 Bimaristan is the shortened, Latinized word for a word in our tradition, so if you speak Farsi or Urdu, you know the word Bimar. Bimar is sickness, illness, and so on, stand location, so the Bimaristan are the centers for healing, somebody who's ill. Bimaristan shortened is Maristan, and that's where we got our name, this inspiration. In Arabic they were called daughter shifa, same idea, daughter location of shifa healing. In Islamic history, some of my research and the work of my team at the lab, Mashallah, we've been really working and actually we're writing a book at the moment on what is a Maristan and what is the history and how what it is Muslims contribute, and it's really phenomenal Mashallah, but not only did they create the Maristans, but they actually had inside of their hospitals along with physical illness, you know your your organs, anything related to bones, anything related to surgery was there of course as any hospital, but in addition the Muslims were the first to add mental health, the first psychiatric wards, and this is incredible because it's at a time where the people before them, other religious traditions or even the Greeks and the Romans and other civilizations that came before them didn't do this. There's something about Islam that allows for holistic healing, mind, body, soul connected to each other and you don't take them apart, so they didn't discriminate between physical illness and mental illness, it's in the same healing center that the Maristan, and today you can still visit some of these, if you go ever to Istanbul there are still some standing that from the later years before the Ottoman Empire fell, you still see the Maristans there, you can see them still in Cairo, you can see them in certain countries in which they're actually still there.