Photographer @susanmeiselas's snapshots of asylum seekers in Tijuana capture an ecosystem rather than an imaginary line. With the help of journalist @skinosian, Meiselas began a week after Border Patrol deployed tear gas at the Port of San Ysidro, and photographed the temporary inhabitants of the Benito Juarez Sports Complex—where migrants were first placed before a combination of flooding and overcrowding made it uninhabitable—and at the next shelter, some 12 miles away in a former nightclub called El Barretal. “I came with my cousin; she’s 13," says Cindy, 17 (above). "We decided to come because we don’t have have any money to study, and that’s what we want, to be able to move forward. I like learning about other countries and want to study in the social sciences. At the other shelter [Benito Juarez], everything would just get flooded and there was so much trash. We only waited at the old shelter, even after they cut the water, so that we could be sure that we would not be getting deported when the government put us on buses. Even when we were getting transported here I still wasn’t convinced that the Mexican government wasn’t going to deport us. We thought we were going to have to break the windows. We don’t want to go back. We are now living in a tent with 10 friends, but many have left with coyotes [smugglers], but we don’t have any money for that. We live with my mom and grandmother. My mom can’t work because she’s taking care of my grandmother, who is really sick. We had to rely on the little from church groups to survive. I had heard about the other caravan in April, and then I saw a poster circulating on Facebook about this one and decided to go. I want to work, to be able to send them money back.” Tap the link in our bio to read more. Photographed by @susanmeiselas

voguemagazineさん(@voguemagazine)が投稿した動画 -

Vogueのインスタグラム(voguemagazine) - 12月8日 06時54分


Photographer @susanmeiselas's snapshots of asylum seekers in Tijuana capture an ecosystem rather than an imaginary line. With the help of journalist @skinosian, Meiselas began a week after Border Patrol deployed tear gas at the Port of San Ysidro, and photographed the temporary inhabitants of the Benito Juarez Sports Complex—where migrants were first placed before a combination of flooding and overcrowding made it uninhabitable—and at the next shelter, some 12 miles away in a former nightclub called El Barretal. “I came with my cousin; she’s 13," says Cindy, 17 (above). "We decided to come because we don’t have have any money to study, and that’s what we want, to be able to move forward. I like learning about other countries and want to study in the social sciences. At the other shelter [Benito Juarez], everything would just get flooded and there was so much trash. We only waited at the old shelter, even after they cut the water, so that we could be sure that we would not be getting deported when the government put us on buses. Even when we were getting transported here I still wasn’t convinced that the Mexican government wasn’t going to deport us. We thought we were going to have to break the windows. We don’t want to go back. We are now living in a tent with 10 friends, but many have left with coyotes [smugglers], but we don’t have any money for that. We live with my mom and grandmother. My mom can’t work because she’s taking care of my grandmother, who is really sick. We had to rely on the little from church groups to survive. I had heard about the other caravan in April, and then I saw a poster circulating on Facebook about this one and decided to go. I want to work, to be able to send them money back.” Tap the link in our bio to read more. Photographed by @susanmeiselas


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