Tony, his wife Joelle, and their daughters, Pearl-Hope and baby Faith, are photographed in their new Cape Cod home. A former UN photojournalist from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tony fled in 2014 after being kidnapped and tortured for documenting mass killings. His portrait is one of sixteen in Invisible Threads, an ongoing series exploring the lives and stories of Cape Cod residents who have journeyed from around the world.

The full series debuted at the Cape Cod Museum of Art in Dennis (August–November 2025) and an expanded version will be exhibited at the Cahoon Museum of American Art in September 2026. The complete collection of portraits and narratives will also be published in a forthcoming book with Daylight Books.

Invisible Threads: Portraits and Stories of our Global Neighbors

By Photographer Julia Cumes in Collaboration with Lipe Borges

Invisible Threads is a portrait and narrative series offering an intimate glimpse into the lives of people who have journeyed from around the world to build new lives on Cape Cod. Through collaborative portraits and personal storytelling, the project invites viewers to slow down, look closely, and truly listen.

Cape Cod is often imagined as a place of escape, yet it has long been a place of arrival. When the Pilgrims landed in Provincetown in 1620, they began one of the country’s earliest immigration stories. Today, contemporary migrations continue that legacy, though these stories are often overlooked or politicized. Invisible Threads reconnects us to the ongoing search for safety, opportunity, and belonging.

Photographed at home, at work, and with loved ones, the individuals in this series show the Cape as a place where people root themselves anew. Each portrait grew from trust and a shared creative process, revealing moments marked by memory, loss, hope, and transformation. The stories span Jamaica, Brazil, Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ukraine, Malaysia, Costa Rica, South Africa, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, and more.

The project is also being developed as a traveling exhibition and includes an educational program for school-aged children, inviting students to create their own portraits and stories in response to the series—deepening understanding of identity, migration, and community.

Created in collaboration with photographer Lipe Borges, whose lighting expertise and thoughtful partnership shaped the visual tone of the work, Invisible Threads centers dignity, agency, and authenticity.

“As immigrants ourselves, this work is deeply personal. That feeling of in-between—of leaving one home while learning to belong in another—is something we understand. This project is a tribute to those who trusted us with their stories.”
Julia Cumes

In a time when migration is often framed through fear or division, Invisible Threads offers a space of empathy. It reminds us that while borders define geography, the unseen threads of hope, family, and shared humanity are what connect us.

The full series debuted at the Cape Cod Museum of Art, August 14–November 9, 2025. An expanded version will be published by Daylight Books in late 2026 and exhibited at the Cahoon Museum of American Art, Sept–Dec 2026, alongside the developing traveling exhibition and youth education program. Below are the portraits and abbreviated versions of their accompanying narratives.

  • Aqela - Afghanistan

    Aqela, 68, sits in her alterations shop, A Perfect Fit, surrounded by her granddaughters, the tools of her trade and a photo of her younger self. Born in Kabul, Afghanistan, she fled in 1984 with her daughters to escape war, enduring a dangerous journey through mountains to reach Pakistan before being sponsored to the U.S. by her husband’s Cape Cod connections. Despite language barriers and isolation, Aqela opened her own shop in 2005. Today, her daughters are a doctor, a lawyer, and an educator. “The best thing about being here is knowing my kids are safe and educated,” she says, reflecting on the sacrifices that made their future possible.

  • Wilsie - Haiti

    Wilsie sits with her mother, Matilde, in their Cape Cod home while her granddaughter, Janaila, twirls happily in her favorite dress. Originally from Cap-Haitien, Haiti, Wilsie moved to the U.S. to support her family, studying English and training as a nurse’s aide. Despite facing racism, she found peace in Cape Cod’s Haitian community and expanded her efforts to Rwanda, launching a farming project to support families in need. “With the little we have, we are trying to make an impact,” she says, dreaming of opening community centers in both countries.

  • Ling Long - Malaysia

    Photographed with his wife, Yin-Cheng, daughter, Chien-Rui, and mother, Ling Long reflects on years of struggle after leaving Malaysia in search of opportunity. After enduring long hours in restaurant kitchens across the United States, he reconnected with his childhood friend Yin-Cheng during a return home for his father’s funeral. They married and moved back to the U.S. hoping to build a more stable future for their daughter. In 2021, the family relocated to Cape Cod, where Ling Long started a sushi business with the help of a friend. With his mother now joining them, the family is together in the United States for the first time. “This place feels like a blessing—full of opportunities,” he says, grateful for their fresh start and the natural beauty of Cape Cod.

  • Kenard - Jamaica

    Kenard is photographed in his studio at The Cordial Eye in Hyannis, surrounded by mannequins, fabric, and a sewing machine. He creates bold, colorful fashion using upcycled fabrics. Born in Montego Bay and raised in Georgia, he faced challenges adjusting to life in the U.S. But after moving to Cape Cod, he discovered a passion for tailoring during the pandemic. In 2023, he launched Ken Tailor, and within a year, he showcased his designs at New York Fashion Week. “The opportunities here are endless,” he says, with dreams of building a global fashion brand and inspiring future designers.

