• Link to X
  • Link to Facebook
  • Link to Instagram
  • Link to TikTok
  • Link to Youtube
  • About
    • About Us
      • President
      • Board of Directors
      • Board of Advisors
      • Financials
      • Our Methodology
      • Success Tracker
      • Contact
  • Act Now
    • 30 Ways to Help
      • Email Congress
      • Call Congress
      • Volunteer
      • Courses & Certificates
      • Be a Donor
    • Internships
      • In-Office Internships
      • Remote Internships
    • Legislation
      • Politics 101
  • The Blog
  • The Podcast
  • Magazine
  • Donate
  • Click to open the search input field Click to open the search input field Search
  • Menu Menu
Blog - Latest News
Global Poverty, Migration

Support Networks for Indigenous Migrants in Mexico City

Indigenous Migrants in Mexico CityMexico City can hold out the promise of opportunity, but for many families arriving with little money or stability, it can also be difficult to navigate without proper support or infrastructure. Housing is expensive, work can be insecure and basic services are not always easy to reach. For indigenous migrants in Mexico City, those pressures could often come with another layer of difficulty, as many try to hold on to language, identity and community while adjusting to a fast-moving urban environment. Support networks can ease that transition while helping families maintain community and culture. They offer shelter, food, education and practical help. Just as importantly, they can offer the reassurance that a family is not alone in a city of more than 9 million.

Education That Makes Staying Possible

One part of that support comes through the Indigenous Education Support Program, which helps Indigenous children and young people continue their studies by providing lodging, food and support that also strengthens cultural identity. The program is especially important for students who do not have the option of continuing school in their own communities. Poverty is not only a question of income. It also shapes whether a child stays in school, eats properly and can imagine a future without being away from everything familiar. Educational support combined with daily stability gives families more room to hold things together. It also gives younger people a better chance of moving forward without losing touch with their cultural identities.

A Place to Regain Stability

A second kind of support comes through shelters such as Casa Tochán, which works with people in migration in Mexico City. Its work includes housing, medical and psychological care, job support and cultural activities, all of which give people a greater sense of stability while they try to build or rebuild their lives. Families living with poverty or displacement often need more than emergency relief. They need somewhere to rest and somewhere that makes ordinary life possible again. That sense of dignity comes through strongly in Gaby Hernández’s words when she says, “this is how we change how people migrate,” by “making others feel valued and helping them resolve the issue of work.” Shelter alone is not enough; people also need the stability that allows them to preserve dignity and cultural identity while rebuilding their lives.

The wider shelter network in Mexico City suggests that these pressures are not isolated. Shelters like CAFEMIN work with women, children and family groups arriving in the city under increasingly difficult conditions. Sister Magda’s description of current arrivals as “forced migration” shaped by violence rather than only economic need helps clarify the conditions many families are now moving through. Many are arriving after being uprooted, and that instability continues long after they reach the city. In that situation, shelter, legal support and day-to-day care are what make any kind of stability possible.

The Effects of Support

These support networks respond to need where it is actually felt. They help make sure a child can remain in school, a parent can find temporary stability and a family can avoid the stress of uncertainty. In a city as demanding as Mexico City, these are not small gestures, they are often what keeps hardship from deepening further. Support Networks for Indigenous Migrants in Mexico City is not only a story about vulnerability, but also about local and sustaining care and support. Programs and organisations may not solve every structural cause of poverty or displacement, but they can create the conditions in which indigenous migrants in Mexico City are able to hold on, rebuild and move forward with greater confidence.

– Elliott J Carter

Elliott is based in Mexico City, Mexico and focuses on Good News for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Unsplash

May 26, 2026
Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share on WhatsApp
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Vk
  • Share on Reddit
  • Share by Mail
https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Naida Jahic https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Naida Jahic2026-05-26 07:30:362026-05-25 12:05:32Support Networks for Indigenous Migrants in Mexico City

Get Smarter

  • Global Poverty 101
  • Global Poverty… The Good News
  • Global Poverty & U.S. Jobs
  • Global Poverty and National Security
  • Innovative Solutions to Poverty
  • Global Poverty & Aid FAQ’s
Search Search

Take Action

  • Call Congress
  • Email Congress
  • Donate
  • 30 Ways to Help
  • Volunteer Ops
  • Internships
  • Courses & Certificates
  • The Podcast
Borgen Project

“The Borgen Project is an incredible nonprofit organization that is addressing poverty and hunger and working towards ending them.”

-The Huffington Post

Inside The Borgen Project

  • Contact
  • About
  • Financials
  • President
  • Board of Directors
  • Board of Advisors

International Links

  • UK Email Parliament
  • UK Donate
  • Canada Email Parliament

Get Smarter

  • Global Poverty 101
  • Global Poverty… The Good News
  • Global Poverty & U.S. Jobs
  • Global Poverty and National Security
  • Innovative Solutions to Poverty
  • Global Poverty & Aid FAQ’s

Ways to Help

  • Call Congress
  • Email Congress
  • Donate
  • 30 Ways to Help
  • Volunteer Ops
  • Internships
  • Courses & Certificates
  • The Podcast
Link to: AI Tools Outperform Clinicians in Rwanda Study Link to: AI Tools Outperform Clinicians in Rwanda Study AI Tools Outperform Clinicians in Rwanda Study Link to: Bangladesh’s Trillion-Dollar Economy Plan Link to: Bangladesh’s Trillion-Dollar Economy Plan Bangladesh’s Trillion-Dollar Economy Plan
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top