Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Brazilian students cheer President Lula
    Brazil_Hawkey_WCC_Assembly_20060217_...jpg
  • Pope Francis visited the Philippines. Millions of people waited hours to see him pass by. Pope Francis has prepared an encyclical on the environment and climate change, and the Pope's visit to show solidarity with victims of Typhoon Haiyan, known locally as Yolanda, is thought to be related to his message on climate change and the importance of 2015 for negotiations on climate change.
    Philippines_Hawkey_Pope_Francis_2015...jpg
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez during his investiture event in the National Stadium in Tegucigalpa on January 27th this year. <br />
<br />
The event took place inside several rings of military exclusion that extended for a kilometre from the stadium. A limited number of people were brought in, arriving on buses, and reportedly many were paid to attend, certainly many didn’t want their photograph taken. Animators in front of the stands instructed people when to cheer and wave the flags they were given. Later, videos circulated on social media of heaps of discarded National Party flags and of fights that broke out over the distribution of sandwiches that were promised to the people who attended.
    honduras_hawkey_20180127_211.jpg
  • Young people cheered as the FMLN won the elections in San Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_158.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
  • Duvelkis Mercedes Delgado Hernandez, 13, in La Carbonera, Somoto, Nicaragua. This region has been severely affected by lack of rainfall over recent years. The prolonged drought has dried up rivers and wells and has destroyed most crops before they get to harvest. ELCA is supporting the Nicaraguan Lutheran Church, ILFE, with community-based farming responses to this crisis, where small plots are farmed in groups, sometimes with irrigation, in an attempt to provide the basic nutritional requirements for the participating families.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_ELCA_1178.jpg
  • Portrait of a Shakira in her hairdressing shop in southern Malawi.<br />
<br />
In this area World Renew works on peer-mentoring programmes for girls. <br />
<br />
The region has a problem of girls and young women who work at markets being pressured into transactional sex by their clients. The peer-mentoring programme teaches girls how to resist such pressure, and teaches them about how to prevent HIV and pregnancy.<br />
<br />
The groups have become very popular with girls in the area.<br />
<br />
Since taking part in one of the girls groups, and doing the Stepping Stones programme, Shakira and her friend Isabello have set up their hairdressing salon.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_40...jpg
  • IvoryCoast_Hawkey_20161114-20161114_...jpg
  • Alique Deque, works in the pharmacy at the Clinique du Planteur. CAMAYE is a Fairtrade-certified coop that produces cocoa. It is based in Abengourou in Ivory Coast. The coop membership doubled from 900 to 1,800 members in 2015. The coop spent its first Fairtrade premium payment last year on buying fertilizer for the members, scholarships for members and their children, and the repair of a village well. Along with four other coops, CAMAYE has recently set up a clinic for farmers, who only have to pay 20% of the cost of the medical consultations and treatment.
    IvoryCoast_Hawkey_20161114-20161114_...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
  • Rita Amalia Rodas Amador at UNCRISPROCA Fairtrade cocoa farms in La Cruz de Rio Grande, RAAS, Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UNCRISPROCA_2014081...jpg
  • Jainer Javier Medoza Tercero keep his hat on with a string, at La Cruz de Rio Grande, RAAS, Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UNCRISPROCA_2014081...jpg
  • Sandra Cruz Mendoza, 26, mother of four, in her cocoa patch in El Papayo, Waslala. Sandra is a member of the CACAONICA coop. Cooperativa de Servicios Agroforestal y Comercialización de Cacao, CACAONICA, is located in Waslala, Nicaragua and is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_CACAONICA_20111027_...jpg
  • Pablo Flores Hernandez, member of ACAWAS coop, on his cocoa plantation. Asociación Campesina Waslala, ACAWAS, is a Fairtrade-certified cocoa producer based in Waslala, Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_ACAWAS_20111027_035.jpg
  • honduras_hawkey_20180127_152.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Amparo Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_077.jpg
  • Karol Salazar: "I’m from Choluteca but I live in Tegucigalpa. I work building capacity in the community, particularly on family plots, school plots. We want to run more projects, because they do benefit the community, in their nutrition and independence, but also in building self confidence and good social relationships between people. It’s good to see women become producers of food for their own nutrition, and to sell for an income. We also work on small community projects, helping them to get organised to get improvements in their roads or houses. Communities can do a lot if they get organised and together make a plan for whatever they need. That’s what I do here, helping with those areas of work. Christian Ministries have several programmes in education, that’s where I began working, as a social worker and teacher of sixth grade, and I worked on grants and nurseries, and I worked on a programme to guarantee a nutritious meal at school, because lots of the children here are from very low income families."
