
Birth on the border
One million people legally cross the U.S.-Mexico border every day in both directions. Among them are women from Ciudad Juárez who cross to give birth in El Paso, Texas. Even with visas that allow them to cross, their journeys are uncertain. Gaby and Luisa, two women from Ciudad Juárez, cross legally into El Paso, Texas, in order to give birth. Two Chicana midwives in El Paso, Lina and Sandra, support the women who cross. After living through the extreme violence that engulfed Ciudad Juárez from 2008-2012 and with the looming threat of obstetrical violence in Mexican hospitals, Gaby and Luisa choose to cross, seeking a safer future for their children and the opportunity for natural childbirth with midwives. They risk losing their visas, getting turned back, and harassment at the hands of U.S. Border Patrol. Against the backdrop of oppressive U.S. border policy, these women's stories of risk and resilience reveal the complexities of life on the U.S.-Mexico border.
You may like

The Cossack and the Gypsy

Sometime, Somewhere

Enemy Alien

My Life Inside

The Empathizer

Straight Stories, Part 1

The Fall of the I-Hotel

All of Me

Life Before Birth

The Story of the Weeping Camel

Hijos de la Diáspora

Visions of Europe

Der lange Weg ans Licht

Erich Maria Remarque und Marlene Dietrich - Flucht in die Liebe

Okinawa/Santos

I Don’t Have the Codes

Maternal Instinct

Showrunners: The Art of Running a TV Show

God Grew Tired of Us

The Walking Dead: The Return

Obi-Wan Kenobi: A Jedi's Return

HOMECOMING: A film by Beyoncé

Our Planet: Behind the Scenes

Looking for Richard