Interactive border wall mural tells stories of deported

Artist Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana is videotaped during an interview, left, as volunteers help install her new mural on the Mexican side of a border wall that shows faces of people deported from the U.S. with barcodes that activate first-person narratives on visitors’ phones, in Tijuana, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 9, 2019. De La Cruz Santana, 28, conceived the interactive mural as part of doctoral dissertation at University of California, Davis, in Spanish with a focus on literature and immigrant experiences.(AP Photo/Joebeth Terriquez)

Volunteers help install a new mural on the Mexican side of a border wall that shows faces of people deported from the U.S. with barcodes that activate first-person narratives on visitors’ phones, in Tijuana, Mexico, Friday, Aug. 9, 2019. Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana conceived the interactive mural Her project blends Mexico’s rich history of muralists with what can loosely be called interactive or performance art on the U.S.-Mexico border. (AP Photo/Joebeth Terriquez)

TIJUANA, Mexico — Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana returned Friday to the Mexican beach where her father entered the U.S. illegally before she was born, this time to put final touches on a mural of adults who came to the U.S. illegally as young children and were deported. Visitors who hold up their phones to the painted faces are taken to a website that voices first-person narratives.

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