  • Jitka - Czech Republic


    Jitka stands with her daughter Mischa inside Nove Yoga Studio, a reflection of the life she’s built on Cape Cod through resilience and community. Raised in a small Czech village during the last years of communism, she came to the U.S. in 2003 as an au pair with almost no English. Support from a Cape Cod Literacy Council tutor helped her find confidence and a sense of belonging.
    She went on to earn her degree at Cape Cod Community College, launch Cleangreen—an eco-focused cleaning company employing more than 20 people—and later open Nove Yoga, a studio centered on inclusivity and wellness. A competitive cyclist and active volunteer with WE CAN and the Rotary Club of Hyannis, Jitka says, “The best thing about being here is the support. People show up because they want to see you succeed.”

  • Inna - Ukraine


    Inna sits with her husband, Andrew, her mother, Victoria, and their cat, Mars, inside Great Awakening Coffee Shop, the community space she and Andrew built on Cape Cod. Born in Hungary just days after the Chernobyl explosion, she grew up in Ukraine amid health concerns and political upheaval, spending summers in Spain through a Red Cross program. After moving to the U.S. for graduate school and marrying Andrew, she eventually found belonging on the Cape through teaching Spanish and supporting international J-1 students.
    Inspired by the idea of creating a welcoming space, she and Andrew opened their coffee shop, which by night hosts open mics, recovery dinners, and community events. When the war in Ukraine began, Victoria escaped on one of the last flights out and joined them here. “My passion is bringing people together,” Inna says, grateful for a life rooted in connection and purpose. goes here

  • Eugene - Belarus

    Eugene and his dog, Tulsa, sit beneath a century-old weeping beech tree, one of his favorite spots on Cape Cod. Born in Minsk when it was still part of the Soviet Union, he grew up amid scarcity and deep intolerance toward LGBTQ+ people. After first coming to the U.S. on a J-1 visa, an online joke about Provincetown led him to the place where, he says, “I could just be.”
    As conditions worsened in Belarus, Eugene applied for political asylum and returned to the U.S. in 2015, eventually settling on Cape Cod. Today, he works as an arborist specializing in aesthetic pruning, a craft that lets him reveal the natural beauty of trees. Though he hasn’t seen his family in a decade, he’s found belonging here. “The best thing about Ptown is the ocean—and the people,” he says. “When you plant a tree, it’s because you want beauty. That’s what I’m trying to grow.”

  • Hanane - Morocco

    Hanane stands in the ballroom of the Cape Cod hotel where she works, wearing a flowing Moroccan kaftan gifted by her mother—a reminder of her roots in Casablanca. She grew up in a big, close-knit family, spending summers in Marrakesh surrounded by orange and olive trees. After earning a psychology degree, a friend urged her to enter the U.S. green card lottery; she won on her birthday and decided to take the leap.
    Her first stop was Boston, then Cape Cod, where speaking French helped her feel grounded in her earliest job at a Hyannis café. Since then, she has managed restaurants, studied full-time at Cape Cod Community College, and earned Employee of the Year at the hotel where she now works. “The hardest thing is the cultural difference,” she says. “But the best thing is knowing I’ve built a life on my own.” Looking ahead, she hopes for a family and a home filled with the warmth and hospitality she grew up with.

  • Sofia--Indonesia

    Sofia sits beside her family at the piano she taught her daughter to play, their traditional Indonesian clothing beside their children’s American outfits—a reflection of the two worlds they’ve bridged. Born in Medan, Sumatra, she worked in Jakarta and later in Bali as a tour guide before discrimination against Chinese Indonesians and fears for her daughter’s safety pushed the family to seek a new life.
    When the pandemic devastated Bali’s tourism industry, Sofia and her husband, Hoshen, moved to the U.S. through a family sponsorship. Their first job ended abruptly after a misunderstanding, but they persevered, eventually building two successful sush franchises in local grocery stores—and recently a third.
    On Cape Cod, Sofia feels a safety she never knew at home. Her children thrive in school, and she dreams of sending them to college. “Here, I don’t have to worry about my daughter’s safety,” she says. “I’m a lucky mom.”

  • Tony- Democratic Republic of Congo

    Tony sits with his wife, Joelle, and their daughters, Pearl-Hope and baby Faith, in their new Cape Cod home—a place of safety after years of danger. A former UN photojournalist in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tony fled in 2014 after being kidnapped and tortured for documenting mass killings. He arrived in the U.S. alone, seeking asylum while Joelle prayed daily for his safety back home. It took years before they reunited, with their daughter Pearl arriving as an unaccompanied minor at age six.
    Life on Cape Cod has been both grounding and challenging. Tony has worked stocking beverages and now drives for income while slowly returning to freelance photography. Joelle recently began a job as a community resource navigator. Their American-born daughter, Faith, symbolizes the resilience that carried them through years of separation. “I miss photojournalism—that’s who I am,” Tony says. “But Cape Cod feels safe, especially for my family. We named her Faith because we believe there is always a way forward.”