    Honduras_Hawkey_WorldRenew_NuevaSuya...jpg
  • Reina, a Maya Chortí woman in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20121207_027.jpg
  • A young woman works picking coffee on a coffee farm in Intibucá, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Fairtrade_20190213_5...jpg
  • Blanca Aracely Membreño Milla, picking coffee on a COPROCAEL coffee farm. COPROCAEL, Cooperativa De Productores De Café La Encarnación Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Encarnación, Ocotepeque, Honduras, close to the borders of Guatemala and El Salvador.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COPROCAEL_20120204_0...jpg
  • Jeremías Reyes Hernandez picks coffee on the farm of a COPROCAEL coffee farm. COPROCAEL, Cooperativa De Productores De Café La Encarnación Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Encarnación, Ocotepeque, Honduras, close to the borders of Guatemala and El Salvador.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COPROCAEL_20120204_0...jpg
  • Norma Argueta works at COMSA running a warehouse. COMSA, Café Orgánico Marcala, is a Fairtrade-certified organisation based in Marcala, La Paz, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COMSA_20120207_075.jpg
  • Three young women pick coffee on a COCATRAL farm
    Honduras_Hawkey_COCATRAL_20120130_06...jpg
  • Lucía López Pérez en Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala, una zona Maya Chortí. Esta zona del país esta muy afectado por el cambio climático. La lluvia de los ultimos siete años ha sido muy poca e irrugular, si cae el agua cae cuando ya no ayuda las plantas. No se ha podido lograr una buena cosecha en varios años y cada siembra es apenas para perder la semilla. Como la sequía no acaba, los campesinos diversifican sustento buscando empleo como jornaleros, viajando frecuentemente por meses a trabajar. La Federación Luterana Mundial apoya projectos en la zona incluyendo la privisión de granos básicos.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Jocotan_LWF_2016072...jpg
  • Taking care of the local shop in Concepción Actelá, Alta Verapaz
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Just hangin' around.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Simona Choc in her corn field. World Renew is beginning to work in Concepción Actelá, through its Guatemalan partner ADIP.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Mayra y Stefanie Coc, indigenous Q'eqchis in Concepción Actelá, Alta Verapaz.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Edwin Ruiz Nieves, banana worker and member of the BOS coop in Salitral, Piura, Peru.
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161012_416.jpg
  • Xiomara Saavedra Riofrio, banana worker at Fairtrade-certified coop BOS in Salitral, Piura, Peru
    Peru_Hawkey_bananas_20161012_431.jpg
  • Young shepherd girls in Tubas district, northern West Bank.<br />
<br />
There are 27 people in their extended family, all living in tents because they are not allowed to build a house.
    OPT_Hawkey_WCC_20170704_109.jpg
  • Portrait of a woman in M'nchere village, Malawi
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170601_16...jpg
  • Portrait of a young girl in M'nchere village, Malawi
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170601_13...jpg
  • Portrait of Maria  in southern Malawi. Maria is working as a security guard for a community water scheme.<br />
<br />
In this area World Renew supports a peer-mentoring programmes for girls. <br />
<br />
The region has a problem of girls and young women who work at markets being pressured into transactional sex by their clients. <br />
<br />
The peer-mentoring programme teaches girls how to resist such pressure, and teaches them about how to prevent HIV and pregnancy.<br />
<br />
The groups have become very popular with girls in the area, and many of them continue their education and get jobs outside the the precarious and vulnerable informal sector.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_93...jpg
  • Young girls pump water using a pump in a village in southern Malawi. There are no houses with their own pump, and no one is connected to a water network.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_83...jpg
  • A girl in Malawi shows off the plaits a friend has just done on her hair.<br />
<br />
They take part in a peer-mentoring programme for girls supported by World Renew.<br />
<br />
The region has a problem of girls and young women who work at markets being pressured into transactional sex by their clients. The peer-mentoring programme teaches girls how to resist such pressure, and teaches them about how to prevent HIV and pregnancy.<br />
<br />
The programme uses the Stepping Stones programme to help girls understand how to achieve their goals in life. Many of the girls feel encouraged to continue their education and go on to take jobs in service of the community.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_77...jpg
  • Portrait of a girl  in southern Malawi.<br />
<br />
In this area World Renew works on peer-mentoring programmes for girls. <br />
<br />
The region has a problem of girls and young women who work at markets being pressured into transactional sex by their clients. The peer-mentoring programme teaches girls how to resist such pressure, and teaches them about how to prevent HIV and pregnancy.<br />
<br />
The groups have become very popular with girls in the area.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_20...jpg
  • Portrait of a girl  in southern Malawi.<br />
<br />
In this area World Renew works on peer-mentoring programmes for girls. <br />
<br />
The region has a problem of girls and young women who work at markets being pressured into transactional sex by their clients. The peer-mentoring programme teaches girls how to resist such pressure, and teaches them about how to prevent HIV and pregnancy.<br />
<br />
The groups have become very popular with girls in the area.
