 I am shivering with hope, and I'm blifted to hear such deep voices for justice and peace, our conciliation. You know, this kind of spirituality is needed nowadays, that transcends denominations. And when I hear you, I feel this kind of spirituality of resistance that is needed. Nowadays here, spirituality of resistance and creativity. And since we talk about hope, I like the verses of the 2nd Corinthians, chapter 4, verses 8 to 9, which says, we are hard-pressed on every side, but not crushed, perplexed, but not in despair, persecuted, but not abandoned, struck down, but not destroyed. This kind of thing helps me to keep hope. This verse, this paragraph, sustains my hope. And also my hope coming from the fact that we belong to the land, all of us. And as one of the leaders of the first nation people, sitting full, says, man belongs to the earth, earth does not belong to man. So all of us, regardless of our faith, regardless of our nations, color, gender, belong to the earth, the earth does not belong to us. It is a call of inclusivity. It is a call for respecting each other and also diversity in unity. I believe the voice I heard from you is a prophetic voice and the work you do is a prophetic action that all of us say, occupation is evil and we need to end it and to let people coexist with mutual respect, with inclusive call for justice. As you know, our kids, our youth suffered a lot. One third of the male population in Palestine have been in prison. One third has suffered from the prison. More than 20,000 women have been in prison since 1967. So it called to free us all, let my people free. And this is a very important message to see our cause internationalized because at this moment it is very difficult to solve this kind of conflict, to end the occupation by only dialogue or negotiation between Israel and Palestine. We need the international community to bear its responsibility to help end the occupation. When I see 52 members of the parliament in Canada sign a memorandum to end the annexation, to stop the annexation, to end the occupation, it is hope. It is really a call for hope. And as Palestinians, we always look to convert, to transform crisis to opportunities. As a result of the threat of annexation, Palestinians more are more united. We work for diversity and unity and we are making connections and there are hope in reading the history. You know, we talk about the wall in Berlin. After 28 years, the wall is no longer there. We talk about apartheid system in South Africa. After 42 years of systematic apartheid is no longer there. We talk about civil rights movement despite there are some pockets of resistance in the States but Martin Luther King was able to transcend, to move, to transform and in the Balkans the conflict stopped. So this kind of hope, you know, we needed more and more to see end the occupation. And nowadays if we make some mathematics that Israel is talking about annexing almost area C or it could be 60%. We don't want to lose our pose in percentage wise, 10%, 60%, 1%. But if we talk about area C 60% and if we make such equation, the West Bank is 22% of the historic land. Cross 60% almost equal 13%. This is where the black Africans in South Africa used to own before they changed from apartheid to better situation. I think hope for us is a form of faith, a form of nonviolent struggle. With you, we are all able to move forward. And especially when we talk about women, you know, since the start of who we are in 1994, we embark on empowering women and we created a lot of coalitions between men and women. And I think there will be no freedom if the women are not free. Actually, our woman does not compose only 50% of the population but they raise the other 50. And with your voices, with your support, you are helping us more. You are empowering us to walk in this less traveled road, despite of guvide, despite of the occupation and despite on the personal issue, the separation between my wife and children in the states and in Westland. This kind of unhorrific affinity would like on the personal level, we are able to overcome it. On the national level, we are able to conquer it. And on the international level, justice will be the coal and will be the march and will be the drums to beat in order to free all the nations. And as the South African leader, Bishop Tutu says, and Mandela of course, South Africa will not be free until Palestine is free. And we need the freedom for Jews, Muslims and Christians to live together in two state solutions or one state to guarantee that equality and inclusivity and reciprocity as the umbrella for any solution. We'd like to thank you all for your support, for your empowerment. And I tell you frankly, also we shouldn't not think of the peace camp in Israel, the Jewish peace of voice in the world. Despite they are getting smaller, but they are a voice and they are a ray of hope. It is also a part of renewable hope for us. Thank you all. And we would like to invite you again by saying there is more room in the end now. Thank you so much. Zugby persistence is required. Our persistence, our action to bring forth transformation and that justice for all. My last words of gratitude to all of you who have been present and listening and reflecting for the gift of your attention and your solidarity and action. I want to thank our partners, Zugby and Tarik and Lucy very much for your clarity and for your generosity and for your hope. We want to strive to live up to the call that you are issuing to us in this context. I want to thank our delegates for their words and for their speaking from their hearts of their own experience. They were church leaders, but ordinary people who went and experienced and we are committed to persisting in our advocacy. I want to thank our trusted advisor, Wendy and Rachel also who you now can see on the screen who were resource people to our delegation. So helpful to us. I want to thank Kirsten who has been working to support this webinar and the work around Palestinian advocacy, advocacy for just peace, who you can see Kirsten Van Houten and who helped us with the presentation today. And we couldn't have done this without the technical assistance of Gabriela Jimenez and Giselle del Resorio who helped to uplift us and facilitate us and make this all possible. So I hope you can see their faces on the screen too to bring them from behind the scenes to in front of the scenes as a critical part of this process that we were in this morning. And I just close really with my deepest hope for our collective action as hope made real in this world. And thank you to all of you for being present with us in this time.