>> Maria Guadalupe Partida: Hi there, my name is Maria Guadalupe Partida. Greetings from Mission Concepcion right here in San Antonio, Texas. Our program aims to increase the library accessibility through visual learning tools that bring awareness to Hispanic collections. They say that history is written by the victors. Untold narratives [inaudible] the unknown, prohibiting a true story to unfold. From 1325 to 1519, the Mexica, or now recognized as the Aztecs, relied on the titlantli, a Nahuatl word that means messenger, to deliver messages swiftly across the empire. IN 1519, the titlantlis delivered a message that would forever change the course of the Aztec civilization: The coming of the conquistadores. My junior fellows project entails a digital story map entitled Stolen: An Indigenous Story of Conquest that follows [Foreign Language], an omnipresent narrator and wanton inhabitant of the great Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan. Join [Foreign Language] as she gives witness to her ancestor's past, opens new historical perspectives, and uncovers the voice of the Aztec civilization before, during, and after their conquest. Under the guidance of Dr. Suzanne Schadl and the Hispanic Division, this digital story map was developed utilizing Hispanic collections from the online catalog. Items used include collection items from the Jay I. Kislak, the Huexotzinco Codex, and An Ongoing Voyage: What Became of America. I'm sincerely grateful to the libraries Hispanic Division. The fellowship and internships program, and the policy training and cooperative division for mentoring, guiding, and inspiring this project.