    Malawi_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170530_02...jpg
  • CAYAWE coop is a Fairtrade-certified cocoa producer based in Aniassue in the Ivory Coast. The coop has nearly 1,500 members and can produce around 5,000 tons of cocoa a year. With the Fairtrade premium from 2015, amongst other things, CAYAWE built a high school for up to 210 students and drilled six wells.
    IvoryCoast_Hawkey_20161115-20161115_...jpg
  • CAMAYE is a Fairtrade-certified coop that produces cocoa. It is based in Abengourou in Ivory Coast. The coop membership doubled from 900 to 1,800 members in 2015. The coop spent its first Fairtrade premium payment last year on buying fertilizer for the members, scholarships for members and their children, and the repair of a village well. Along with four other coops, CAMAYE has recently set up a clinic for farmers, who only have to pay 20% of the cost of the medical consultations and treatment.
    IvoryCoast_Hawkey_20161114-20161114_...jpg
  • CAYAWE coop is a Fairtrade-certified cocoa producer based in Aniassue in the Ivory Coast. The coop has nearly 1,500 members and can produce around 5,000 tons of cocoa a year. With the Fairtrade premium from 2015, amongst other things, CAYAWE built a high school for up to 210 students and drilled six wells.
    IvoryCoast_Hawkey_20161114-20161114_...jpg
  • Students drink from a water system in the playground of a Fairtrade-supported school in Rapar district, Gujarat, India. The water system was also 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_026-2.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 Hondia D. Sangma takes part in the training.
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170407_1060.jpg
  • Elish Momin n the village of Nongladew, Meghalaya
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170407_1039.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 Runu Wahlang takes part in the training.
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170407_648.jpg
  • Villagers in a cotton-growing village in Madhya Pradesh celebrate on a wedding day.
    India_Hawkey_Madhya_Pradesh_20170113...jpg
  • A family on motorbike rides through a coffee farm linked to UCA Pantasma. UCA Unidad Santa Maria de Pantasma, Jinotega, Nicaragua, is a Fairtrade-certified coop.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UCA_Pantasma_201112...jpg
  • A peanut farmer near Chichgalpa, Nicaragua. The Del Campo cooperative is a certified Fairtrade producer in the Leon and Chinandega regions of Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Del_Campo_20111221_...jpg
  • Technical staff from CACOANICA Aydali Granados and Johana Palacio laughing during a cocoa training workshop in Ocote Tuma, Waslala. Cooperativa de Servicios Agroforestal y Comercialización de Cacao, CACAONICA, is located in Waslala, Nicaragua and is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_CACAONICA_20111026_...jpg
  • Maritza Sanchez, 22, is picking coffee on a farm at El Balsamo that is part of the Arca de Noe Coop. The coffee-producing coop Arca de Noe in San Juan de Rio Coco, Nicaragua, is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Arca_de_Noe_2011111...jpg
  • two girls laughing
    india_hawkey_20100118_963.jpg
  • A young girl covers her face and laughs.
    india_hawkey_20090830_815.jpg
  • Young women hold hands during a team-building exercise in a health training centre, Pondicherry.
