Un abuelo le enseña a su nieto sobre la rica cultura garífuna. El nieto está prepárandose para bailar una danza tradicional llamada Wanaragua . A young boy learns from his grandfather about their rich Garifuna culture as he is preparing to perform a traditional dance called Wanaragua. Acknowledgements All proceeds from these books are donated to local community organizations like ISLA Immersion School https://www.laislaschool.org & UNC’s Adams School of Dentistry clinics that offer sliding scale and no-cost dental care to the local underserved populations https://dentistry.unc.edu/ as well as other organizations that serve the Hispanic/Latino community. These books were written and donated by Heather Knorr’s Spanish for Professional and Community Engagement class at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as part of a service-learning project. Special thanks to the many native Spanish speakers in the Romance Studies Department and the local community for their volunteer editing. Our goal is to create bilingual children’s books featuring Hispanic/Latino characters, Indigenous characters from Latin America and Afro-Latino characters as well as to tell the stories of cultures from Latin America to promote diversity and representation in children’s literature. To purchase more books in our collection, go to https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BMP7355C and select either kindle or paperback. To learn more, get involved as a volunteer illustrator, or make a donation to the project, please contact Heather Knorr at knorrh@email.unc.edu or heather.knorr@gmail.com