Jacquelyn Martin » Galleries »
Display Options
Train to el Norte(10 images)
The ease of crossing the Suchiate River that forms the border between Mexico and Guatemala belies the many dangers facing Central American immigrants who need to first cross Mexico in order to enter the United States. For ten Mexican pesos, from the border town of Tecun Uman, Guatemala, people and goods are ferried into Mexico at this illegal crossing point. For many would be migrants to the...
more »
  • Train to El Norte - Here Comes the Devil.Rudy Gonzales Lopez, who says he is 14, from Huixtla, Mexico, right, looks for the oncoming engine while waiting to hop the freight train north to the United States. He is heading there by himself hoping to work. He hasn't told his family that he's going.  A half an hour before, migration picked up at least five people and he ran to evade them. Migrants from all over Central America waited in the shadows of the town of Arriaga, in the state of Chiapas, Mexico on Thursday June 29, 2006 while waiting to hop the freight trains that run north. Poor migrants who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - The Mutilated .Migrants who were mutilated by the trains that run toward the United States recuperate and help to build the Jesus el Buen Pastor Shelter on Friday June 23, 2006 in Tapachula, Mexico. Poor migrants who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the freight train north where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - Flight.Migrants from Central America flee as they are pursued by two men, possibly Federal Police, complete with shotguns, while the migrants were waiting to jump the freight town going towards the town of Ixtapec, Oaxaca, Mexico from the town of Arriaga, in Chiapas, Mexico on Saturday July 1, 2006. The men grabbed a woman, Maria Isabel Velasquez, 29, of Guatemala, by the hair and hit her on the chin but then ran when migrants shouted that there was a camera there. A police officer who refused to be named said that often robbers will dress as police to extort money from migrants, while the migrants said it is the police themselves who abuse their power. "He wanted money," said a shaking Velasquez, "or he'd report me to migration." Poor migrants including women and children who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - Wilmar, 7.Holding hands and saying a prayer as the train pulls out of the station, Selvin Allende, 22, of Honduras, left, sits with his girlfriend's son Wilmar David Castellan Zaldivar, 7. The first place the train can currently be boarded, migrants bound for the United States from all over Central America jump the freight town going towards the town of Ixtapec, Oaxaca, Mexico from the town of Arriaga, in Chiapas, Mexico on Saturday July 1, 2006. Poor migrants including women and children who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - Searching.A migrant from El Salvador looks for a safe place to sit on a train in Tierra Blanca, Veracruz, Mexico on July 9, 2006. Daily rains began to make the journey uncomfortable for the would be immigrants. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - Hold on Tight."Branch! Hold on tight!" is shouted as Selvin Allende, 22, of Honduras, left, ducks a low hanging tree branch, while hitching a ride with around 300 other Central America migrants bound for the United States in the town Arriaga, Chiapas, Mexico on Saturday July 1, 2006. Poor migrants including women and children who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. Despite toughening vigilance on the northern border with the United States, migrants continue to make the harrowing journey through multiple borders in search of economic opportunity. According to many, Mexico is by far the most harrowing part of their trip. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - Into the Night.Around 300 migrants bound for the United States from alll over Central America ride the freight train going towards the town of Ixtapec, Oaxaca, Mexico from the town of Arriaga, in Chiapas, Mexico on Saturday July 1, 2006 on the first train leg of their ride north. Poor migrants including women and children who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. At this town the train stops for twenty minutes and people who live near the tracks sell food, soup, water, and soda, to the riders who scurry down the ladder and back up again before the ride begins again. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - A Long Journey Ahead.After a large raid by immigration shortly after the train stop in Ixtepec, these Honduran men are part of a small group who have made it to the town of Tierra Blanca, in the state of Veracruz, Mexico on July 10, 2006. Women, children, and the injured may stay in the local migrant shelter, while men are taken to a makeshift shelter where they will spend the night outside. They haven't yet made it to Mexico City, less than halfway through Mexico. After making it through Mexico they still have to cross the desert into the United States, evading the security fence, surveillance, and National Guard. And still they come. "It's a matter of math," they say, "they could build the great wall of China and still we'd come." By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  • Train to El Norte - As the train pulls out into the darkening night, a migrant from Colombia stands on the top of a car. He is one of about 300 migrants bound for the United States from Central America to have jumped the freight train going toward the town of Ixtapec, Oaxaca, Mexico from the town of Arriaga, in Chiapas, Mexico on Saturday July 1, 2006. Poor migrants including women and children who don't have money to hire a coyote will often ride the train where they face dangers ranging from theft and rape to mutilation or death if they fall from the train. Arriaga is the first place the train can be boarded, and on the walk from the border with Guatemala many have already been robbed multiple times. By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg
  •  By photographer Jacquelyn Martin
    150Train to...jpg