    india_hawkey_20071008_169.jpg
  • Sobeida.<br />
<br />
Sobeida is given a hug by her granddaughter, the daughter of her son Ronal. Sobeida lives in a notorious neighbourhood of Catacamas, Olancho. Her son Ronald decided to migrate to escape the violence. Men were trying to kill him. His family got him out of Catacamas by using decoys to distract the men that were waiting for him at both ends of his street.<br />
<br />
During his journey up to the US, he lived numerous adventures, and was well liked for helping others on the journey up to the US, including saving others’ lives. One time, helping someone else escape from a criminal group he broke his ankle.<br />
<br />
After months of detention in the US, when he was deported, he came back to Olancho and became the coordinator of the LWF program of young returned migrants in Olancho. <br />
<br />
Shortly afterwards, Ronal Leonardo Rojas Castro was shot dead in Olancho by unknown assailants.<br />
<br />
LWF’s program for returned and deported migrants is supported by ELCA.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190122_68...jpg
  • César Abraham Méndez Calix, 31, Jutiquiles<br />
<br />
We’ve seen people leaving Syria, going through France, thousands of them. We never thought we’d see thousands of people leaving Honduras at the same time. But, if you all go together, you don’t pay smugglers, and it’s safer.<br />
<br />
I lived in a really dangerous neighbourhood. Really dangerous. Lots of my friends were killed.<br />
<br />
The first three times I got up to Laredo.<br />
Then I went on the train, on top of the train, up to Mexicali.<br />
All in all, I went six times, I was deported five times.<br />
<br />
The last time, the people I was with got impatient, they tried to get across, they were deported. I got homesick, I decided to come back here, to eat beans.<br />
<br />
But, it’s hard here, economically. <br />
<br />
I was lucky to survive it, I saw someone killed in front of me, I was with this guy from Choluteca, we were tired, it was six in the morning, we hadn’t slept much, we were perched in between the train wagons, he slipped off and went straight under the wheels. God knows how many people have died on the journey, and plenty come back with limbs missing. Another time I saw someone reach out for a mango from an overhanging tree, the train will full, 60 people on each wagon, we were hungry, so he reached out, he slipped, he went between the wagons, landed on his teeth, he was dead straight away.<br />
<br />
One time I nearly died myself. I was travelling between Nayarit and Guadalajara. I was on the train and I touched a high-tension cable, it just brushed my face, burned me, two Mexicans stopped me from falling off, they grabbed my legs. I’ve never been closer to death. I have never got on a train again. <br />
<br />
Sometimes the Mexican throw stones at you while you’re on the train. <br />
<br />
I have done training with the LWF, I am making a living painting, painting houses and businesses, and doing signwriting and tattoos.<br />
<br />
LWF’s program for returned and deported migrants is supported by ELCA.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190122_58...jpg
  • Silvia Maria Alvarez Rosales<br />
Tenquiscapa<br />
<br />
I have migrated to the US seven times. The last time was a very bad experience.<br />
<br />
At the beginning it was fun, going through Mexico. But, as soon as I got across the river into the US, it was bad. It is dangerous, you can lose everything including your life.<br />
<br />
My feet were tired, I’d been walking three days and nights, I had injuries on my feet, my socks were stuck to my feet, I couldn’t bear it any more. That night, we were walking through forest, there were thorns, the thorns would get stuck in my skin, scratch and injure me. We could see lights way off in the distance. It was evening time, I saw a woman who’d given birth, both the woman and the baby were dead. I got scared, the guide got hold of me and covered my mouth to stop me screaming. The smuggler wasn’t bad, he left me on a road where I’d get picked up by the migration. <br />
<br />
Migration passed by a few times before picking me up. Eventually they woke me up, I could hardly stand up, they treated my wounds. I asked for political asylum, and I was left in prison for seven months before being deported. My family thought I was dead, there aren’t any international calls. When I got back here, I got off the bus, and my father saw me and he fell down on the ground and couldn’t stop crying. <br />
<br />
The LWF has helped me set up my own salon, they’ve helped me a lot, to buy my equipment, they’ve given me training. Now I have a job, I have no need to leave again.<br />
<br />
<br />
LWF’s program for returned and deported migrants is supported by ELCA.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190122_50...jpg
  • Carlos Andrés Enriquez Hernández, 23, Tailor, Barrio La Soledad, Juticalpa, Olancho<br />
<br />
