  • An itinerant seller of plastic bowls in a market in southern Malawi
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_52...jpg
  • Coffee drying on a patio at the UCCEI coop, Matagalpa, Nicaragua. Fairtrade is an alternative approach to conventional trade and is based on a partnership between producers and consumers. The coop is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UCCEI_20111025_008.jpg
  • David Guido, warehouse manager at UCCEI coop, Matagalpa, Nicaragua, in front of a heap of coffee parchment or husks near the coffee mill. The coop is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UCCEI_20111025_044.jpg
  • Two girls drag a sack of compost across a small timber bridge. Asociación de Cooperación al Desarrollo Integral de Huehuetenango, ACODIHUE, is a Fairtrade-certified producer of honey and coffee based in Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
    guatemala_hawkey_20120315_1226.jpg
  • Workers carry a large blue and white vase in a Buddhist temple in Chengdu
    china_hawkey_20050929_002.jpg
  • Workers carry a large blue and white vase in a Buddhist temple in Chengdu, incense burns in the background.
    china_hawkey_20050929_003.jpg
  • World Renew works through its partner NEICORD in the indigenous region of Meghalaya. In the village of Nongladew, the women gather for a training provided by NEICORD on seamstressing, to learn how to make clothes for themselves and their families, but also for small business. Here Elish Momin carrying her son Pangchak, takes part in the training.
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170406_617.jpg
  • Taking boiled maize in a bowl to the mill in Concepción Actelá. Maize is the staple grain in Guatemala and is used to make tortillas.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Coffee pickers emerge from the coffee farm to the road where the coffee they've picked during the day will be taken to the mill by a vehicle. Cooperativa Fraternidad Ecológica Ltda, CAFEL is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in San Fernando, Ocotepeque, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_CAFEL_20120204_003.jpg
  • Jesús López, 17. Gangster. "I was sentenced to four and a half years prison for extortion. I've been inside for seven months and 17 days. I'll get out when I'm 22.When I was nine years old I used to go to a church called the Ministry of God's Beloved. But I had to work at that age, to survive economically. But it was hard at home, there were many problems, and I decided to leave home. My aunts would fight over the food, and well, they weren't my parents, and I didn't want to obey them, so I left, and I joined the gang. At ten years old I was taking drugs. I began murdering at age 12. I would kill kids of my own age, to keep in with the gang. In the gang that's something that's normal. When I was 14 I began stealing cars, carrying weapons, but by 16 I got into extortion, I would distribute people across neighbourhoods in Tegucigalpa to carry out the extortions. One of my children died, and my life went further out of control, I did more and more in the gang. I am here in this centre, and I'm trying to get some of the shit out of my head. I want to study, and maybe become a soldier. Before, you could leave the gang if you joined an evangelical church, but the gang is evolving, and now you can't leave unless you are dead. I'm alive, I'm still breathing, and I'm asking God for another chance."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180820_5642.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 />
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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 />
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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 />
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CASM [a Mennonite organisation] has helped me, they've helped me a lot.<br />
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The money lender wants the money, he wants
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  • Faustino de Jesús Cortés Cortés is from La Vainilla, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “I’ve been working with CIEETS, and they’ve helped us with fruit trees, mangos, papaya and other fruits, they’re just maturing and we’ll get some fruit from them soon. We have citrus fruits, we’ve built level curves, barriers, we have natural medicines like lemon grass, we have pitahayas, achiote – which is good for the bees, but it’s also good for cooking, we use it ourselves, and it’s better than what you find in the shops. We have ornamental plants too, flowering plants for the bees. All this is good for us, for the family. We haven’t had a lot of success with the Meliponas, yet, but we will, we’ll keep trying. We have planted a lot of achiote, the bees love it. We have papaya, plenty of yuca, and plenty of quequisque that’s good for the nutrition, it’s the basics, and we have coconut, and peaches, star fruit. As all this goes up, we are creating the best conditions for the family to live well, it’s all new, we planted it all with CIEETS. What we want is to carry on improving, and all this will strengthen us. CIEETS has helped us move forwards”.
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  • “I am studying, and I want to carry on studying. I still don’t know what I want to do. I want a good job though.<br />
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Most people around here make a living fishing. We eat a lot of fish here. And we’ve got our own food - machuca, estofado, casave, marote. Grown ups drink gífiti sometimes. And we have our own culture of stories, customs and dances. The whole country knows punta - that’s our dance.<br />
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We live in a community here - the Garifina community. That’s not like living anywhere else. We live as families but also as a community. We’re not on our own.<br />
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I understand Garifuna, but don’t speak it much yet. <br />
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The Garifuna people have a strong struggle to keep its ancestral land as people want to take it off us.”
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