 It has now been two years since the disappearance of 43 students from Ayotzinapa, Mexico. And students gathered on the steps of Sproul, in their memory, refused to let the crime be forgotten. So to this day, this Ayotzinapa event is really dear to my heart, especially because we're students and seeing 43 of our very own disappear is something that really bothered me. I had to take action and I'm also really happy that other people were able to take action with me. You know, the mothers and the fathers of the 43 are still looking for them. They're still organizing themselves and one of the main things that they asked is to not let them be forgotten. That, you know, everyone has to keep them in their minds in order to go fighting for them. Students believe this movement is about much more than the missing students from Ayotzinapa and is actually emblematic of a far deeper crisis in Mexico. We want to make this a little bit more of an intersectional struggle to understand that it's not just 43 students, it's thousands of thousands of students in Mexico and thousands of people around the globe. So right now we're trying to make sure to be able to tell people that it's not just one isolated event. It's many things happening at the same time. Through this demonstration, the students hope to urge others to stand in solidarity and make their voices heard. It's just really important to me because as students we have a very powerful voice and I feel like people don't really know that because we're still kind of coming in age and coming into like who you are as a person but, you know, your voice is very powerful and it's something that we need to use together collectively. One voice, maybe it cannot change the world but one voice can start to make a change in the world.