I was in four iceboxes in the US, about three days in each. The icebox is a room where they put you with very cold air conditioning, the aim of it is to freeze you, to make you more likely to sign the form so that they can send you straight home. It really is freezing, you are on the floor, there’s no bedding, you don’t have enough clothes, your teeth chatter and you feel like you are going to die.<br />
<br />
I was deported after about 20 days. I met someone here in Juticalpa who told me about the LWF.<br />
<br />
I left my place because of danger. What does danger mean? Ha! Danger here is not an abstract concept. My whole family was threatened by a gang. Threats against your life are part of controlling you, subjecting you. My whole family had to leave. People who don’t take notice of threats like that are simply killed. We’ve lost a lot of friends and neighbours, they disappeared. The gang here use a tourniquet on your neck, that’s their signature.<br />
<br />
When I came back, I moved. I had nothing, lost everything. <br />
<br />
The LWF helped me get back on my feet. I make school uniforms, I make adjustments to clothes, I make suits and rent them for weddings. I have dreams of getting bigger to start making clothes that people here want. I have no plan to go back to the US. <br />
<br />
With skills here, and a helping hand to get on your feet, and plenty of hard work, you can make it here, you can survive.<br />
<br />
LWF's programme for deported and returned migrants is supported by ELCA.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190121_40...jpg
  • Cocinera en Catacamas. Dina Escoba, 28 y Alan Mejía Verbinsky y su bebé Alejandra. <br />
<br />
Fuimos deportados de la frontera Mexico y los Estados Unidos. Fue horrible, no queremos volver a pasar por eso, tenemos suerte de estar aquí contando la historia, gracias a Dios. Hemos tomado la decisión de no volver a intentar nunca. Miramos gente que cayó del tren, que fue llevada. A muchos los llevan y desaparecen, muchos son robados, violadas, golpeados, a muchos les piden un rescate, y allí esta todo perdido. Así es la vida allí. Desde que sale uno de la frontera de Honduras a Guatemala, ya a uno lo extorsionan, hasta la policía le quitan el dinero. Es difícil. <br />
<br />
Yo intenté una vez, mi esposo intentó varias veces. Viajamos por semanas, y cuando llegamos al río, ya para cruzar el río, nos agarró la migración, nos pusieron esposas y nos subieron a un camión y nos llevaron. Nos llevaron a Monterey, y nos pusieron en una cárcel, pero no una cárcel de migración, una cárcel normal, y estuvimos 23 días porque no se podía llenar un bus para mandarnos hasta DF para ver la gente de migración. Después nos mandaron para DF, y después para Tapachula, y de Tapachula para la frontera de Honduras con Guatemala. Fuimos tratados como criminales.<br />
<br />
Al llegar aquí no teníamos nada. No teníamos trabajo, mi esposo conseguía trabajo un día sí un día no, así pasábamos, pero la mayoría del tiempo haciendo nada. Y, gracias a Dios, nos hablaron de la Federación, y nos visitaron, incluso no creíamos, de allí nos hablaron que fueramos a Juticalpa a la reunión, y fuimos y miramos que la cosa era en serio. Desde que nos involucramos nos hemos perdido una reunión. Y gracias a Dios estamos trabajando. El negocio de nosotros, que hemos levantado con el apoyo de la Federación, es golosinas. Vendemos tacos, baleadas, plátanos con carne, tajaditas con pollo, y, gracias a Dios, desde que empezamos, todo producto que preparamos se vende, se nos va todo. Empezó con solamente
    Honduras_Hawkey_returned_migrants_20...jpg
  • Marcia Verónica Elvir Romero, 28, madre de cuatro hijos, y esperando el número cinco.<br />
<br />
La idea era esa, llegar a los Estados Unidos. <br />
<br />
Pero cuando íbamos por Mexico, y los Zetas estaban empezando a secuestrar las personas, mejor decidimos venir. Ya estábamos en México, trabajamos allí, para hacer el pasaje, y nos venimos.<br />
<br />
Nos venimos el 22 de diciembre del año pasado, un año ya. Estuvimos allí más de un mes. <br />
<br />
Cuando llegamos, alguien nos dijo del programa.<br />
<br />
Yo ya tenía me salón de belleza. Le digo salón verdad, porque esta en mi salón de estar, aquí en mi casa. <br />
<br />
Me han ayudado con capacitación, y con muebles, sillas, espejos, la mesa para manicure, la silla de manicure. <br />
<br />
He ido a varias capacitaciones, hasta en Tegucigalpa. La semana pasada vino una técnica que contrataron para dar cursos de bellezas, me ha venido a visitar.<br />
<br />
Ya voy a perder algunas reuniones porque ya me toca [dar la luz]. Me dieron reposo, y míreme, trabajando. <br />
<br />
Me dijo la doctora que ya no hay problema que nazca el bebé.<br />
<br />
En México yo no salía, me daba miedo que nos viera la migración o las bandas criminales como son los zetas, no quería que nos secuestraran, o que nos sacaran. La familia de mi esposo tiene un amigo allí que nos dieron donde quedar. Y yo trabajé en un salón de belleza, cortando pelo. Pero no salía, tenía mucho miedo. La verdad es que tuvimos mucha suerte que no nos pasó nada fuerte, como suele pasar.<br />
<br />
Ahora, con el bebé que viene, y con estas capacitaciones y el apoyo de la Federación, siento esperanza, que todo va a salir bien aquí. No deja de ser una lucha, pero ya tenemos algo para ir trabajando.
