 I think the problem with talking about what these years went through and the scale of their suffering, the scale of the genocides is very hard to bring into life. You know, the saying is always that one life, one life lost is a tragedy and an entire people wiped out. It's hard to get a handle on it and I think that what they are doing is brilliantly by kind of transporting you into the heart of what happened. It makes you understand the scale of it. It gives you a sense of the personal tragedy, the eyes of the girl. You see what's happening but at the same time it's very effective and conveying the sense that this is a tragedy for an entire people. So it was quite a good experience to see exactly what they went through. The experience brings out is just the sense of home and the sense of what was lost and the sense of the people. It's an opportunity to connect to that really human level, the people who are affected by this. Do you have any messages to the Yazidi community? That's a big one. What do you say to a community that has been completely torn apart? Oh my gosh, I don't even know where to begin. Hopefully things like this advocacy and just people trying and working to spread the word and gain traction can, you know, we can't undo what was done but hopefully we can gain justice and we can make sure that the people that did this were persecuted and we as a society can learn to not let this kind of stuff continue to happen in the future. Those of us who have seen the scale of your sufferings and horrors inflicted on you will never forget you but it is also a constant source of anguish that your fate is not remembered as it probably should be by everybody else in the world and insofar as I can, insofar as other people I know can we will do our absolute best to keep the flame what happened to you and of your sufferings alive. And thank you to those who participated in this. I guess that would be my strongest message which is thank you to those who participated in this who shared their stories and who are giving us the opportunity to engage with their experience in such a personal and intimate way. It's a hugely powerful and important thing as a historian. It's an incredible artifact to have documented in the historical record and I hope that soon rather than later the international community will come together to recognise what's happened to them as a genocide and to coordinate much better and more effective responses to deliver some form of justice however it is going to be for what they suffered.