 Sixty years ago, the land behind me was flooded when the government built the Kenney Dam, and they gave the people that lived here two weeks to leave. They buried the village, the gravesites, and I think government at the time might have even thought they were burying a way of life, but today we came to see the Chislata, who are alive and well, still speaking their language, keeping their culture alive, reclaiming this land and the gravesites that they've been lost, and working on a reconciliation agreement to try and address some of these legitimately long-held grievances and the anger that people feel in this community. I can tell you today, I didn't feel a lot of anger, I felt a lot of hope from people looking forward to the future and changing the future from what's happened in the past. It's a big step for the Chislata and a big step for all British Columbians who believe in justice.