    Honduras_Hawkey_returned_migrants_20...jpg
  • Claudia Carrasco
    honduras_hawkey_20170814_483.jpg
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  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Angélica Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_065.jpg
  • Portrait of an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman, Amparo Rodriguez, near Copán Ruinas, Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20170810_040.jpg
  • Iveth, 15: I help my mother with the little shop. With the government programme ‘for one lempira less’ we offer products slightly cheaper than in a lot of shops. I help and study at the same time, I want to study pharmaceutical chemistry at university.
    Honduras_Hawkey_WorldRenew_NuevaSuya...jpg
  • At the Lourdes Monserrath school in Nueva Suyapa, children take part in a school gardening project supported by World Renew through its partners Christian Ministries.
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  • Wendy Lopez at home in a rural household in Buenos Aires, Santa Barbara, Honduras. Wendy and her family were taking part in a programme on food production and nutrition. The interventions of the programme were strategic, aiming to boost areas of poor nutrition.
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  • José Rufino, an indigenous Maya Chortí man in the Copán region of Honduras
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  • Maya Chortí girls in the Copán region of Honduras
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  • Jimena Pereira, a young student at the International COMSA school in Marcala, La Paz. The school was built and is run with Fairtrade premium money. (Full permission, informed consent)
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  • Selenia Vanegas, coffee producer with COMSA cooperative in Santiago Puringla, La Paz. Selenia was a migrant and lived in the New York working for six years.
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  • Olga Alvarado, a coffee producer in Intibucá, migrated to the US and worked at Macdonalds in Devon, New Jersey for eight years, scrimping and saving to buy a small plot of farm land and grow coffee. She is a member of the COAQUIL cooperative that is Fairtrade-certified, and the Fairtrade prices are keeping their heads above water as the international coffee market prices are very low. Many of the farmers in her area are selling coffee at a loss of around $50 a sack, the Fairtrade price is giving Olga a profit of around $30 a sack.
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  • Rosa Arely Gútierrez, 29, with her brother Torland Danneri 'Neri' Gútierrez, both are coffee producers at the COAQUIL cooperative in Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Neri was a migrant in the US for 12 years, working in the catering industry, and returned home to work on coffee production. Their father also migrated to the US and returned to produce coffee.
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  • Rosa Arely Gútierrez, 29, coffee producer in the COAQUIL cooperative, Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Rosa's father and brothers migrated to the US looking for employment.
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  • Rosa Arely Gútierrez, 29, coffee producer in the COAQUIL cooperative, Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Rosa's father and brothers migrated to the US looking for employment.
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  • José Mario Rodríguez, from neighbouring Guatemala, picks coffee for a COPROCAEL member in Honduras. José travels with his family to work. COPROCAEL, Cooperativa De Productores De Café La Encarnación Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Encarnación, Ocotepeque, Honduras, close to the borders of Guatemala and El Salvador.
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  • Norma Estrella Monroy, picking coffee on the farm of a COPROCAEL coop member. COPROCAEL, Cooperativa De Productores De Café La Encarnación Ltda, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Encarnación, Ocotepeque, Honduras, close to the borders of Guatemala and El Salvador.
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  • Ruth Noemí Badilla Carranza, labels coffee sacks with the names of contracts and clients at COAGRICSAL, Fairtrade-certified cooperative in La Entrada, Copán, Honduras.
