Fundacion En Via Fighting Poverty in Oaxaca Mexico
Fundación En Vía is a non-profit organization that fights poverty by supporting the growth and development of communities in Oaxaca, Mexico, through a combination of microfinance, education, and responsible tourism.
Mexico Flood Relief In Acapulco and Oaxaca
In the wake of devastating floods that have left thousands stranded in Acapulco, OBI teams are preparing to deploy emergency relief such as hot meals, clean water and more to Mexico's flood victims.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: Health Workers in Haiti: A Day in the Life
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Luis Sahagun - Arquetopia
Oaxaca Protest.
A poem being recited by a poet in Oaxaca; dedicated to a teacher that has been disappeared. It was a protest that I got to witness, and this was poem was very powerful. Also, the family of the missing teacher is sitting behind the poet.
Oaxaca documentary: Holding on the the past -Sunny Wu Connor Scheumann Adan Beltrones
Story of a teenage girl in rural Oaxaca, Mexico
Mi película Angelica de Oaxaca, Mexico
Esperanza in Oaxaca 2010
First volunteer trip in Oaxaca!
Via Crucis, Teotitlan, Mexico, 2011
* * Watch in 720p HD! * * On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with tapetes created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all.
jaydunn.org
Humanitarian Issues & Cultural Tradition Worldwide
Original multimedia projects from Asia, Africa and the Americas. Short documentary essays with rich soundtracks, capturing tribal ceremonies, religious pilgrims, rituals of faith, and cultures in transition, always dignifying our common humanity.
CRIBS! Just $260 Dollars Per Month - Tidy Pad With Awesome Roof Terrace In Mexico's Magical Oaxaca!
A sneak peek at Oaxaca and what you can expect to pay for accommodation in Mexico's magical city!
Delicious bug burgers, awesome cocktails and parties every day this is one of the best places in the world to begin your digital nomad adventure on a budget!
Oaxacan Idian Migrant Camp
A quick shot of the migrant camp where we will be building a home for the working poor.
Mexico's strongest quake in 85 years kills dozens in the poor south
JUCHITAN, Mexico (Reuters) - At least 61 people died when the most powerful earthquake to hit Mexico in over eight decades tore through buildings and forced mass evacuations in the poor southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, triggering alerts as far away as Southeast Asia.
The 8.1 magnitude quake off the southern coast late Thursday was stronger than a devastating 1985 temblor that flattened swathes of Mexico City and killed thousands.
The tremor rattled Mexico City and shook Guatemala and El Salvador, but the Oaxacan town of Juchitan bore the brunt of the disaster, with sections of the town hall, a hotel, a church, a bar and other buildings reduced to rubble.
Dalia Vasquez, a 55-year old cook, said she watched emergency workers haul the bodies of her elderly neighbor and her middle-aged son from their collapsed home.
Her own house was badly damaged. Frightened by the possibility of aftershocks, she planned to sleep with dozens more in the streets and parks. “We have nothing now. We don’t have any savings,” she said.
President Enrique Pena Nieto flew to the battered town to oversee rescue efforts. The town’s mayor, Gloria Sanchez, called it “the most terrible moment” in Juchitan’s history.
Facades of shattered buildings, fallen tiles and broken glass from shop fronts and banks littered the pavements of Juchitan while heavily armed soldiers patrolled and stood guard at areas cordoned off due to the extent of the damage.
Startled residents stepped through the rubble of about 100 wrecked buildings, including houses, a flattened Volkswagen dealership and Juchitan’s shattered town hall. Scores paced the terrain or sat outside warily, mindful of the frequent aftershocks and reliving the night’s terror.
“It was brutal, brutal. It was like a monster, like a train was passing over our roofs,” said Jesus Mendoza, 53, as he milled about in a park across from the damaged town hall.
Alma Rosa, sitting in vigil with a relative by the body of a loved one draped in a red shroud, said: “We went to buy a coffin, but there aren’t any because there are so many bodies.”
All the deaths were in three neighboring states clustered near the epicenter that lay about 70 km (40 miles) off the coast.
At least 45 people died in Oaxaca, many of them in Juchitan, while in Chiapas the count reached 12 and in Tabasco four people lost their lives, according to federal and state officials.
In Chiapas, home to many of Mexico’s indigenous ethnic groups, thousands of people in coastal areas were evacuated as a precaution when the quake sparked tsunami warnings, but only two-foot waves were produced by the quake.
Oaxaca Protests, October 2, 2013
Big protest against educational reforms on the National Day of Protest.
