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  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: People buy traditionally made tortillas in the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, in central Mexico. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   food   women   culture  economy
    jku14030363.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: A band performs in a cantina in the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, central Mexico. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   alchohol      culture  economy
    jku14030360.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: A Mexican woman rests her hands atop her head in the desert outside of the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, in central Mexico. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   WOMEN  ENVIRONMENT    POVERTY  INDIGENOUS
    jku14030359.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: An indigenous  woman walks away from a public well in the desert near the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, in central Mexico. .PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   WOMEN  ENVIRONMENT   WATER  POVERTY  INDIGENOUS
    jku14030358.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: Farming family harvests squash near the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of  Hidalgo, central Mexico. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   AGRICULTURE  FAMILY  LABOUR  CHILD LABOUR  FOOD
    jku14030364.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: A boy in a lettuce field in the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, central Mexico. The vegetable were for export to the US and grocery stores in Mexico City. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   AGRICULTURE LABOUR  FOOD  FAMILY CHILDREN CHILD LABOUR
    jku14030362.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: Brothers hoe a cauliflower field in the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of Hidalgo, central Mexico. The vegetable were for export to the US and grocery stores in Mexico City. PHOTO © JACK KURTZ   AGRICULTURE LABOUR  FOOD  FAMILY
    jku14030361.jpg
  • IXMIQUILPAN, HIDALGO, MEXICO: A boy with his father in a squash field near the town of Ixmiquilpan, state of  Hidalgo, central Mexico. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ   AGRICULTURE  FAMILY  LABOUR  CHILD LABOUR  FOOD
    Farming002.jpg
  • 16 JANUARY 2002, GUANAJUATO, GUANAJUATO, MEXICO:  Overview of the interior of Mercado Hidalgo, opened in 1910, in the city of Gunajuato, state of Guanajuato, Mexico, Jan. 16, 2002. Mercado Hidalgo is the main market for Guanajuato..PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Guanajuato015.jpg
  • 16 JANUARY 2002, GUANAJUATO, GUANAJUATO, MEXICO:  A chicharone (fried pork skins) salesman makes a delivrey to a snack bar in Mercado Hidalgo, opened in 1910, in the city of Gunajuato, state of Guanajuato, Mexico, Jan. 16, 2002. Mercado Hidalgo is the main market for Guanajuato..PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Guanajuato014.jpg
  • 26 JULY 2004 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration044.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Central America wait in the train yards in the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula, hoping to hop the freight trains north on their way to the US. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration035.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration033.jpg
  • 06 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO: People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration027.jpg
  • 06 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO: People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration025.jpg
  • 27 JULY 2004 --  TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO: People from Guatemala pay the rafters who brought them across the Rio Suchiate to the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration054.jpg
  • 27 JULY 2004 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration053.jpg
  • 26 JULY 2004 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration045.jpg
  • 26 JULY 2004 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  A raft operator (balsero) in Hidalgo, Mexico, about 20 miles from Tapachula, loads his raft with corn flakes he is smuggling to Guatemala. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration040.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Central America wait in the train yards in the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula, hoping to hop the freight trains north on their way to the US. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration036.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration034.jpg
  • 06 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  A woman pays a rafter (balsero) who brought her across the Rio Suchiate to Hidalgo, Mexico, about 20 miles from Tapachula, Mexico. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration028.jpg
  • 06 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO: People from Guatemala ride on rafts across the Rio Suchiate towards the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration026.jpg
  • 06 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  Raft operators (balseros) in Hidalgo, Mexico, near Tapachula, on the Rio Suchiate, wait for customers under a mural of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration024.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2003 -- TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO:  Border crossers from Central America are searched by a Mexican Grupo Beto officer in the train yards in the Mexican town of Hidalgo, near Tapachula, hoping to hop the freight trains north on their way to the US. Tapachula is center of the smuggling industry between Mexico and Guatemala. Consumer goods are smuggled south to Guatemala (to avoid paying Guatemalan import duties) and people are smuggled north into Mexico. Most of the people coming north are hoping to eventually get to the United States. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Immigration037.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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