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  • Izamar España serves coffee at Café Honor in Santa Rosa de Copan, Honduras. Café honor is a retailing project of a collection of Fairtrade-certified coffee producing coops including COAGRICSAL.
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  • Fatoumata Conte, logisitics specialist for the WHO during the Ebola vaccine clinical trial in Conakry, Guinea.
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  • Maya Ixil people during a political rally in Nebaj, Quiche, Guatemala
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  • Lucía López Pérez en Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala, una zona Maya Chortí. Esta zona del país esta muy afectado por el cambio climático. La lluvia de los ultimos siete años ha sido muy poca e irrugular, si cae el agua cae cuando ya no ayuda las plantas. No se ha podido lograr una buena cosecha en varios años y cada siembra es apenas para perder la semilla. Como la sequía no acaba, los campesinos diversifican sustento buscando empleo como jornaleros, viajando frecuentemente por meses a trabajar. La Federación Luterana Mundial apoya projectos en la zona incluyendo la privisión de granos básicos.
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  • Lucía López Pérez  in Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala. This part of the country is highly affected by climate change. Rainfall patterns in the last seven years have been unreliable, with too little or too irregular rainfall to get harvest of corn and beans. Many farmers have lost the seeds they plant. As the drought seems unending, the farmers diversify their income searching for employment as day labourers, travelling often for months at a time.
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  • Lucía López Pérez  in Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala. This part of the country is highly affected by climate change. Rainfall patterns in the last seven years have been unreliable, with too little or too irregular rainfall to get harvest of corn and beans. Many farmers have lost the seeds they plant. As the drought seems unending, the farmers diversify their income searching for employment as day labourers, travelling often for months at a time.
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  • Juan García Gonzalez working on his corn field  in Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala, Mr Garcia is part of the Indigenous Council here. This part of the country is highly affected by climate change. Rainfall patterns in the last seven years have been unreliable, with too little or too irregular rainfall to get harvest of corn and beans. Many farmers have lost the seeds they plant. As the drought seems unending, the farmers diversify their income searching for employment as day labourers, travelling often for months at a time.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Jocotan_LWF_2016072...jpg
  • Miguel Pérez Ramírez in Las Flores, Jocotán, Guatemala, Mr Pérez head the Indigenous Council here. This part of the country is highly affected by climate change. Rainfall patterns in the last seven years have been unreliable, with too little or too irregular rainfall to get harvest of corn and beans. Many farmers have lost the seeds they plant. As the drought seems unending, the farmers diversify their income searching for employment as day labourers, travelling often for months at a time.
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  • Julia cooling off at the kitchen door after making tortillas. The temperature in Concepción Actelá is often around 40 celcius.
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  • A Q'eqchi woman with her baby in Concepción Actelá, Alta Verapaz.
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  • A young Q'eqchi girl laughs outside her school in Concepción Actelá, Alta Verapaz.
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  • visit to Guatemala with World Renew
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  • visit to Guatemala with World Renew
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  • Larry Rivera, organic Fairtrade banana worker at Valle de Chira in Querecotillo.
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  • Workers cut, carry and prepare organic Fairtrade bananas in a plantation at Querecotillo for Valle de Chira.
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  • Dina Karina Ramirez Camacho, banana worker at Fairtrade-certified coop BOS in Salitral, Piura, Peru
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  • Daysi Luana Siloan Kajima, nurse providing medical attention at Fairtrade-certified banana coop BOS in Peru. The Fairtrade premium is used by the coop on healthcare and education projects.
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  • Doris Marchena prepares organic Fairtrade bananas in one of several processing plants at Fairtrade-certified banana producers APPBOSA in Samán, Marcavelica, Piura, Peru.
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  • Doris Marchena prepares organic Fairtrade bananas in one of several processing plants at Fairtrade-certified banana producers APPBOSA in Samán, Marcavelica, Piura, Peru.
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  • Portrait of David Calderón packing organic Fairtrade bananas in one of several processing plants at Fairtrade-certified banana producers APPBOSA in Samán, Marcavelica, Piura, Peru.
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  • Portraits of Julio Suárez packing organic Fairtrade bananas in one of several processing plants at Fairtrade-certified banana producers APPBOSA in Samán, Marcavelica, Piura, Peru.
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  • Quilombolos during a meeting on a quilombo near Cachoeira, Bahia, Brazil
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