Guatemalan Mayan Towns Work to Reverse Emigration and Keep Families Intact

Indigenous Mayan weaver Delfina Perez, who's husband has worked in the U.S. as an immigrant for 20 years, works on a foot loom at the Grupo Cajola weaving cooperative on February 11, 2017 in Cajola, Guatemala. Women are especially effected by emigration from Guatemala, where some 70 percent of the men have left to work as undocumented immigrants in the United States, many of them leaving behind wives and children who only know their fathers online, if at all. (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)
Guatemalan Mayan Towns Work to Reverse Emigration and Keep Families Intact
   
  Military Woman Gallery

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