Why is Suri Cruise Holmes not allowed to contact her father?
- Culture, Entertainment, Mothers, WE ARE, WE KNOW
- April 19, 2023

In Tapachula, mothers from Ecuador, Honduras, Colombia, and Cuba are turning migration’s invisible graveyard into a public accusation, exposing how disappearances on Mexico’s southern frontier now shape family grief, border policy, and Latin America’s uneasy geopolitical bargain with the north.
READ MORE
As Mexico readies stadiums for the 2026 World Cup, searching mothers marched on Mother’s Day with missing-person flyers, grief, and anger, demanding that a country preparing to celebrate goals finally confront its 133,601 disappeared and unlocated people.
READ MORE
In Cotacachi, ancestral midwives are defending home birth as Indigenous knowledge, bodily autonomy, and political resistance, challenging Ecuador’s medical system while training a new generation to protect women from obstetric violence and cultural erasure.
READ MORE
Fifty years after the coup, Argentina continues to wrestle with its lost loved ones, stolen children, and what justice really means. With state support fading and denial growing louder, the Mothers’ weekly march in Buenos Aires feels less like a ritual and more like a warning.
READ MORE
In Cuba, pregnancy occurs amid blackouts, empty kitchens, and deteriorating infrastructure. The BBC’s reporting from Havana reveals more than hardship; it exposes how energy shortages, state exhaustion, and diminishing hope transform private family decisions into a regional political concern.
READ MORE
The US FDA approved the first oral treatment for postpartum depression a month ago. We tell you what is it about and how possible it is.
READ MORE