 I'm here to partly retell the slum story. I was born and grew up in Kibera. And I think I had a typical childhood, any kid in Kibera old. And the interesting thing, I don't remember feeling poor. Not that it was easy, but I didn't have the feeling that I was poor. But when I started working, or the many times I listened to stories about Kibera and other slums, it starts and ends with crowded spaces, open sewers, and crashing poverty. And yeah, there is that too. But the lived experiences are a little bit different. I mean, it's all that. There are strikes of victorious moments. And this moment, the either push us away, slightly away from the world we were born into, or give us a reason to be happy in a place you ordinarily not find a reason to be happy. And it's this moment that, to me, tell us story better than the open sewers, crowded spaces, and crashing poverty. To me, those little steps, those victorious moments was becoming a lawyer or working to get to us that. And when I graduated, I was already, I wanted to leave and really happily doing so. But I realized I lost every boy I grew up to cry. It was a big number, like dozens of them. And that's not the sad part. The sad part is most of them died happy. And talking to them, it's like, through that, they had a moment when they weren't poor, and they were ready to pay for the price for that. And I felt I was wrong. And I felt that there could be a way we could come together and try to break the poverty cycle. And that's how this was passed, like a grassroots movement to break the poverty cycle and retell the slam story in a more balanced way. Another thing is to create a platform to reach out for that little help, you need to break the poverty cycle. Not charity, a fighting chance, which I think we denied most of the time. Sometimes back, I think three years ago, I went to the Belgium Embassy. I was denied a visa. It was the second time at the Belgium Embassy. And the first time overall. And I was so crushed. When I went home, I found this guy. And he told me, it's a gunfight out there. And all we have are really blanched knives. We don't stand a chance unless you live by the gun. And, okay, not really condoning crime. But he told me, I wish they had given you the visa. It should have convinced me. There's a way out, you know, like you went to school. Should be easier for you, but it's not. I didn't think much of that. Okay, he's passed on, he's passed on since. I didn't think much of that. But the third time I went to the Belgium Embassy, I carried that with me. They didn't give me the visa again. This time, oh, they did. But it was conditional. I had to supply a few documents and I would be given the visa. So when I was leaving the visa, I told that woman, you know, this is the third time I'm applying to this Embassy. So it's in the cars that go to Belgium. It may not happen today, but someday. But if I go back home without visa, I'll be supporting someone's claim that the only way you get out of this place is through a gun. And to most of the people, it should be like, it doesn't matter how hard you work or how smart you are, it's an impossible place to live. So from that moment, it became larger than just me. To me, getting that visa was very important at that moment and I chose the lady that. Okay, she didn't give it to me. But on Sunday, but she called me on a Sunday morning and asked me, when is your flight? I told her it's on Monday. She told me come to the Embassy and collect your visa on a Sunday. Like, I'm traveling to the Embassy just to give you the visa and I did. And it meant a lot that moment. Like, the many struggles and shumbling block on the way to breaking the poverty cycle. And that's why we need help, removing the tumbling blocks more. And in closing, I'm not trying to say, we tell a different story of the slam. All it said is there, but can we look at it a little bit differently? The deepest story of it, beyond the open sea world, what else, crowded spaces, crashing poverty, there's more to that. And I think if we concentrate on that, we release so many people from it. A couple of days ago, I had a meeting with one of the guy who grew up there. He was awarded an award for being one of the best pathologists in the region. And when he started talking, not because me, him and others who make it are better than any of the rest of the kids who grew up. Sometime along the way, like we had a little help in getting a quality education and a lifetime's difference. And that's the story like we want to tell in a more balanced way. Thank you.