@fritz.gerald.sain3:

Fritz Gerald Saint Jean
Fritz Gerald Saint Jean
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Region: DO
Thursday 05 December 2024 17:40:13 GMT
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amanciars
AmanciaRS :
y el amor también se ha perdido
2024-12-05 19:08:24
1
saraih67
saraih67 :
Así mismo es mi compatriota muy triste lo que estamos pasando
2024-12-26 22:47:45
2
proyectosartistic
Dicson Gonzalez :
Dios te bendiga FRITZ
2024-12-05 20:33:44
2
user70588095
Dios patria :
Dios patria y libertad
2024-12-10 18:51:26
1
marida528
mary☕😘 :
así es tan lindo nuestro país
2024-12-07 03:55:37
1
tamaracabrera23
SHALOM :
no escuchan
2024-12-05 18:39:05
0
seneidasuarez
seni :
🥰
2025-02-21 11:00:24
1
marida528
mary☕😘 :
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
2024-12-07 03:54:45
1
juanubrynova
juanubrynova :
🌹🌹🌹
2024-12-13 16:25:37
0
amanciars
AmanciaRS :
👌
2024-12-05 19:07:58
0
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Other Videos

Over the past year, Karla Reyes and her team at Anima Interactive have visited the US-Mexico border twice to interview migrants and humanitarians. Once a month, Reyes interviews migrants remotely via video calls. She’s spoken to dozens. They come from Latin America, but also South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, each with a shared goal: to cross into the US in search of safety. In January, hours after President Donald Trump’s inauguration, thousands of migrants suddenly received notice that their appointments with US Customs and Border Protection—the agency that would help them gain asylum—had been canceled. The administration shut down the CBP One app that allows migrants to apply for asylum. It was the first of many roadblocks the new administration would erect in front of those seeking to immigrate to America. “At a moment's notice, the course of their lives has been altered again,” Reyes says. “These are people who have been waiting as long as years.” For Reyes, it only reinforced the sense of urgency around her team’s current project: a crowdfunded game called Take Us North about migrants making the journey across the border. An asylum seeker’s journey is never easy, but in 2025 it’s an increasingly frightening prospect. Take Us North is attempting to both foster empathy and raise awareness about “issues that are unfortunately often reduced in mainstream media to statistics or divisive rhetoric,” Reyes says. Many migrants do not want to leave their homes, but are forced to, whether it’s because of violence, persecution, or extreme poverty. Others, Reyes says, have been kidnapped and are unable to return home. “These are innocent and honest people who have just been in unfortunate circumstances,” she says. Tap the 🔗 in bio to read the full story.
Over the past year, Karla Reyes and her team at Anima Interactive have visited the US-Mexico border twice to interview migrants and humanitarians. Once a month, Reyes interviews migrants remotely via video calls. She’s spoken to dozens. They come from Latin America, but also South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, each with a shared goal: to cross into the US in search of safety. In January, hours after President Donald Trump’s inauguration, thousands of migrants suddenly received notice that their appointments with US Customs and Border Protection—the agency that would help them gain asylum—had been canceled. The administration shut down the CBP One app that allows migrants to apply for asylum. It was the first of many roadblocks the new administration would erect in front of those seeking to immigrate to America. “At a moment's notice, the course of their lives has been altered again,” Reyes says. “These are people who have been waiting as long as years.” For Reyes, it only reinforced the sense of urgency around her team’s current project: a crowdfunded game called Take Us North about migrants making the journey across the border. An asylum seeker’s journey is never easy, but in 2025 it’s an increasingly frightening prospect. Take Us North is attempting to both foster empathy and raise awareness about “issues that are unfortunately often reduced in mainstream media to statistics or divisive rhetoric,” Reyes says. Many migrants do not want to leave their homes, but are forced to, whether it’s because of violence, persecution, or extreme poverty. Others, Reyes says, have been kidnapped and are unable to return home. “These are innocent and honest people who have just been in unfortunate circumstances,” she says. Tap the 🔗 in bio to read the full story.

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