The Migrant Workers' Plight
Migrant camps: these are the sites across the Baja produce belt where thousands of workers--mainly indigenous peoples from Oaxacana, Mexico (pronounced Wah-HA-ca)--are brought in to work the produce fields.
Although promised fair wages and acceptable housing, the labourers arrive to work 12-hour days in the fields for only a few dollars a day, and to live in substandard houses. The provided homes are often without plumbing or electricity. To ensure that the working families cannot leave the labour ranch, the ranch stores sell food and goods at inflated prices. The low wages and high prices keep the workers indebted to the ranch.
An informative paper YWAM sent us before our trip provided these additional startling statistics:
-Over 80% of such workers are exposed to harmful and carcinogenic pesticides. (Additionally,
most workers do not have access to clinics and medical insurance, and cannot afford health care or medicine.)
-25% of these workers are children under the age of 14.
This is the situation to which Foundation for His Ministry's Adult Evangelism program provides outreach twice a week. To read further information about migrant workers and the Mission's ministry to them, click here:
The program involved serving a meal to the entire camp, engaging with the kids, showing a film projected on the side of a van, and distributing toiletries and Bibles in the Oaxacan language.
For PICTURES of the event, please click "Read More."