© James Whitlow Delano
Hundreds of crosses, each bearing the name of a Mexican or Central American who died trying to cross this border into the United States, have been mounted on the Tijuana, Mexico, side of the border fence referred to, south of the border, as the "Wall of Shame".
© James Whitlow Delano
Central American migrants warm themselves beside a fire of scrap wood and trash in the pre-dawn in the 2,200 m (6,000 ft.) high Valley of Mexico before hopping a train further north. The "Train of Death" safely behind them, migrants will take a train further north and then scatter to the winds, hopping trucks before converging again at the U.S. border. Lecheria train depot, Mexico City, Mexico.
© James Whitlow Delano
Janeth Aminta Munoz of Honduras was robbed and beaten when she reached into her bag at a market between the southern border city of Tapachula, Chiapas, and the border by several men who nearly killed her. She was taken in by the Shelter of Jesus the Good Shepherd, which nurtures migrants injured on the journey north through Mexico.