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A mountain in the form of a woman lying on her back silhouettes a small town. Both the town and the mountain lay on the other side of the 10-meter-high fence separating Ceuta, Spain, from Belyounech, Morocco. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

La Mujer Muerta, the dead woman, finds her final resting place in the mountains just behind the Moroccan town of Belyounech. A fitting name, I think to myself, as I capture the moment. Standing on the Spanish side of the border, I remember all the women I had spoken to over the past few weeks. The women who, like the mountain that represents them, were almost laid to rest in a small fishing town in the Strait of Gibraltar.


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An aerial view of Ceuta and its port, as seen from Fortaleza de Hacho, Monte Hacho Fortress. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

For three weeks, I had been in Ceuta, Spain, an unassuming city of only 7 square miles, uncovering the stories of survivors of domestic violence. Most of the women I interviewed were Moroccan, born and raised in one of the towns within close proximity to the border that separates the rest of Africa from the tiny European enclave.


An Islamic marriage certificate, Aqd Nikah, between Reem* and her ex-husband. Through the 1992 Cooperation Agreement between the Spanish State and the Islamic Commission, Spain legally recognizes Islamic marriages. Despite this, Reem’s husband never formalized their marriage in Spain, denying her access to her rights. Reem has since left her husband and lives with her mother. Both are awaiting decisions on their asylum status. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

*Reem’s name and document have been altered to conceal personal information for the safety of herself and her mother.

The survivors told me that while they had grown up crossing into Spain on the weekends to shop or spend time at the beach, they had no intention of migrating. It wasn’t until they married Spanish men of Moroccan heritage that they moved to Ceuta, where they found themselves trapped in violent relationships. Their husbands often denied them access to education, employment, and healthcare by never regularizing their Spanish residency. For years, they confined their wives to the domestic sphere, where the women endured unspeakable physical and emotional abuse, all while endlessly serving their husbands and their families. 


Reem plays with her cat, Kenzu, in the room she and her mother share. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

These survivors make up a community of countless Moroccan women who have been exploited into domestic servitude through marriage and migration. By crossing to Ceuta, they lose their livelihoods and agency at the border. They are invisible and forgotten by many — their suffering kept locked behind closed doors.


A couple walks to the El Tarajal border crossing, the only legal checkpoint in Ceuta to enter Morocco. They will need to go through both Moroccan and Spanish immigration and customs procedures. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

Due to a recent change in border politics, the dangers these women face have only escalated, experts say. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the border between Spain and Morocco had been largely unrestricted. The only requirement to cross between the two countries was to show a Moroccan or Spanish passport. When the border eventually reopened in 2022, Morocco enforced a new visa requirement for its citizens. Without access to a visa, migrant women in Ceuta, who had previously been able to visit their families in Morocco or receive healthcare there, have become indefinitely cut off from their homeland. They are trapped in Ceuta. “The abuse has only gotten worse. Our husbands know we have nowhere to go,” one woman tells me.


A survivor of domestic violence sits in a park with her friend. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

As a result, Moroccan women in Ceuta, many experiencing similar marital abuse, have begun to form their own networks of support. When their husbands let them leave the house alone, the women meet in public spaces to share their stories and exchange potential resources with other migrants. 


Sister Maria prays in the Adoratrices convent. Although the nuns are Christian, most of the women they take in are Muslim. The community shares in one another’s faith practices, respecting each other’s prayer schedules and celebrating both Christian and Muslim holidays together throughout the year. “Being able to share the two faiths, I think that helps a lot,” Sister Ana tells me. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

Many of the women urge their friends with abusive husbands to go to las monjas—the nuns. Through their organization, Adoratrices, las monjas offer a shelter for domestic violence survivors.


The nuns and migrants share a lunch. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

At Adoratrices, the women live side by side with the nuns, sharing meals, partaking in housework, and slowly building personal relationships amongst the other residents. Their physical and emotional needs are met through the convent community and the network of social workers who assist the organization. 


Two children swim in a pool at Adoratrices. They are staying with their mother in the shelter. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

Through legal services, sessions with psychiatrists, and Spanish lessons, Adoratrices helps the migrants heal from their past and move forward with their lives. The women at the shelter tell me that one of the most important services Adoratrices offers is childcare. With the nuns watching over their children, many women can maintain stable working hours and start saving towards their futures. 


Naima* poses behind a magazine titled “Samaritans of Love.” She spent 15 years trapped in an abusive marriage in Ceuta. Two years ago, she left and sought help. Eventually, social services directed her to Adoratrices. Since then, she has learned Spanish, received residency, and found a stable job. During her interview, she told me she was going apartment hunting the next day. On my last day in Ceuta, Naima confirmed she was ready to leave Adoratrices and rent her first apartment for her and her daughter. Image by Nicole Abudayeh. Spain, 2025.

*Naima’s name has been altered to conceal personal information for the safety of herself and her daughter

Perhaps the most important resource Adoratrices offers is community. For the first time since arriving in Spain, the migrants have a home, a support network, and a family. In living amongst others who have shared in their struggle and feeling the constant reassurance of the nuns, the women are empowered to take back control of their lives. They receive a second chance in Spain to live proudly and publicly, never again behind closed doors.