 I think that we want to get out and add in the issues of the Covid-related measures that are in place, and the face covering should be worn when moving around the chamber and across the Holyrood campus. The first item of business this afternoon is time for reflection. Our time for reflection leaders today are Sarah Baitman and Andrew Martin, Holocaust Educational Trust Ambassadors. Hello. My name is Andrew Martin and this is Sarah Baitman, and we are ambassadors for the the Holocaust Educational Trust. Last year, we participated in the lessons from Outfits online project in the People's Winkled Psychic Academy. We heard from Holocaust survivors that Outfits work now via virtual reality and share what we learn with our school. I wanted to take part in the project because growing up with Jewish grandparents, the Holocaust was always something that I was aware of, hearing about memorials at a synagogue, so I understood how important it is to remember. I wanted to take part because the Holocaust is an incredibly important and devastating part of human history and we must learn from it to prevent anything like it from ever happening again. The most important part of the project, for me, was speaking to Holocaust survivor Janine Webber, BEM. I was particularly struck by the photos that she showed us of her family before the Holocaust, which made her story seem so much more real. Before the project, we both knew various facts and figures about the Holocaust, but until hearing Janine's story, we had never truly understood their gravity. That is why it is so important for young people to hear from survivors and to pass on their stories. For our next step to project, we gave a presentation summarising what we had learnt to several classes in our school. I have shared how the Holocaust affected Jewish people all across Europe. I have also talked about the diversity of pre-war Jewish life, which is a really important aspect in humanising the Holocaust. I focussed on the contemporary relevance of the Holocaust, as well as passing on parts of the Janine Webber story and orchestrating an activity around the individual Jewish experience. That helped us to shift the focus away from statistics and instead see those impacted as individual people. That leads us to this year's Holocaust Memorial Day theme one day. One day cannot tell the whole story, but remembering just one day during the Holocaust can be a gateway to realising that no one person affected by it was the same. As investors, we look forward to continuing our work to ensure that the 6 million Jewish men, women and children who are murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators are remembered.