It took thousands of #migrants aiming for America more than three weeks to reach Mexico City after starting their journey in the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula on Oct. 12. Among them are many parents, children and unaccompanied minors, who said they were fleeing violence and poverty. In the fourth photograph by @jeromesessini, Martha from Colón, Honduras, is illuminated by a cell phone as she speaks to her mother. The 25-year-old managed to borrow one, marking the first time during the journey that she was able to communicate with anyone from home. A single mother, she left her three children—aged 1, 3 and 5—in the care of her sister in Honduras. “I’m doing this for my children,” she told TIME. “They are what’s important.” Martha had been working since the age of 13, she said, and now hoped to find a good job in the U.S., where she could send money home. After several days spent resting their blistered feet, receiving medical attention and debating how to proceed at the Jesus Martinez stadium, a sports complex on the eastern side of the capital, many departed on Nov. 10 for the longest and most dangerous section of a trek toward the American border. Mexico City is more than 600 miles from the nearest crossing at McAllen, Texas, but the California route is considered safer. Earlier this year, a caravan chose to the longer route to Tijuana and dwindled to only about 200 people by the time it reached the crossing. Read more on TIME.com. Photographs by @jeromesessini—@magnumphotos for TIME

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It took thousands of #migrants aiming for America more than three weeks to reach Mexico City after starting their journey in the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula on Oct. 12. Among them are many parents, children and unaccompanied minors, who said they were fleeing violence and poverty. In the fourth photograph by @jeromesessini, Martha from Colón, Honduras, is illuminated by a cell phone as she speaks to her mother. The 25-year-old managed to borrow one, marking the first time during the journey that she was able to communicate with anyone from home. A single mother, she left her three children—aged 1, 3 and 5—in the care of her sister in Honduras. “I’m doing this for my children,” she told TIME. “They are what’s important.” Martha had been working since the age of 13, she said, and now hoped to find a good job in the U.S., where she could send money home. After several days spent resting their blistered feet, receiving medical attention and debating how to proceed at the Jesus Martinez stadium, a sports complex on the eastern side of the capital, many departed on Nov. 10 for the longest and most dangerous section of a trek toward the American border. Mexico City is more than 600 miles from the nearest crossing at McAllen, Texas, but the California route is considered safer. Earlier this year, a caravan chose to the longer route to Tijuana and dwindled to only about 200 people by the time it reached the crossing. Read more on TIME.com. Photographs by @jeromesessini@Magnum Photos for TIME


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