 how many of you have been led to believe that Muslim women do not have choice when it comes to marriage and divorce, right? So again, this is something that in that list, I started reading more and more, but there's a story that I'd like to share. One of the companions of the Prophet Muhammad, his name was Ibn Abbas, Ibn Juzmi's son, so the son of a man and the best. He relates that once a young girl, she came to the Prophet Muhammad and she had just been married off forcibly by her father, and she was very upset, so she came to complain to him. Now in that moment, the Prophet, the marriage ceremony had already happened, so he paused and he, again, it's important to reflect on what, you know, how he engaged her. He asked her, now that this is an advent, you have a choice. Do you wish to stay in this marriage, or do you wish to leave the marriage? Her response was, what do you think? She said, I want help. Bring me out of this. She complained, right? You know how many people make you stay? She actually said, I do wish to stay, but the reason I spoke up is so that other women know that no man has the right to force them into a marriage. So this story to me was really profound, because now I'm only exercising her own choice, right in the matter, but she's also clearly showing that she is looking out for other women, and so she made a really responsible decision to speak out, but she kind of just kept quiet and stayed in that marriage without anybody ever knowing that she had a problem with it, but she wanted to make a clear point, and the fact that that was related to 101 stories of men who had dispelled the myth that Muslim women cannot marry or divorce, and that's why, like I said, many.