ナショナルジオグラフィックさんのインスタグラム写真 - (ナショナルジオグラフィックInstagram)「Photos by Ivan Kashinsky @ivankphoto / “Sometimes I would be on my break and I would get little panic attacks. Am I making too little of this?  Am I making too much of this? Should I just be smart and stay home?” -Osvaldo Ozuna   When I met Ozzy last year, he was working at a grocery store in Santa Monica, California. He immigrated to the U.S. from Ensenada, Mexico, at the age of 10. Before DACA*, Ozzy was working in a couch factory. “I was working long hours for less than minimum wage and just being treated like a work animal,” he said. At Santa Monica College, he was able to follow his true passion, filmmaking. He made an award-winning film, Muñecas, and is now finishing his second film, Ink, which focuses on the traumatic effects of separating families. This issue is personal for Ozzy: his sister was deported and was separated from her four children. He has taken her children under his wing and has helped them to try and emotionally recover. He works with them to foster their creativity and helps them with their schoolwork.   1: Osvaldo’s 4th grade portrait from a school in Ensenada (courtesy of Osvaldo Ozuna). 2: Ozzy watches fireworks with his sister’s children on the Fourth of July in Los Angeles. 3: Ozzy checks out a color-corrected version of his film Ink during a break at work. 4: Ozzy disinfects shopping carts at a grocery store.   *Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA) protects some undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children from deportation. President Trump’s attempt to end DACA was blocked by the Supreme Court last year. President Biden signed an executive order to preserve the program. This project was created by @kchete77 and @ivankphoto with the support of the @insidenatgeo Covid-19 Emergency Fund for Journalists.  Check out Nat Geo's link in bio for more on this story.」2月12日 4時48分 - natgeo

ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 2月12日 04時48分


Photos by Ivan Kashinsky @ivankphoto / “Sometimes I would be on my break and I would get little panic attacks. Am I making too little of this? Am I making too much of this? Should I just be smart and stay home?” -Osvaldo Ozuna

When I met Ozzy last year, he was working at a grocery store in Santa Monica, California. He immigrated to the U.S. from Ensenada, Mexico, at the age of 10. Before DACA*, Ozzy was working in a couch factory. “I was working long hours for less than minimum wage and just being treated like a work animal,” he said. At Santa Monica College, he was able to follow his true passion, filmmaking. He made an award-winning film, Muñecas, and is now finishing his second film, Ink, which focuses on the traumatic effects of separating families. This issue is personal for Ozzy: his sister was deported and was separated from her four children. He has taken her children under his wing and has helped them to try and emotionally recover. He works with them to foster their creativity and helps them with their schoolwork.

1: Osvaldo’s 4th grade portrait from a school in Ensenada (courtesy of Osvaldo Ozuna). 2: Ozzy watches fireworks with his sister’s children on the Fourth of July in Los Angeles. 3: Ozzy checks out a color-corrected version of his film Ink during a break at work. 4: Ozzy disinfects shopping carts at a grocery store.

*Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA) protects some undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children from deportation. President Trump’s attempt to end DACA was blocked by the Supreme Court last year. President Biden signed an executive order to preserve the program. This project was created by @kchete77 and @ivankphoto with the support of the @insidenatgeo Covid-19 Emergency Fund for Journalists.

Check out Nat Geo's link in bio for more on this story.


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