 The ability for organizations, foreign of the blind, like ours, to exchange the books that we create as opposed to as all creating individual books has been something that we have been advocating to be able to do for the past ten years, right? So, when Marrakesh finally came into being, it was like the culmination of all of those years of work. Something that all our organizations have been hoping for, not just CNIB, but all around the world. You could hear a collective hooray. We've done it. We've finally done it. So in each country, it then became important for our individual countries to embed the principles of the Marrakesh Treaty in our national laws. And that Canada just did at the end of June this year, being the 20th country to do so. It then allowed the Marrakesh Treaty internationally to come into force at the end of September. I think whether you're in the developing world or the developed world, access to literature is important for one's education. To build life skills, to be able to read helps you advance in your society. It allows you to benefit from school education. If your sighted kids in a school have access to books to help them advance, the same is true and needed by children who do not have sight. They need access to the same books to literature in order to advance in life. To build on their life skills.