  • Emilio - South Africa

    Emilio sits on his back deck surrounded by instruments and the old record player he grew up with. Raised in Cape Town during apartheid, he spent part of his childhood in a shack in Gugulethu, where instability and his father’s addiction made music his refuge. Through church, he discovered guitar and bass and later played in bands that shaped his life.
    He met his wife, Claudine, through church and music, and after touring the U.S. with a racial reconciliation project, they returned to Cape Cod in 2015 seeking a better future for their children. With four suitcases and $3,000, they rebuilt their lives—Emilio leading youth programs and Claudine working in health care. Their children now thrive in music and sports. “The sky’s the limit here,” he says, as the family recently received their U.S. citizenship and a life rooted in faith, music, and community.

  • Michael Brazil

    Michael sits with his twin sons, Matthew and Gabriel, at the Brazilian Resource Center—a reminder of how far he’s come since arriving from Rio de Janeiro in 1998. The first in his family to attend college, he left Brazil after a year of law school hoping for a new path in medicine. On Cape Cod, he worked as a busboy, painter, and newspaper delivery driver, sometimes juggling three jobs while studying English at night.
    Step by step, Michael built a future through education, earning a bachelor’s and then a master’s degree in psychology, later working at Cape Cod Hospital and Boston Medical Center. In 2023, he began leading the Brazilian Resource Center full-time, the nonprofit he founded to help immigrants access healthcare, mental health support, education, and basic necessities. “I know what it’s like to arrive with nothing,” he says.
    For his sons, he hopes to pass on both resilience and purpose. “I want them to know they can do anything—and that giving back is the most powerful thing we can do.”

  • Michael - Costa Rica

    Michael sits with his wife, Miranda, in their Cape Cod home surrounded by pets—a far cry from his childhood in Playa Pallades, Costa Rica, where he and his five brothers were raised by their mother in a three-walled house with no electricity or running water. He began fishing at age five to help feed the family, and at 11 quit school to care for his siblings when his mother was jailed. “Those years taught me responsibility,” he says.
    As a young adult, he worked on fishing boats and in restaurants, and while surfing met Miranda—sparking a long-distance relationship that led to a fiancé visa. He arrived in the U.S. in 2014, adjusting to the cold, the fast pace, and a new language. Today, he and Miranda run a successful pet care business, surf, compete in obstacle course races, bike races, and running events, often placing in the top three. “The best thing about being here is the freedom and opportunities,” Michael says. “I have a home, my wife, and a future I never thought possible.”

  • Tania and Yeicy--El Salvador and Dominican Republic

    Yeicy and Tania met in an ESL classroom at Cape Cod Community College and quickly became, in their words, “like sisters.” Yeicy, who moved from the Dominican Republic four years ago, grew up between the beaches of Estero Hondo and the busy streets of Santo Domingo. Now a bus monitor for children with special needs, she calls her work a dream and hopes one day to host a Spanish-language radio show in Hyannis.
    Tania’s path from El Salvador was far more urgent. After being separated from her mother for 20 years, she attempted to reunite through a program that was suddenly canceled. Determined to build a safer life, she crossed the U.S.–Mexico border and now has work authorization as she continues her immigration process. She hopes to become a preschool teacher or social worker and dreams of a home surrounded by trees and flowers.
    Together, they share meals, laughter, and long conversations—two friends who have become family in a place where they are rebuilding their lives.

  • RaShaan - Trinidad and Tobego

    In his small cabin in the woods, RaShaan rests his hands on the drum that has followed him through a lifetime of music. Born in Trinidad and Tobago in 1942, he grew up in a strict, British-influenced home before setting out on a path that took him from insurance jobs and chicken farming to singing in hotels, reconnecting with his son in New York, and performing in Boston.
    He moved to Cape Cod at 66, where music, caregiving, and love shaped his later years, including a decade spent caring for a partner until her passing. Now in his 80s, he lives simply with a friend who offered him shelter, works as a caseworker for people with disabilities, and lives by four principles: love, openness, gratitude, and kindness. “The best thing about America is I get to be who I want to be,” he says. “I just try to be somebody’s angel every day.”

  • Dora - Philippines

    Teodora sits in her small Eastham shop, Four Winds Leather, surrounded by the tools she once shared with her late husband. Raised on a farm in rural Philippines with eight siblings, she studied dressmaking before leaving home to work in garment factories in Singapore, Manila, and Hong Kong. There, she met an American pen pal from Connecticut; after years of letters, they married and began a life together in the U.S.
    The couple eventually moved to Cape Cod, opening Four Winds Leather in 1998. Teodora learned the craft through a short class and a great deal of self-teaching, creating the handmade bags, jackets, and dresses that fill the shop today. Her husband died eight years ago, a loss she still carries. Cape Cod has given her stability, faith, and community, and she hopes one day to sell the shop and split her time between the Cape and the Philippines. “I came here for a better life—and for love,” she says. “I’m grateful.”