They are 13 normal kids from Worthington, and they've grown up in the small southwestern city doing what most American kids do. They go to school, participate in after-school activities and hang out with their friends.
But at least one thing is different for these 13 kids, and hundreds like them: They have never met their grandparents, and in some cases, their siblings.
The 13 students were born in the United States to Guatemalan parents who either came to the country illegally or overstayed visas. Their parents have worked in and near Worthington for years, laboring for factories or on farms.
Until the government agrees on overhauling the immigration system, the parents of these kids can't go back to visit family, aware they could not get U.S. passports.
Lisa Kremer was thinking about those parents when she went on an "awareness trips" to Guatemala. Then it occurred to her: The kids are Americans, there is nothing stopping them from getting passports.
So Kremer made a plan.
She began contacting families who were interested in sending their children to meet grandparents they've never seen before. In two cases, the kids will also meet siblings who were left behind when parents immigrated.
Kremer worked with local churches and the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota to organize the project, called Abuelos y Nietos Juntos, Grandparents and Grandchildren Together. They have raised most of the money to send the children from the parents and fundraisers.