The DH mapping project that I looked into is ReVilna.org, Vilnius Ghetto Project. It was a ghetto that was constructed in Lithuania and the Jewish people with 3 or more grandparents that were Jewish or were married to a Jewish person were forced into. There was it’s own police force and someone who was in charge of it. Ther Ghetto existed from 1940 to 1943 until the people were either killed or saved from the place; however, few survived. Some of the pictures show the culture and the way of life that families tried to live despite the terrible circumstance. The point of view of the map is showing a place where a marginalized group of people lived and revealing their story. The map reveals the story in the best way to understand. The perspectival of the map shows that they try to fit it to the landscape. There are dots where important events occurred and important historical landmarks to the story at hand. Today none of the ghetto has actually survived but the mapper appears to have accurate dimensions and locations of where the things were when the ghetto was up and running. The subjective part of the map shows that it is focused around the ghetto and there is very little mentioned about anything else.The images are helpful to understanding what was happening and to actually picture what the place looked like. The map obscures other things that do not reflect well on the I think that the obscuring of things is not done out of maliciousness but to keep the story centered on the ghetto and not other things. If they were to include other happening on the date observed it might obscure what the map was supposed to show this ghetto and it’s story. What is revealed is the purpose of the map. To explain what happened at this historical ghetto and to shed light on things that occurred in these ghettos. The map itself ties several different story lines together. There was the construction, life, education and it’s demise. I also appreciate that the makers of the map included more information than just the dots on the map pointing out buildings. Instead the map told a story and I think that in that way it succeeded in it’s purpose.