 I used to do portraits and say to my colleagues on the last day, here's a portrait of you. And please, if you like it, please send some money to Variety. And that I did for many years until Paul Newman caught me about, what, almost 20 years ago and said, Haim, I know that you work with Variety and so, come and see what I'm doing in Connecticut, in my town, for children who suffer from bad illnesses. I went to see it and I was very impressed. When I came back home, I gathered together the directors of the big hospitals that we have and they said that would be a wonderful thing if you could start something like that. And then I said, OK. Music playing Six years ago, we opened it. And we have now children. We deal with about 25 different illnesses. We bring in doctors who specialize in that illness of that week and suddenly it's something that the organization that Paul started, I mean, they are looking now at us. We are working all year round. It's not just a summer camp. This is, we call it the quiet one, quiet building. And here they come and if they want to read or listen to music. Earphones. Earphones or be by themselves. Welcome, we are there. This is the art center. You know, on the first day, so this is where we talk to them and tell them what the ideas are, what we are about to do and so on. But actually this is the room where we let them paint and do whatever they want. You can see the works that they did here and there. That's where they do all kind of woodworks. You can see here in Arabic and in Hebrew and I don't forget from where I arrived. I'll never forget that's what he wrote. It's a good day to have a great day. The poet. So this is the auditorium. Come and see. This is what we have here. And as you see, we have here a row that we can sit with people in wheelchairs and there is one in the middle too. This is sports. You can play here football. You can play basketball. You can do whatever they want. What can be more beautiful? Look at them. After at the end of the session, before they leave, we give them kites. When they leave, they just let them go. What a place, huh? This is the dining room. Betty Eshna, Betty. What did you see in the room? Everything. All right. Hello. This is Betty. She's the cook and the chef and the manager. And I still have a banana. I can't believe myself, but we have close to a thousand volunteers, all the doctors who work in the village and all the nurses who work in the village. Whoever we need, who volunteer with all the heart, I mean, they will do for the children anything. And this is something that makes the children so happy and forget about their illnesses, which I have to point out that they can be Arab, Muslims, Jewish, and not one penny asked from them. For myself, for my heart, it's the most important thing that I did in my life.