Support Handmade Heritage Arts made by asylum seekers at the U.S.-MX border & beyond
Stitching mantas—tortilla covers—is a traditional craft among Latin American women. As migrants wait out the U.S. immigration bureaucracy in a Mexican border city, mantas are increasingly a lifeline.
https://artandfaithinthedesert.com/2021/08/05/how-the-arts-can-help-asylum-seekers-make-their-way-in-the-u-s-a-artisans-beyond-borders-update-summer-fall-2021/
https://ismreview.yale.edu/article/eye-of-witness-hand-of-faith-the-art-of-asylum-and-embroidered-retablos-at-the-border/
https://thisistucson.com/tucsonlife/stranded-asylum-seekers-stitch-elaborate-embroidered-art-supported-by-a-tucson-organization/article_231f3ec0-5a6d-11eb-9757-0f2394a58f40.html
https://tucson.com/laestrella/frontera/voluntarios-de-tucs-n-ayudan-a-migrantes-en-nogales-a-bordar-servilletas-para-vender/article_1b46340e-3a88-59a6-8f8b-76efc033a336.html
https://episcopalmigrationministries.org/artisans-beyond-borders-at-the-u-s-mexico-port-of-entry-supporting-family-faith/
https://artandfaithinthedesert.com/2020/09/02/artisans-beyond-borders-summer-fall-2020-newsletter/
https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/border-art-sanctuary-practice
https://weavearealpeace.org/wp-content/uploads/Spring-2020-1.pdf
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