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During
36 years of Guatemalan civil war, more than 200,000 people died before
the government and leftist rebels made peace in 1996. Since then Guatemala
has been rocked by violent drug traffickers and street gangs. With almost
6,000 Guatemalans slain last year, nearly the same number occurred in
a single year of the civil war, the Guatemalan murder rate is one of
the highest in the world. The violence Guatemalans faced in their post-civil
war lives drove many of them to flee the country in search of a better
life.
During the past ten years, thousands of Guatemalans
have migrated north, some to Mexico and many more to the United States,
to find jobs, stability, and a peaceful existence. Unfortunately, many
of them found their way to neighborhoods plagued by violence, poverty,
and crime. Guatemala is not the only country facing this problem. Guatemala's
neighbor to the north, Mexico, faces a similar crises.
Many Mexicans are drawn to the United States to escape
poverty and lack of opportunity in their own country. The photos in
this book document Guatemalans and Mexicans in their countries. Their
journeys are filled with hope, desperation, and most importantly, humanity.
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