WRAP Police converge on Oaxaca day after US journalist killed, funerals, Interior Ministry
Oaxaca, 28 October 2006
1. Troops getting off bus
2. Troops with guns
3. Officer with gun
4. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Officer Armando Navarrete Delgado, Mexican Federal Police:
I haven't entered the city yet. I see everything is calm over here but I haven't entered the city yet as I say, so I couldn't tell you how things are in the city.
5. Various of police in street stopping cars
6. Coffin draped with Mexican flag being carried down street
7. Mid shot of men carrying coffin
8. Mourners in street with flowers
9. Wide of funeral procession
10. Coffin and banner in street
11. Close up of two women in crowd of mourners
12. Man taking photo of body in coffin
13. Coffin with flowers on top being carried through crowd
14. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Voxpop, Mourner:
We are going to continue with our movement and our struggle. Some of our peers have died. This is not fair and we will continue with our objective.
15. Barricade in street
Oaxaca, 28 October 2006
16. Various of people around the coffin of Bradley Roland Will, the journalist who was killed on October 27 2006
17. Mid shot coffin and face of Will
18. Wide shot people at funeral
19. Mid candle and people behind (at the funeral)
20. Wide shot exterior of Teacher's Union building
21. Tilt down from spokesman of Teacher's Union to a copy of Will's identification
22. Close up identification
Oaxaca, 21 October 2006
24. Mid shot of people walking, Will is in the centre carrying a camera
Mexico City, 28 October 2006
25. Pan right young man carrying flag and giant banner reading APPO (Popular Assembly of Oaxaca) is still fighting
26. Mid people carrying banner and shouting against governor of Oaxaca Ulises Ruiz
27. Mid protester walking and carrying banner
28. Mid protester with face painted (simulating blood)
29. Tilt down from flags to people marching and shouting It is a popular fight
30. Pan left protesters carrying banners reading: Ulises Ruiz is a killer
31. Mid people marching and carrying giant banner and a lot of women in Mexican dress walking behind it
32. Mid man with face painted (simulating blood)
33. Mid protesters marching and carrying banners reading: Ulises Ruiz is a killer
Mexico City, 28 October 2006
34. Pan left Mexican Interior Secretary, Carlos Abascal, walking into news conference
35. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Carlos Abascal, Mexican Interior Secretary:
The Federal Government stresses that the deployment of the federal police is a legitimate resource that does not in any way limit the freedom of expression or the right to protest for all Oaxacans.
36. Mid shot Abascal on stage
37. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Carlos Abascal, Interior Secretary:
(The demand for the governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz) he must respect the rule of law, that he conducts himself with prudence and reason, as he should.
38. Zoom out Abascal leaving news conference
STORYLINE:
Mexican President Vicente Fox announced on Saturday he was sending federal police into the violence-wracked southern state capital of Oaxaca after a journalist from New York City and at least two Mexicans were shot and killed.
The clashes occurred on Friday when leftist protesters barricaded streets as part of a five-month campaign to oust the governor of the state.
Fox's office issued an early morning declaration on Saturday saying that federal forces would be concentrated in Oaxaca city, though how many officers were being sent was unclear.
The president had repeatedly shied away from sending such forces to the city, hoping to avoid violent confrontations.
Gunfire on Friday erupted in a rough Oaxaca neighbourhood when armed men tried to remove a blockade set up by protesters demanding the resignation of Oaxaca Governor Ulises Ruiz.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Bison in Oaxaca Final Project - Camille Myrie
Howard University: Bison in Oaxaca study abroad program
Summer of 2014
Disclaimer: I do not own the rights to the copyrighted material. No copyright infringement intended.
NGO Project: Poverty in Mexico
American High School
AP European History
Misra, 5
Contributors: Karen Zhai, Vicki Young, and Maggie Liu
Ni'Tasha Denson: 2015 Beating the Odds in California
My goal in life has been to prove to everyone that you can beat the odds regardless of what has happened in your past. I may be half blind, but I see the world more fully than I ever have.
Watch Ni'Tasha's story. Learn more and support Children's Defense Fund Beat The Odds program
Directed by: Thembi Banks
EU empieza deportación de reos a México por garita de Tijuana
El gobierno de Estados Unidos comenzó la deportación de reos mexicanos por el puerto fronterizo El Chaparral, en Tijuana, Baja California.
#NoticiasMilenio
Suscríbete a nuestro canal:
Sigue nuestro EN VIVO las 24 horas:
Sitio:
Fb:
TW:
Corpus Cristi Traditional 500 years old procession Panama
If you want to participate authentic traditional Panamanian events just check this link out:
The rural side of Panama and its enchants.