 It's been five years since the Sunflower Movement. The campaign had a huge impact on all aspects of the political and social landscape in Taiwan. Things have really changed since then. In the course of 23 days of occupying the parliament, the movement generated a massive amount of texts, of images and recordings. For the sake of the collective memory of the people in Taiwan's future, they had to be digitized and preserved. As for the actual objects of the campaign, they too have been collected by the Institute of History and Philology in Academia Seneca. They were then digitized into an online collection by the Institute of Information Science in Academia Seneca. Now they are archived at the National Museum of Taiwan History. The end of May this year, with the assistance of the Academia Seneca and many civil society organizations, the museum will hold a special exhibition of the post-war social movements in Taiwan to document related developments since the 1940s. And this will inspire us to reflect on the right to free speech and vote, which appear to have been taken for granted now, but in fact they were obtained through courageous sacrifices and struggles of many people at the grassroots level. In addition to thanking Yao Ren Duo, the former Deputy Secretary General of the President's Office, Zheng Li Jun, the Minister of Cocha, I would also like to thank Wang Changhua, the former curator, Xie Shi Yuan, the former Vice President of the Museum, and Lin Chongxi, the current curator, and also Zhuang Ting Rui from Academia Seneca. For your efforts, this special exhibition would not exist. Of course, all those who participated, supported, and reported on the Sunflower Movement, thank you too. You are the protagonists in a great story of Taiwan. I hope everyone can set aside some time for the exhibition, and I'll see you in Southern Taiwan's Tainan City in May.